DFL

Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
RSS Feed
View Profile
« January 2008 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31
You are not logged in. Log in
Entries by Topic
All topics  «
Friday, 11 January 2008
Carving The Fish

 

 The fish had been poached perfectly and Rachel turned from her atlas to scrutinise its potential edibility.  Bill had prepared it for her - and had sprinkled several herbs and whole peppercorns over it.  Bill was currently her Ex.  But they were still fast friends. 

 

.            Bill taught geography which was Rachel’s worst subject at school -- but she enjoyed the shape of maps more for their aesthetic quality than for their representation of reality.  She hated reality.

 

              The atlas she had been browsing through was one of Fantasy Worlds, where all literary maps had been collected together.  Tolkien’s Middle Earth.  Thomas Hardy’s Wessex.  Lewis Carroll’s Wonderland.  Samuel Butler’s Erewhon.  James Hilton’s Shangri-La.  Cervantes’ La Manche.  And so on.  Rachel adored poring over them with studious grins – lovingly tracing their margins, imagining herself in the various purlieus of mindscape. 

 

            “You want to read a real atlas one day, Rachel,” announced Bill as he carved the fish: thick-slivering fillet after fillet upon each of their plates. 

 

            “I’ve always wondered how anyone reads a map?”

 

“Real places on maps are like words, too. Full of meaning, nuance, history, language...”

 

“Well, this bloody place we live in is not spelt properly then!” Rachel joked with a wince of seriousness.

 

            The reason for them falling out as soul mates had been caused by their lack of sympathy regarding these very maps.  Bill was fascinated by the salt-of-the-earth disciplines of physical geography.  Political geography, too.  Brown contours that swirled around outlandishly tall peaks.  The bright primary colours dividing chance nations.  The pastel ones depicting exports, customs, geological features or striations, irrigation projects, hydroelectric dams, forestry conservation preoccupations and so on. 

 

 

          But Rachel loved nothing better than the more nebulous worlds that occupied her precincts of thought. 

 

 

            She grabbed the fish knife and, in a desultory fashion, prodded her share of the mutual meal.  

 

 

           Bill, by now, had taken a whip from his wide-mouthed briefcase.  It was a snaky, quirky terrier of a whip.  It snapped and coruscated.  It almost had a life of its own. 

 

 

            Bill positioned it on the table in the map-outline of the place whence the fish traditionally derived. 

 


Posted by wordonymous at 4:47 PM EST
Updated: Friday, 11 January 2008 4:49 PM EST
Post Comment | Permalink

View Latest Entries