The InterRail pass, which was introduced in 1972, opened Europe to youths under 21. Once you bought the pass, you could travel by train for free in 21 European countries. Since I was in the army, I had to wait until the following year before I could go. Pelle and I had talked about traveling together, but he got a summer job, so I went on my own.
The card was valid for one month, but there was a catch and that was that you could not use it in the country where you had bought it, so I bought my card in Åland so that I could use it in Sweden. As the departure approached, I decided to hitchhike to Denmark on July 14, the day before the pass started. I didn’t want to burn one day by taking a train in Sweden.
Dad drove me from our summer house in
northern Öland to an E22 onramp outside Kalmar. It took
several hours before I got my first ride, which took me to Ronneby. I was
dropped off by a Sibylla kiosk where I bought a hot dog and then wandered out
of the town center to a place that looked good. I raised my thumb and there I
stood while the afternoon passed. The sun slowly sank and once it had
disappeared behind the trees it started to get cold. I sat down by the road
wondering if I was going to have to spend the night in the forest when a Saab
96 stopped a hundred yards ahead of me. The driver called out through the open
side window asking if I wanted a ride. I jumped up in an instant, grabbed my
backpack and yelled YES as I ran towards the car. He was on the way to
Copenhagen to meet a girl and asked if it was okay to go via Helsingborg as it
was cheaper to take the ferry from there, and I had of course no problem with
that.
A week later I sat in a train that slowly
and noisily rolled in towards Termini, Rome’s central
station. It was seven-thirty in the morning. The wagons shook and slammed every
time they passed a switch. Tired and stiff after a night in a seating
compartment, I took down my backpack and put away my sweater. I left the train
and felt the warm exhausts from the humming diesel engines as I walked towards
the station building. There were available storage lockers but even the largest
were too small for my backpack, so I had to take off the tent and sleeping
bag to fit everything in.
Termini
was modern and functional but not at all as impressive as Paris’s cathedrals of iron and glass. Right opposite
of the entrance I found a café where I sat down to study a city map that I had
picked up at the station over a cappuccino and a brioche. My goal was the
Coliseum where I hoped to meet Emma and Frida who had suggested that we meet
there on July 20.
There
wasn’t a lot of traffic on Via Cavour, but the
street was lined with lots of Fiat 500,
600 and 128, plus a few squeezed in Vespas. When I turned into Via degli
Annibaldi I could see the Coliseum. I remember that I walked around the north
side looking for good shooting angles, but also that it was hard to capture the
entirety of it. In front of the entrance there were half a dozen horse buggies
and an ice cream vendor’s scooter, but the tourists had not started arriving so
the whole thing looked rather sleepy except for three nuns dressed in black who
energetically crossed the street with silver crosses dangling from their
necks.
I
walked into the amphitheater which was empty except for a couple of Japanese
tourists. I walked around and took photos but got bored after a while and sat
down on a concrete block to figure out what to do. Nobody thought
of the time when we decided to meet in Rome on this day.
The
wait turned out to be long and as the sun rose, the heat went from stifling to
unbearable. I did small excursions and return at the top of every
hour. At eleven I walked over to Forum Romanum which I didn’t care for or understand, but where you could
at least catch some shade under the pine trees. My next excursion was about
buying water, which wasn’t easy since it was now siesta. Most stores had their
shutters pulled down, but one had left it half shut. The owner was there and
took pity on me, so I could return with a two-liter bottle of aqua minerale.
By five in the afternoon, I had made seven excursions which all ended with me alone at the giant arena. I gave up and walked back to Termini where I bought pears, orange juice and one more bottle of aqua minerale. Also checked when the train to Venice would leave.
I arrived at Venice’s
Central Station Santa Lucia on Saturday morning and went to the bathroom area
to brush my teeth and wash up. I leaned my backpack against the wall and took
out what I needed. There were three sinks. The left one was clogged. I took the
middle one when it was free, but it had no warm water, so I asked the guy to my
right if he had any warm water in his tap. His name was Yurik and he belonged
to an ethnic minority by the Caspian Sea in Soviet Union. He and two friends
had escaped from Soviet to Israel, but didn’t like it there so they hope to
continue to the US. When we were done, we packed up our stuff and left the
bathroom. I found a storage locker for my backpack, but I couldn’t fit in the
sleeping bag, so I took it with me. I asked Yurik if he knew any affordable
place to stay in Venice.
“The Hotels are very expensive and there only a
couple of youth hostels and they are fully booked, but I’ve heard that you can
sleep in railway cars that are parked at the station area,” he said.
“Have you done it?”
“No, but if you think about it, you always see
unused cars at the station. I’ve heard that they park them there so that they
can be used the next morning.”
“That makes sense,” I said.
We
walked to the end of one of the platforms where it was concrete block that he had
been using for his daily workout. He was shorter than me, but well-built and
muscular. He said that he had practiced Judo half his life and studied in
Moscow to become a doctor.
We
returned to the station building after his workout and met his friend
Stephan and his girlfriend Lena. Stephan was tall and skinny and looked
intellectual with his long, black hair and glasses. He dreamed of moving to
Los Angeles to work with computational medicine. Lena didn’t say much about her dreams.
We
walked through the city and talked while we walked. As we passed by an old
church, we could hear classical music through a door that was ajar. Yurik
carefully opened it and we walked in and sat down to listen to a small string
orchestra that was practicing.
After
dinner, Yurik asked if I wanted to join him trying to find a sleeper car for
the night. His friends already had a hotel room, but he seemed to be more
adventurous. I liked the idea, but I was worried about my camera equipment.
Stephan and Lena offered to keep it for me. It was not an easy decision since I
had just met them, but to bring it on our adventure was not exactly a safe
solution either, so I handed over my camera bag to Stephan.
We
split and Yurik and I walked to the end of the same platform where he had done
his training pass earlier, and we found a train that looked like it was parked
for the night. We opened to door to one of the cars, climbed up and walked
through the train until we found a compartment that looked okay. There we
rolled out our sleeping bags and climbed into them to sleep. It seemed that the
plan worked.
We
were soon asleep but awoke when we felt the car shaking and the wheels
squeaking against the rails. The train was moving! I looked at Yurik and we
both looked out the window. It looked like the train had left the station and
was on the railway bridge that connects Venice and the mainland.
“Shit,” I called out.
We
were scared, but then the train stopped and started to move back towards the
station. It stopped again and it was silent for a few moments until we heard
doors being opened and shut. And the sound became louder and louder. We guessed
that it must be the conductor inspecting the train before the next trip. We
quickly rolled up our sleeping bags and ran away from the sound. What would
happen if we were caught? Would we be arrested? Then I got a wicked idea.
“Follow me,” I told Yurik and ran ahead a couple
of cars.
We
entered a sleeper compartment where I rolled out my sleeping bag and climbed
into it. He followed my lead. Then we pretended to sleep.
It
didn’t take long before we heard steps outside our
compartment and then the door opened. At first it was quiet, but then we heard
a metallic knocking on glass.
“Signore! Signore! Mister!”
I
pretended to wake up and looked with mock surprise at the intruder. Then Yurik
woke up and looked first at me and then at the genial conductor in his rumpled
uniform. I smiled at him and said in home-made French Italian.
“Pardonne, treno par
Firenze, eh? Destinazione Firenze?”
“No, no, no,” he said and shook his head,
followed by a long harangue that ended with a curt request that we “Go
stazioni!”
“It seems that this train doesn’t go to Florence
after all,” I told Yurik who pretended to be surprised.
“Are we on the wrong train,” he asked the
conductor.
“Stazioni,” he said again and pointed towards
the station building.
”Si, si, stazioni,” repeated Yurik and smiled
his most charming smile.
Where
upon we quickly rolled up our sleeping bags and ran towards the door.
”Thank you, mille grazie, mille grazie,” I
called out as we jumped down on the tracks and ran towards the station.
”It was a very kind man,” Yurik said once we
were back in the station building. “Back in Kazakhstan we would have been
arrested and thrown in jail.”
It was
now four in the morning and the only thing we could do was to take a stroll in
a city that was incredibly quiet and peaceful, except for the pigeons cooing
and the seagulls fighting over scraps of food left over by the tourists. It was
chilly and damp, so we were happy when we found a café that was open. We sat down and ordered two
caffe latte and sat there until the sun began to rise. We wet Stephan and Lena
at the eight o’clock meeting time.
“Did you sleep well,” Stephan asked with a smile
as he handed me my camera bag.
“Fantastic! It was like a dream,” Yurik said.
We took a vaporetto to Piazza San Marco where Stephan and Lena visited Sant Mark’s Basilica while Yurik and I explored the square. He stopped to talk to three girls and two boys sitting on a step outside a café. One of the girls had a long blond hair and played on a guitar. I sat down next to her and started peeling an orange with my pocketknife. I shared the orange with the company, which came from Norway. We talked and exchanged stories about our InterRail adventures and shared tips about places to eat and inexpensive places to sleep.
July 23, Monday
I and Therese are sitting on the steps in front of the Central Station. It’s very hot outside. Yesterday we said farewell to Yurik, Stephan, and Lena, who were heading to Rome. My Norwegian friends was also going to the station, so we walked together, but didn’t get far until we were surprised by a storm. Suddenly there were lightning and heavy thunder. The entire sky was lit up. At first, we thought it was fireworks, but then the rain started. We sought shelter in a café and continued when the rain let up but were now met by a hailstorm! And the hails were large, some large as peas, others as sugar cubes! We took shelter under an awning to wait out the worst. Then the storm ended as quickly as it had started.
A
quarter past seven at the same step in front of the station.
I feel happy, secure, and calm. After Yurik and his friends left, I got to share a room with the two Norwegian boys who had found an inexpensive small hotel. We had breakfast together in the hotel’s courtyard where vines grew on a pergola from which hung plenty of green and red grapes. Then we packed up, paid for the rooms, put on our backpacks, and began the long zigzag walk along the canals towards the station. We locked up our backpacks and took a final tour of the city before we returned to take the train to Pescara which left a little before eight in the evening.
We found a hotel not far from the sandy beach and rented a bungalow for 3,600 liras. The girls shared one room and the guys the other. We were dead tired after the train trip, so the first thing we did wat to take a good siesta. In the evening we ended up in a discotheque together with some Italians we had met. I wore my blue jeans and old worn-out t-shirt and danced barefoot. At first, I danced with Hanna and then with a Belgian girl who was there with her Italian boyfriend. She was very good looking, but she said she felt clumsy and insecure when she danced with him since he danced so well.
Thursday
night. I sat in the large double bed in our room talking to Hanna, who
clearly was interested in me. Then Linda showed up and sat down at the foot end of
the bed. We talked about writers and music and the meaning of life. The
conversation became more and more personal. By then Therese woke up and joined
the discussion. Linda asked me why I was travelling alone, and I said that my
friend had to cancel last minute. She asked if I had a girlfriend at home and I
said that I didn’t which
unfortunately was also true. Therese asked what I thought of them as persons.
It was a tricky question since I had been flirting with all three of them.
I said
that she seems to be stubborn and holds on tight to her integrity as if she is
trying to keep the world at bay. About Linda, I said that she is a natural,
independent, and easy to connect to. About Hanna, I said that she is romantic,
but keeps her guard as if she’s been
hurt. The room was quiet when I finished, and you could her the waves crash on
the beach. Hanna said after a few minutes that she wanted to go to the beach
and asked if I wanted to accompany her. Which I did, but at the same time I
felt a somewhat split.
We
walked along the beach and felt the lukewarm Mediterranean Sea wash over our
naked feet. I took her hand and she let me, but I didn’t know what to do with it. I was thinking of Susan and Therese. What was it I wanted?
It was as if love for me was an abstract state with no history or future. Neither marriage, children nor other practicalities featured in my romantic dreams. It was about passion, desire, and lust. Was it Plato’s dream of unifying the two halves? Or simply the thought of holding a girl, kissing her, making love to her? What else could a young man dream of?
We were on the way from Pescara to Rome, when we
suddenly decided to jump off the train in the little town Carsoli, which is
situated 700 meters above the sea level. There was a guest house opposite of the
station where we rented three inexpensive rooms. It didn’t take long
before we had met half a dozen local youths.
We
strolled around town during Friday afternoon while trying to communicate across
the language barrier. One of the girls, Angelica, was a true beauty. She had
brown eyes and a long wavy golden hair. She had tight beige jeans and a
tight-fitting white sweater that accentuated her breasts. If I had been back in
Stockholm, I would probably not have dared to even look at her, but here I
flirted freely, and she answered my flirt.
At
five Angelica and her friends went home but promised to return. We Nordics sat
down at the guest house’s restaurant to
have dinner. We ordered pasta and wine, which didn’t cost more than 500 lira
per person. The owner joined us and treated us to more wine. Later his wife
came out and joined us too, followed by her two sons who were eight and twelve.
I used the little French I knew to make myself understood and filled in the
blanks with sign language. When I pointed at knives and forks, glasses, plates and colors, the boys enthusiastically answered. Thanks to the wine I was
soon convinced that I spoke Italian well.
We had
just paid for the dinner and thanked our hosts when our new friends returned.
Angelica had changed into a black sweater. She asked if I wanted to take a walk
up to the old castle and I had of course nothing against that. We walked along
a paved street that ran in a spiral towards the top. Now and then we stopped to
admire the view and she posed for pictures, but when I tried to take her hand,
she withdrew it and pointed towards her eyes. This was a small town, and the
walls had both eyes and ears.
Angelica
and I took farewell once we were back at the guest house and I returned to my
room where Hanne sat in front of the mirror in her blue night shirt, slowly
combine her long hair. She didn’t say
anything, but I understood that she was upset.
“It was just a crazy flirt and nothing serious,”
I said as an excuse as I undressed and climbed in under the thick comforter.
Darkness
fell and the room turned cold as we were up in the mountains and there were no
radiators in the room. Hanna started to shiver and said that she was cold. She
came to bed and asked me to warm her. I felt her body against mine and her
breasts against my chest. Then we kissed and it was clear that she wanted to
make love and I was ready, but when I started to remove her panties, she asked
me if I loved her. I could have lied, but it made me uncomfortable. We obviously
played different games, so I stopped, and the interrupted act was replaced by a
conversation. I said that I liked them all three.
“But there must be some difference,” she
suggested.
“Of course, there are differences,” I said but
she wanted a more specific answer.
She wanted to hear that I loved her, only her, but if I had told her that, it would not only have been a white lie, but a rotten lie. The truth was that it was Therese that first attracted me when we met in Venice, but she seemed hard to win over, so I turned my interest towards Linda, who was intelligent, funny, and down to earth. There was something about Hanna that turned me off, maybe her underlying sadness and hunger for love, as well as the fact that she was the one who wanted me, and I allowed her to try to catch me. I kept a certain distance, but it had the opposite effect.
When I woke up on Saturday morning I found on my night table a handwritten copy of a poem by Arne Paasche-Aasen called The Things Nearby. “To Johan from Hanna” it said at the top of the paper. I read it and the message was clear enough. I was a dreamer who didn’t understood to value what I had right in front of me.
Go into your cottage, which, as small as it is
Contains something your heart holds dear
Calling out in the forest gets no answer
Find the way back to what you have
The happiness you seek behind mountains blue
Maybe you have always owned it yourself
You should not chase in a restless circle
But learn to love those nearby things
It was
a fine poem, but I wasn’t ready to enter that small cottage.
We checked out from the guest house at noon and took a hike as they say in Norway. We walked a couple of kilometers up in the mountain until we found a little brook where we set up our tents. I helped the girls wash their hair in the brook’s cold water and then we ate from the packed lunch that the guest house had provided us with. We sat on a slope admiring the view. When the sun had set, we returned to our tents. I slept alone but could not avoid hearing Hanna and Lars laughing in the tent next to mine. Was it her revenge or her need of consolation? I assumed that she was proud and wanted to show me that she didn’t need me.
I felt
distress. Had I done right or wrong? Obviously wrong, but in what way? At
least, not completely wrong. I wanted to turn my soul inside out and wash it
clean. Does my philosophy of life hold up?
The
night was heavy. I had treated her bad and then I didn’t want to pay the bill.
I was thinking of continuing my trip alone. Better to spare the feelings until after the journey.
We returned to town the next morning and had lunch at the guest house. Signora came out and waved to us as we walked to the train station with our backpacks on. My friends had decided to travel east and take a boat to Corfu while I continued west.
I arrived in Rome on Sunday afternoon, had a lousy pizza at a restaurant not far from Termini. By then I had walked around for three hours searching for a place to eat. I was too picky for the simple places and too cheap for the fine ones. While I walked and walked inspecting menus one restaurant after the other started to pull down their metal curtains and suddenly there were nowhere to eat. That’s why I ended up at a pizzeria near the station. I was tired and in a bad mood and had little patience for the city’s chaos and dirt.
A bit later, I took a walk with no other
plan than that I wanted to visit Saint Peter's Basilica, and eventually I was
at Saint Peter’s Square. The line was short, so I entered and soon
found myself standing on the shining marble floor in front of Bernini’s high
altar which is surrounded by four dark corkscrew shaped columns. When I stood
in front of Michelangelo’s Pietà, which was glassed-in, I heard somebody asking
me in Swedish if I was a Swede.
It was
a priest that asked. He was dressed in black and had a white collar around his
neck. He was shorter than me, maybe fifty years old and had a receding
hairline.
“Why is Michelangelo’s sculpture behind glass,”
I asked.
“Oh, that was a terrible thing that happened
last year. A mad geologist attacked the sculpture with a hammer and damaged it
badly,” he said.
“It’s a fantastic sculpture, but isn’t it
strange that she looks so young, too young to have a 33-year-old son,” I said.
“That’s a good observation. Too many tourists
just rush by to check off the items on the list in the guidebook,” he said.
“Are you too a tourist,” I asked.
“No, I work with the Vatican’s secret archive,
which unfortunately isn’t as exciting as it sounds. It’s simply His Holiness’
personal archive.”
“Is that where the Vatican keeps its
pornographic collections?”
“Ha, ha. You’re not the first to ask that, but
it’s a myth, a very old myth. The Vatican does of course have a large art
collection and there are some paintings and sculptures that depicts nude
bodies, but there is no pornographic collection here.”
I
looked skeptically at him.
“If you have time, maybe we could continue our
conversation over a cup of coffee,” he said.
“I’d love to. I was on my way out anyhow,” I
said.
He
took me to a café on Via della
Conciliazone, a street that leads to Saint Peter’s Square. He ordered two
espresso and introduced himself as Mikael Sten and said that he had been a
Jesuit for ten years.
“What do you think of Saint Peter’s Basilica? To
me it’s an antechamber to Heaven,” he said.
“I must admit that it leaves me with mixed
feelings. It’s hard to deny it’s beauty, but it’s also hard to deny that it
represents the feudal system. When I stood in there, I tried to see it as a
poor 16th century farmer would have seen if he for some reason had been allowed
in. What would he have thought of all the splendor? Did he get a sense of Heaven or just another evidence that the rich controlled both the power and the
glory?”
“Now I can hear that you really are a Swede,” he
said. “The Lutherans never liked the Vatican and that makes sense since it was
built to stave off the reformation that at the time was sweeping across
Europe.”
“How come you live in Rome – I mean in the Vatican
State?”
“That’s a long and complicated story. I grew up
during the war and Sweden had already become a secular place where the Lutheran
church didn’t have much to offer when it came to moral guidance. Terrible
things were going on outside our little country, but people didn’t react. They
left it to the government. And if anything was wrong, all that was needed was
to make a new law. There was no need to take a stand and we had no values to
tell us what was right or wrong. That was at least how I felt it as a young man
searching for the meaning of life,” he said.
“It was also my parents’ divorce which in my
eyes was wrong, but in that time, nobody could say that it was wrong.
Everything was relative. My father was a businessman who wasn’t much interested
in religion and moral dilemmas. I think that’s why I was looking for something
to hold onto in a troubled world. And if you asked people about the truth they
only shrugged. I was upset about the world, and I wanted to change it. I wanted
to go against the grain and one of the worst things you could do in Sweden was to
become a catholic. Despite the war, I was lucky to get a chance to live in both
London and New York. I didn’t care for the Anglican Church, but in the US I
met catholic students who seemed to know what they wanted. I realized that I
had been indoctrinated against the catholic church during my entire childhood
and gradually opened-up to new ideas. Another thing was the music, which was a
big part of what attracted me to the catholic church,” he said.
“But the catholic church has been a deeply
reactionary force in history,” I interjected. “I’m thinking of things like the
inquisition. And then we have the sale of indulgencies and the corruption. It
must have been hard to swallow, even if you believe in God.”
“Yes, there were many difficult issues I had to
work through, but I read a lot and had many discussions before I decided
to become a Jesuit. To understand the
inquisition, you must study it in its historic context. It was an era when it
was rare to show tolerance for dissenters. It was also an era when Europe was
under pressure both from internal schisms and external threats like the Mongols
and the Ottomans,” he said.
“The question of the indulgencies was the one I
found hardest to understand. I struggled with the issue for over a year begore
I found an answer I could live with, but I have never felt that I must defend
everything the church says or have done.”
“What did it mean for you to become a catholic
during the war? If I had lived then I would have joined the resistance,” I
burst out.
“That was something I thought of a lot and
that’s why I didn’t want to return to Sweden. I joined the British army in 1943
to fight against Hitler even though I was a pacifist in my heart and soul. They
sent me to the Netherlands where I worked with the resistance and later helped
to track down Nazi officers trying to escape. Not exactly what you might have
expected from a young priest,” he said.
“No, not at all,” I said after a pause. “My
generation is fighting imperialism and injustice without religion and churches.”
“As I see it, religion can be both a positive and negative factor, but I believe that it is very important that it stands for something and dare to tell its members that they have a choice to make. In Sweden religion had become very weak. In my eyes it functioned like a bank where the government gave you a moral account at birth which you could deposit to or withdraw from at will during your life. But nobody cared about the balance! And that was nothing for me,” he said.
My next destination was Île de Ré on the
Atlantic Coast. Susan had said that she was going to be there in the beginning
of August and would love to meet me there, but she didn’t say where.
The
trip from Rome to La Rochelle too over twenty-four hours. I had to switch
trains in Genoa, Marseilles, Bordeaux, and La Rochelle, where I caught a ferry
to the island. Then I hitchhiked to the campground where I pitched my tent and
crawled in to get some rest. When I woke up, I first thought that it was the
next morning, but soon realized that it was still Thursday. The clouds were
gone, and the sun was shining. I took a walk from the campground to the village
Le Bois Plage where I bought camembert and bread that I tucked into my already
stuffed shoulder bag. Then I followed the road towards La Couarde-sur-Mer which
was 4 kilometers away. It was now nine-thirty and it was getting dark, so I
started to hitchhike. I was lucky and immediately got a ride with a violinist
who played in the Bamberg Orchestra. His name was Paul and he told me that it
was the second-best orchestra in Western Germany after the Berliner
Philharmonics.
He was
out to put up posters for the orchestra’s
performances on the island and I offered to help. We drove all the way to Ars
en Ré where we met other members of the orchestra. We continued to a couple of
other cities before we were done with the posters. In Saint Clement he stopped
and had med continue with Bertrand, who was short, had a receding hairline and
looked to be about thirty-five. He let me follow him to his parents’ home which
was nearby.
The
sun had set, and it was dark outside when we walked through a blue gate in a tall,
whitewashed wall. We entered a small courtyard with beautiful vines and flowers that were invisible from the street. In the kitchen a pastel blue window frame
contrasted with the white wall. The ceiling in the living room consisted of
planks held in place by thick cross beams. All the wood was dark and exposed.
The whitewashed walls were here and there interrupted by small alcoves that
housed plants or lamps. Fishing nets and glass balls decorated one side of the
room together with large potted plants.
Bertrand
and I were immediately invited to take a seat at the dinner table which already
seated seven persons. The others had almost finished, but that didn’t matter. A new set of plates were set up and
we were served soup with wine and bread. Then crab that they had caught
themselves. It was hard for me to figure out how to eat crab, but
Bertrand’s mom showed me what to do and then it went well. The crab was followed by camembert cheese and finally a sweet desert.
After dinner, Bertrand and his German girlfriend withdrew to the living room where they started to play flute. Having finished my dinner, I followed them to just sit and digest the food. The mother accompanied us, sat down in an armchair, and began knitting. My night ended with Bernard giving me a ride back to my campground.
When I followed Paul around on Wednesday night, I got the impression that Ars en Ré was a popular hangout for tourists, so I thought it might be a place where I could find Susan. Once I had packed up, I hit the road hitchhiking, but it didn’t go well, so I took a break. Leaned my backpack against one side of a tree and myself against the other. My lunch consisted of a liter of pasteurized milk and two buns that I had bought in Bois Plage. It must have looked idyllic, because a girl called out “Bon appétit!” from a passing car, but the idyll was broken when I suddenly discovered that I sat on an anthill.
It was
equally hard to get a ride when I started again, but suddenly a car stopped. I
didn’t think they stopped for me since it was a
small Renault, but a young and perky girl stepped out of the car and helped me
get my backpack into the luggage compartment. There were already two women, two
teenagers and a small child in the car, but somehow, I managed to find space in
the backseat. The oldest girl had studied English for seven years in school but
could hardly utter a word, so I had to converse in my limited French. They dropped me off at a campground outside Ars, where le patron was friendly and
mighty impressed when he heard about my long journey. He showed his wife my
InterRail pass with all its stamps.
I walked over to Bar de Commerce together with two Frenchmen that stayed in a tent next to mine. They live and work in Paris. One plays the piano, and the other is interested in music technology. They said that there are three places on the island for youth that are not into variety entertainment a la Julien Clerc: Bar Commerce, Café des Colonnes, and the night club Bastion in Saint Martin. This gave me hope that I would be able to find Susan.
Friday, August 3.
I dreamt that I had received a lot of letters from Susan at home in Sweden. They were addressed to various campgrounds and Poste Restante in different cities. All had been forwarded to me.
I got
a ride almost instantly that took me to Sant Martin de Ré. I had breakfast at the citadel. The egg yolks
were blue on the surface, the milk had started to turn, and the grapefruit was
dry. I went around searching for Colonnes for an hour not realizing that I
had passed it by several times. For some stupid
reason I had gotten the impression that the place was called Joker after the
name on the sun umbrellas, so I kept searching while taking photos and looking
around. Eventually I found Café des Colonnes and her I am. It’s two o’clock and
the place is almost empty. I am trying to stretch my second cup of tea,
but the bottom is starting to show.
I have
begun to give up on finding Susan. She had given me the impression
that this was a small island where we easily could find each other, but it
turned out that it was a rather large island which during the high season
accommodates a couple of hundred thousand tourists, and I happened to be there during that season.
It annoyed me that she had enticed me to come here if she didn’t have any intention to meet me, but I didn’t regret visiting Île de Ré. The island is beautiful, almost idyllic. I have visited seven small towns and had a chance to see how ordinary people are living. Now, I’m going to try to catch the 10:35 pm train to Paris and from there I’ll continue to London. If everything goes well, I’ll arrive there on Saturday evening or night.
There is a stench of vomit on the London train. I’m traveling with four Swedes that I met at the station. We fought hard to reserve a compartment, but all were taken. Once on the train we found a luggage room where we sat down on the floor and started to eat breakfast. But it didn’t take more than five minutes before an employee kicked us out, so now we are sitting on the floor in the corridor.
It rained and the youth hostels were full, so we decided to take a night train to Edinburgh instead of paying for a hotel room in London.
We were on the way to the post office to buy stamps when I saw a crowd on the square in front of the Academy. The first was a born-again Christian. He was dressed in a grey coat that was buttoned all the way up. He held his Bible in his left hand while gesticulating vividly with his right hand. He was a natural speaker and had no problem in handling interruptions and questions from skeptical listeners. The audience was a mixed crown, old men, bums picking up cigarette butts, long haired youths, middle aged men in suits and old women. The next speaker was a tall, bearded man around thirty who had a red buff of hair. He was dressed in a Manchester suit with a white napkin in his jacket. He stood on a chair against which he had leaned a placard that read Socialist Party of Great Britain. On the ground in front of him lay small brochures. Then there was a girl with large curly reddish hair and a thick hand-stitched sweater. She spoke passionately about Guru Maharaj Ji who according to her was “a perfect master of love” despite being only fifteen years old. Speaker number four also stood on a chair and gesticulated lively with his right hand while holding a Bible in his left. He was dressed in shirt and tie, had a thin jacket and sideburns that ran along his cheek bones. On his sign it said Protestant Action. He tried energetically to convince the listeners that 95 percent of the population in Northern Ireland were protestants. The fifth speaker was a young man representing the Edinburgh Indo-China Solidarity Committee. He was dressed in a stitched sweater and his brown hair almost reached down to his shoulders. It was hard to stop listening to the speakers, so I came late to my meeting with my friends, but it turned out okay.
I had breakfast at Tommy’s restaurant in Manchester. Sausage, chips & eggs. 25 np. It was good and sufficient. It was hard to get an impression of the city from the little I had seen, but it looked like there was a lot of poverty her. It’s after all an industrial city. Like in Edinburgh, you see grown-ups begging and many bums.
NO PERSON
WEARING JEANS,
OVERALLS OR
SOILED CLOTHES
WILL BE SERVED
IN THIS LOCAL.
(TIE and SHIRT, PLEASE!)
I saw this sign outside a restaurant in Manchester, not far from Town Hall.
It’s nine fifteen and I have wandered around
in Manchester since two in the afternoon. I saw a couple of posters at
Piccadilly Garden about a meeting with Guru Maharaj Ji near Town Hall, and began
walking in that direction. On the opposite sidewalk I saw two black men and two
girls that looked like prostitutes. The men were excited. I followed them with
my eyes until I heard somebody talking on my left. I looked in that direction
and saw a short old man who walked muttering something. I thought he was talking
to himself, but he continued and looked at me. So, I listened. He talked about
immigrants, about that the two girls were not English, but Irish. Many Irish,
Scottish, and Welsh girls went with black men and that was something he didn’t
like.
I
asked for directions to the Town Hall. Then he turned around and accompanied me
there. I assumed that he was homeless. Dressed in a worn-out hobo jacket with a
pullover under, old gray pants and worn-out shoes. His hair was tousled, no
upper teeth, and a week-old stubble. Once at the square we split, but then he
came back, and we sat down at a bench. He complained bitterly that there were
no longer any pure Englishmen because of all the immigrants.
“Manchester is run by the Scots and Irish,” he
said.
Besides
immigrants he hated communism.
“Stay away from the university. Only anarchists
and communists there. The students don’t understand that there must be
authority. They are stupid,” he said.
“Manchester is not a god city. It’s run by
Labour. The people in Manchester are bad. You see the man over there? He is
spying on us. Everybody spies in Manchester.”
“You must be careful here in Manchester. There
are a lot of terrible things happening here. It’s so bad that I hardly dare to
be outside some nights. It’s dangerous. Look out for troublemakers and hold on
to your bags!”
Town
Hall is the center of the city, but it was almost empty when I got there.
“That’s the way it is. People don’t go outside.
They stay indoors and that’s better,” he said.
Two
years ago, he had been to Sweden which he liked since there wasn’t as much race mixing there. Despite his bitter
and racist ideas, I couldn’t but feel some empathy for him as a person. I
thought I could guess how he had become that way. He spoke French and German
besides English. Maybe he had an intellectual job at some point in his life. Maybe he had had an intellectual job at some point. He took me to an international
restaurant, an Esperanto club. On the way there he stopped in front of an
Armenian restaurant and pointed out the Russian wines on display in the window.
“Only communists. A bad place,” he said and
shook his head.
Then
he pointed at the Labour Party’s office.
”You see, just near Town Hall.”
The
Esperanto restaurant was closed, so we continued towards Piccadilly Garden.
During the entire walk, he kept pointing despairingly at Italian, Chinese,
Japanese and Indian restaurants. Finally, we reached The Golden Egg, where I’m now sitting. We pressed each other’s hands.
He tested my strength a bit.
“You’ll be all right. Maybe we’ll meet again
around here sometime.”
“Bye!”
Before
we went our own ways, he had declined my invitation to join me inside. He
pointed to his raged clothes.
At the
Golden Egg I had two cups of tea, two tea sandwiches and two pancakes with
whipped cream and peaches. It came to 39 pennies. Everything was good and the
atmosphere was nice.
In
Piccadilly Garden there are destitute old men and women. Along the back streets
you see ill-dressed men wandering aimlessly. Unemployed? At the bus terminal
next to the park, I walked by a poor old man with a beard that made him look
like Karl Marx. He was trying to sleep standing up, leaning towards a railing,
but he failed over and over. Some of the homeless look miserable indeed. On a
park bench, an old man lies sleeping in the rain. His cap is covering his face,
so I only see his beard. Poor man.
Oxford looks pleasant. The university provides
a medieval impression with its stone buildings and heavy wood doors. The lawns
are trimmed, but you see almost no students around since the autumn semester
has not started yet. Half a dozen swans are swimming in a brook where an old
man who looks like he could be a professor is fishing from a stone bridge.
Other
ways there are a lot of people out and about in the town. Everybody seems to be
on the way somewhere. I can’t sense any
distinct center where one could sit down and chat.
I feel
depressed. The loneliness is starting to irk me.
If you’re not in, then you are out. Completely out.
They aren't even ripe yet, said the fox of the grapes. That’s contempt for the world in a nutshell. There's half
of my bitterness, but I’m not bitter now. Just tired, dirty, sweaty, and a bit
sad. The other half belongs to the world.
This
morning I happened to get into a discussion with some guys selling newspapers
outside a department store. I asked a bald guy in a black leather jacket and
worn-out jeans what his group stood for.
“Revolutionary action,” was his fast and
confident answer. “We’re not going to wait for capitalism to dig its own grave.
Marx showed how capitalism will collapse and that the victory of the
proletariat is inevitable, and Lenin showed that capitalism will not go way by
itself but must be helped to the dustbin of history!”
“But what about the role of the people? Marx and
Engels wrote in the Manifesto that proletarians all over the world must unify in battle, not that a small clique should take over the job of grave
digger,” I said.
“No, no, the working class is so oppressed that
it must be led by an avant-garde who knows how to smash the system,” he said.
“Well, it’s obvious that you unlike both Marx
and Mao have no faith in the masses,” I countered. “We will never reach
socialism if we don’t follow the mass line!”
“You are really naïve! Only by
hitting hard against the core of the system can we move forward,” he said.
“Don’t listen to him! He’s a Stalinist,” a guy
from the second group called out.
He had a burly blond hair and looked a bit like Trotsky with his goatee and round
glasses.
“I don’t know what he stands for, but I can’t
imagine that Marx would have wanted to have anything to do with him had he been
alive today,” I said.
“Are you a socialist,” he asked.
“Of course! I'm fighting for a socialist
Sweden,” I said.
“But there can’t be a socialist Sweden and not
any other socialist country,” he said. “Trotsky realized early that the Russian
revolution only was the first step in a world revolution. The revolution cannot
stay within the borders of a nation. The nation is a bourgeois concept. Haven’t
you read The Permanent Revolution?”
“No, but I’m familiar with Trotsky’s theory, and I do understand why the Russian people didn’t want to enter another war after having won the civil war and the war against the imperialist invaders,” I said.
“If Soviet had followed Trotsky’s line instead
of Stalin’s reactionary opportunism, we would have a socialist Europe by now,”
he said. “And the soviet worker state would not have degenerated into a
bureaucratic dictatorship in the transitional stage between capitalism and
socialism. The dream of socialism in one country is reactionary, objectively
speaking! It doesn’t surprise me that this tendency is so strong in Sweden
where the working class is still dominated by the social democratic
bureaucracy.”
I
tried to argue with him but gave up after half an hour and he returned to
selling Workers of the World.
Sitting
in a café licking my chops after this morning’s
political battles. A girl in my age sat two tables away from me a little while
ago. She looked friendly and we exchanged a couple of shy looks, but I felt
insecure and pulled back.
A
skinny man around thirty-five took a seat diagonally from her at her table
which had four chairs. At first, I didn’t
think about it, but after a couple of minutes he moved to the seat opposite of
hers, whereupon she put out her cigarette and left.
The
man then moved to another table where he still sits, and he is eating a hot dog
with French fries. He splits each fry on the middle before he inserts them in
his mouth. He has tired, starved eyes and a nervous half open mouth. I don’t know if he is a pervert, but the thought came
to me.
At the table next to mine sits a gentleman in a jacket, shirt, and tie. He holds his hands under the table in front of his groin. He had spasms and his body jerked now and then. His head and eyes are shifting here and there, and he has hooked his feet behind the front chair legs.
London, August 9
Is there any reasonable reason why police cars should drive through the parks with the spotlights on to chase away those poor devils who are only trying to sleep? It made me think of Jack London’s The People of the Abyss where he told of his time as a drifter in London’s East End the summer of 1902. He wrote that those in power had decided that homeless people should not be allowed to sleep at night, which is why the beautiful parks are surrounded by tall fences with sharp ends that make it hard to climb over them. Even then homeless were hunted through the night.
As for
me, I had a good night and a good day. I’m
lying in Hyde Park. The sun is shining. I’m tired, dirty and such, but other
ways everything is great. Three Italian girls are laying three yards from me.
One of them is very pretty and she flirts with me, but she does it in the
safety of being with her friends.
Sitting in the restaurant on the boat to Ostende. My new Swedish friends are (I hope) on the other boat on the way to the same harbor.
Last night
I planned to sleep at the Victoria Station. Klaus (whom I had met in Cardiff),
and a couple of other Germans had said that they were going to hang at the
station until it was time to sleep. I took a stroll through Soho and came back
half an hour past midnight. Klaus and his friends were not there. I walked
around searching for them. I noticed a black man around 25 following me, so I
stopped and turned around. He then came up to me and asked if I was Danish. He
said his name was Barry, and he was trying to help a Danish guy find his
friend. We started to chat, and I told him that I planned to sleep here at the
station, but that I couldn’t find my
German friends. Barry thought he had seen my German friends being kicked out of
the station and suspected that they had gone to a place run by the Salvation
Army where they let you sleep on the floor. After a while he said that I could
follow him home and sleep there. I said okay, relieved that I wouldn’t need to
sleep alone, but worrying at the same time if I may jump from the ashes into
the fire. But he looked friendly, so I followed him to the garage where he had
his car parked, a Japanese car. It took a while to get to his place, which was
in an apartment complex in southeast London. He said that he worked at an insurance company.
“It’s not that exciting, but it’s a good job,”
he said.
He
seemed content with his life overall and his ideas matched his way of life
well, or as Marx would say, his social existence. He was a bit conservative in an
unpolitical way.
“Poor people don’t need to be poor or go
unemployed, but that’s the way they want it,” he said.
Once
we had arrived in his apartment, he asked me if I cared for some tea, but I
declined since it was so late. Then he offered me a whiskey as a nightcap
before I laid down in the couch and fell asleep.
In the
morning he made med a breakfast with tea, toast, and an egg before driving me
to a bus stop where we said goodbye and exchanged addresses. He continued to
his job and I to the City.
When I
strolled around in Soho, I had locked up all my stuff except the sleeping bag
in a locker. On the way to The Mall that runs through a park towards Buckingham
Palace, I reached a broad stairway that led up to a square with a statue on a
pillar. I walked alone on Regent Street from Piccadilly Circus to Waterloo
Place. The dark street was desolate, why I held my pocketknife half opened in
my right hand, for safety’s sake. Suddenly
a man came running across the street and stopped in front of me. He was about
fifty and his shirt was untucked.
“Ye see, I gotta have some fix, ye see?”
He
pointed at his arm och asked if he could get some money for drugs. He looked
more miserable than desperate and didn’t
seem to be violent. I showed him my sleeping bag and told him that I was going
to sleep at the station because I didn’t have any money. He understood and kept
on chasing money for his fix.
During
Thursday I tried to find a Marxist-Leninist bookstore in London. I took the
subway to Elephant & Castle and walked 4-500 numbers along first New, then
Old Kent Road, where I had heard that CPB(m-l) had a bookstore. Once there a
Japanese guy opened, and I stepped in. There were a few things that made me
skeptical. For example, there were only pictures of Mao and books by Mao in the
window display. It was the same thing in the bookstore. I asked him what they
are doing, and he mentioned “large
actions” with over two hundred participants, which didn’t sound like a lot in a
city with over ten million people. After a while I understood that it wasn’t
CPB(m-l) but CPE(m-l), that is not Communist Party of Britain, but Communist
Party of England.
The
only benefit of the visit was that he gave me the address to the Bellman
Bookshop, which is run by CPB(m-l). The supply of literature there was much
more varied, and it wasn’t just their own
publications. I talked with the guy there for an hour. He said that the other
group was a CIA-supported sect. I bought a copy of CPB(m-l)’s paper The Worker,
a couple of programmatic brochures and some other stuff. Then I took the
Underground to Oxford Circus where I took lots of photos while I plowed through
the mass of humanity along Oxford Street on the way to Hyde Park.
Despite everything I had heard about Amsterdam, I was on the one hand surprised at its many potheads, and on the other of how beautiful and nice its parks are. During my first day I walked and walked until hunger forced me to stop for something to eat. By then it was six in the evening. There was an organ grinder outside the restaurant, but his music was drowned out by hundreds of sparrows in a tree next to him. The man lacked a front tooth, but his eyes glittered.
On Sunday afternoon I took a
walk through the Vondelpark, taking photos of people taking it easy, sunbathing,
smoking weed, or simply sleeping off their hangovers. Here and there you noticed the sweet smell of hashish. After a while I found myself in front of a
group of hippies. My gaze locked onto an incredibly beautiful black girl with
an afro a la Angela Davis. She was one of several beautiful young girls who gathered around a bearded hippie who must have been at least 60. He had a scarf
around his head and long necklaces hanging down in front of his psychedelic
shirt.
He had
a pair of congas in his lap and shook a tambourine with his manicured hands
that had painted nails. I noticed that he kept looking around as if to check
his flock, which besides the beautiful young girls included a pair of twin boys
looking to be about eight years old. The hippie family was surrounded by a
group of spectators. Some were curious kids looking as if they wanted to join
the party, but there were also conservatively dressed older ladies and
gentlemen who observed the spectacle with a mix of surprise and disgust.
I moved
around taking photos of the hippie and his harem. When the film was finished, I
sat down on a park bench to put in a new roll. There was already a man sitting
there. He had curly hair, round glasses and looked to be around thirty.
“Excuse me for asking, but where are you from,”
he asked.
“Sweden, Stockholm,” I said.
“What are you doing in Amsterdam? Are you a
photographer?”
“No, not if you mean by trade. I’ve been
interrailing in Europe for a month and I’m now on my way home.”
“So, it wasn't the pot that
attracted you,” he said laughing.
“No, no. It sounds like you’re from the states.
Where from in the US?”
“D.C. I’m a professor at Georgetown
University, and I’m studying today’s European youth culture.”
“I wouldn’t call this youth culture. It’s a drug
culture,” I said. “Hippies are passive. They smoke their weed and don’t care
about the world. We have hippies in Sweden too. If they ever tried to do
anything, they have given up by now.”
“The drugs do play a role, but I think it’s
about more than that,” the professor said. “Why do you think we have all these
young people who are floating around and don’t know what to do with their
lives? It’s not the first time in history we’ve seen young people adrift, but
it was usually after a big war or catastrophe. Now we have middle class kids,
young people who have grown up in comfort and studied at university. It’s like
they can’t find a way into society. Their parents were happy to settle in the
suburbs, at least in the U.S., but to their children this steady middle class
life seems bored and meaningless.”
“Well, maybe it’s because the society is
fundamentally unfair. All that the young are seeing is how the capital owners
exploit the poor and conduct imperialist wars around the world. Why would they
want to be part of that society? We must change the society and you don’t do
that with hashish.”
“I agree with you that it’s not easy to find a
place in the world we live in. It was probably easier before. If your parents
were farmers, you would if you were lucky go to school for a couple of years
and then start working next to your dad if you were a boy and helping your mom
around the house if you were a girl. The step between childhood and adulthood
was very short,” he said.
“But it was still the same system. It was
capitalism, even if the technology made it necessary to provide the laborers
with education.”
“One could say that the young became alienated
and are unable to see themselves filling a role in either production or society
in general,” he said.
“That’s right. Are you a Marxist?”
“Ha, ha! We are all Keynesians as Nixon said,
but we are not all Marxists, at least not yet.”
“All Keynes did was to try to save capitalism.
His theories could not stop the Vietnam war.”
“One could say that the war was just what the
doctor prescribed. The war both fed and employed people at the same time. You
don’t need to be a Marxist to see the dark logic behind this, but I am neither
an economist nor political scientist, but a psychologist, so I don’t want to
say too much about things I don’t know much about. But there are psychologists
who are trying to understand the society and social trends in a broader
perspective. Have you heard of Kenneth Kenniston?
“No, I have not. What is he doing?”
“He believes that we have reached a new stage in
human life, a stage that lies in between childhood and adult life. We do of course
talk about youth all the time, but he wants to expand the concept of youth in a
way that allows us to understand the great changes that have occurred in the
US and Western Europe after the war. In the 1950s and 60s many experts
assumed that young people were well integrated into society, except for minor
protests here and there, and marginal groups like the beatniks. However, in the 1960s something happened that resulted in today’s society and its youth
culture. It’s like a whole generation pulled out of the society emotionally and
psychologically.”
“On the other hand, we have the antiwar
movement, the struggle against racism and police brutality and the Black
Panthers. And the stagflation shows that the Keynesian model doesn’t work
anymore. I don’t think psychological models explains much here,” I said.
“Maybe not, but I don’t think economic factors
can explain why the youth rebellion grew for more than a decade. Kenniston is
sympathetic to the youth protesters, but he is looking for an explanation to
the fact that the protests came from youths that in a historic perspective are
relatively rich. Why was the society not able to integrate them? He is looking
at real social changes, like the fact that young people go to school for much
longer periods than ever before. People used to be able to land a job after a
few years of schooling and be able to start a family and have children at 22,
but now we have millions of youths who have left childhood behind and gone
through puberty, but still feel lost and reject the entire model for how to
live. During the second world war, many young people found meaning in fighting
Hitler, and during the Cold War it was Stalin and communism that was the enemy.
Since then, it’s like the lines between good and evil have become ever more
blurred.”
“I would say that the lines have cleared
considerably. The Vietnamese have shown us where evil comes from,” I said.
“Maybe so, but this is also a result of a whole
generation of youths taking seriously the Cold War propaganda saying that it
was freedom of choice that separated the free world from the Soviet Union. The
revolt may have been caused by young people adopting ideas that originally was
not intended for domestic consumption, which would be rather ironic.”
“So, they should not have assumed that freedom
was for use at home?”
“No, what I mean is that there are different
dimensions of freedom. The Cold War was about freedom of the press, free
elections, and free markets, but in the 1960s the concept of freedom was
extended to include personal freedom, clothes, haircuts, drugs, and rock and
roll. And then we got the pill, which launched the sexual revolution. The
meaning of freedom exploded, and society didn’t know what to do.”
“But that was maybe just bread and circuses? The
war continued and 1968 faded out.”
“You could say that 1968 faded out if you by
that means the threat from an immediate revolution, but society kept changing
even though the older generation didn’t understand what was happening. Few
parents understood it and that was also true for many teachers and politicians.
Remember that all this happened at the same time as television became common
and TV news brought the world into people’s living rooms. You could see Kenney
murdered and civil rights leaders beaten bloody by racists. And the Vietnam war
also entered the living room every day. It would have been strange if we did
not have a youth revolt, if young people had not protested the war, against
society and their parents’ lifestyles. Neither should we underestimate the
enormous social and economic changes that happened in the U.S. during the first
half of the 20th century. Millions of people were uprooted by war and
conflicts, the economic and technological development. The peasant society
became the industrial society and then the service society.”
“The white middle class in the U.S. moved after
the war out to new suburbs where everybody was white, people dressed in the
same way, and drove the same cars, had the same jobs, dreams, and watched the
same TV-shows. When their children became teenagers, they borrowed their dad’s
car and made out in the backseat, but over time it became obvious that they
didn’t know that to do with their new freedoms and comfortable life in the
suburbs. What was the meaning with life? The grownups were proud over their
material wealth and compared to their parents’ life and maybe with the
depression years, but their kids wanted something different and new.”
“Life must have been about more than sitting
home watching TV,” I said.
“Have you heard of Ozzie and Harriet?”
“Aussie and what?”
“The TV-show.”
“No, I have no idea about that. We watched the
Lucy Show, Dick van Dyke, and Bonanza when I was a kid.”
“Well, Ozzie and Harriet was a TV-show about a
typical American family, a white middle class family. Their kids would never
have protested for or against anything. Everything was fine and got better
every year. But then the Vietnam war entered the picture and then Kent State
where four students were shot to death. To me, that event was enough to burst
the bubble that Ozzie and Harriet lived in, because it was in a way as if it
was their kids that were shot to death on that neat lawn in Ohio.”
“And that’s why you have all these hippies, like
here in Vondelpark?”
“I think it’s part of the explanation, but we
also have all these youths that went out and protested the war and injustices.”
“And we are changing the world.”
“I hope you will get a chance to visit America
one day. It can be hard to see now, but America is so much more than what you
see on TV. Remember that the four students who got killed and the four who got
wounded were Americans.”
“I
agree totally with that. We’re not anti-American. It’s a bitter irony that the
U.S. which had to fight for its independence against the British imperialism is
now bombing Vietnam who is fighting for the same thing.”
“I’m with you to 100 percent there. It’s
terrible and a huge moral failure,” he said and looked at his watch. “But I
just remembered that I have a meeting in half an hour, so I have to run, but it
was very interesting to talk to you. If you ever come to D.C. in the future, I
hope you get in touch. See you!“
August 13
Back
in Sandtorp. Dad is frying flounders that he has rinsed and dipped in egg and
breadcrumbs. We eat them with fresh potatoes and dill that Mom had grown. I
helped her set the table and open a bottle of red wine. She had taken the bus
from Stockholm last Friday so that she could be here to celebrate Dad’s birthday and help him pack up before they
drive back home.
We eat in the living room as usual. It used to be Dad’s studio before he had a new one build next to the main building. When
they bought the house fifteen years ago, it was just a small red cottage with
two small rooms, an old wood stove and a hand pump in the kitchen for the
water. The toilet was a tall and narrow outhouse that we kids were scared to
visit once darkness fell. From the dining room table, you could see all the way
to the Baltic Sea. You could see the pastures with their stone walls and behind
them the headland where the fisherman Sten docked every morning with his catch.
That’s where Dad bought the flounders he had just fried. Sten was the
oldest son of Sture, the farmer who we bought the cottage from.
I have spent almost every summer here since I was small, so it's a familiar place.
During the peak season we played with children of summer guests who stayed at
the guest house next door. We played cowboys and Indians and hide and seek.
Once Per and I climbed up on the roof over the pig pen, but the roof was only
resting on two sides and suddenly we slid right down into the thick black mud where two enormous sows lived. We landed on all four and were scared
to death, but we managed somehow to get out of our predicament.
Sandtorp
is full of memories. I remember how we brothers once caught a frog and rushed
into the bedroom to show Dad, who had just taken a nap, but the frog slipped
out of my grip and landed on Dad’s
pillow. And he wasn’t as fond of the frog as we were.
On
another occasion Dad suggested that we should build a pirate ship and began to
sketch it out. I really loved the idea and began to dig a big whole in the
ground right in front of the living room. I figured that it was best to start
with the cargo room and with time it became a large and ugly pit that we never
managed to undo.
During
a rainy day when I and my brothers complained more than usual about having
nothing to do, Dad declared that we were going to have an adventure.
“But Dad, it’s raining outside,” we called out
in horror.
“Don’t tell me that you can’t have an adventure
just because it’s raining,” he said. “What kind of adventure would that be? Put
on your raincoats and rubber boots and let’s go.”
Half
an hour later we wandered along the gravel road passed the guest house and into
a forest where Dad stopped, looked around a told us to be completely quiet.
”I think we’ve found a good place for our camp,”
he said and pointed at the forest on the right side of the road.
He
climbed over the stone wall, and we traipsed behind in a state of shock. Were
you even allowed to do this? What if somebody saw us? A hundred yards or
so into the forest Dad cut down a small tree with the ax he had brought with
him. The rain was increasing, but that didn’t
matter because we were now part of the adventure and eager to help setting up
camp. Dad trimmed the branches and twigs from the small tree he had cut down
and tied it between two other trees that stood close to each other and then
attached a tarp over the contraption and fastened the loose ends in the ground
with the twigs he had cut. Then he placed another tarp on the ground under the
first and told us to crawl in under the rain cover. There we sat listening to
the raindrops hitting the tarp above us.
“Are you hungry, boys,” he asked and took out
the sandwiches he had made, three Coca Cola and a thermos flask with coffee.
“Dad, why can’t we always have adventures,” Per
asked once he finished his sandwich.
“Well, if it’s going to be a true adventure you
can do it too often,” he answered.
When
the rain stopped, we packed up and traipsed home.
During
dinner, I told my parents about my trip. Later mom disappeared into the kitchen
and when she came back it was with coffee and a birthday cake that she had
baked herself. It was a sponge cake covered with whipping cream and
strawberries from the guest house’s
strawberry field.
This
was in the middle of August when the long summer days were not as long anymore,
but it was only seven o’clock, so we
took a walk along the pastures as we often did during the summer evenings.
I
remember when he during one of those walks pointed a cluster of trees a couple
of miles away.
“What color is that” he asked.
“Green,” I said.
“Look again! What kind of green are you seeing?
How many green colors can you detect?”
I took
a second look and realized that there were many nuances of the same color and
that some trees could be described as brown, dark blue or blackish green.
“If all you see is green, blue, and yellow, then
you haven’t looked that closely. You must be open to impressions as you face
them,” he said.
That was a lesson he had learned from impressionists when he studied in Paris twenty-five years ago.
August 14
I’m sitting outside in a sun lounger. Dad is painting and Mom is looking after the garden she created five years ago. The sun is shining and its warm and nice. I enjoy sitting here looking at the clouds, but I also know that I must continue my journey through life.
I’m needed in the
world.
My Future is with the People is the first part of novel with the working title Shifting Passions.
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