I was almost on top of it, the giant hoarding-sized advert, over a WH Smith and a Leonidas, I think. More correctly, it was almost on top of me.
On the poster a men's shaver, with a fold-out LCD screen. This was in Terminal 4, and it didn't, for more than a full minute, seem unreasonable that such a thing should exist. Now I can't remember what it really was.
It was very early in the morning. Perhaps terminals really are termini, where everything ends. Purgatory will be supplied with Harrods concessions, Sock Shop, Tie Rack, Zara, false Irish bars, mutant electronic goods outlets, internet at one Euro for five minutes.
Imagine despite having, at the direction of the Archangel Gabriel, taken your jacket, belt and shoes off and put them into the x-ray machine, the gates of Heaven emit an accusatory bleep as you attempt to pass through. Cherubim and Seraphim give you the pat-down looking for house keys, a chunky watch, stray coinage. But there's nothing for it, something in you is ferrous and it's downstairs for you, they can't be too careful these days.
My plane taxied with such conviction, and so far, parallel to the A5, outrun by cars and lorries, that it resembled an escape attempt. Only by remaining ground-bound can an aircraft evade its destiny, but where would it go? And what would it do when it got there? Change its name, have its KLM-blue sprayed over, get a job as a bus? Could it ever lose itself in town the size of Hoofdorp, this only lonely bird of its species?
Words, from a mostly metrocentric perspective. See Metrocentricity for pictures.
30 September 2008
28 September 2008
Nederlands a.u.b., I need the practice
I know enough of the language now that not every person who sells me coffee instantly switches to English. Perhaps they are more indulgent these days. I understand the simplest exchanges.
Street parallel to Overtoom, late afternoon. Two children, a boy facing a girl on a bicycle. They are about seven or eight years old, the bicycle is scuffed and blue.
He says: 'Annie... Annie, I...'
He is looking at the girl, but also around and about, the way children will. She is staring intently straight ahead, as children sometimes do. His hand is tentatively on the crossbar of the bike. She does not answer him.
He says again: 'Annie...'
She shouts: 'Let go of my bicycle!'
By now I've passed them, I don't see their faces and I don't look back, but I hear him say: 'Annie, it is my bicycle.'
Street parallel to Overtoom, late afternoon. Two children, a boy facing a girl on a bicycle. They are about seven or eight years old, the bicycle is scuffed and blue.
He says: 'Annie... Annie, I...'
He is looking at the girl, but also around and about, the way children will. She is staring intently straight ahead, as children sometimes do. His hand is tentatively on the crossbar of the bike. She does not answer him.
He says again: 'Annie...'
She shouts: 'Let go of my bicycle!'
By now I've passed them, I don't see their faces and I don't look back, but I hear him say: 'Annie, it is my bicycle.'
17 September 2008
Communication of a kind, or a humble contribution to London Fashion Week
Some time ago I was the guest of, among other creatures in the household, a mostly magnificently white cat (I say mostly, he was equipped with a dark coloured tail so as to be located easily in snowdrifts, etc, and a Gorbachevian patch on the forehead for aesthetic purposes). He resided with his sister, an elegant mute with an eating disorder blending bulimia with an appetite for electrical wiring. I believe they originated in Bushwick, or thereabouts.
Anyway, this feline was in the habit of shedding his brilliant raiment about the place, liberally, as a means of self-expression. Irresistably adherent, this fur of his, so all visitors carried out into the world his traces, and thus his fame spread, by the medium of subway and taxi seats and the general crush of the crowd.
I'm only reminded of this as I found a pair of jeans today that for several years had escaped the attentions of the lint roller kindly despatched to me by his human companion. They are, in theory, black. But, in practice, due to my dear acquaintance, not. Sentiment dissuades me from attacking them with adhesive rotary contraptions. I'll wear them as they are, almost a furry beast in their own right. I'll be sure to sit down a lot on public transport and in pubs and people's homes. The coating of fine white hairs on my own clothing won't be much dimished, but enough of their number will transfer to the garments of others. I'm just a humble disciple and courier, really.
Anyway, this feline was in the habit of shedding his brilliant raiment about the place, liberally, as a means of self-expression. Irresistably adherent, this fur of his, so all visitors carried out into the world his traces, and thus his fame spread, by the medium of subway and taxi seats and the general crush of the crowd.
I'm only reminded of this as I found a pair of jeans today that for several years had escaped the attentions of the lint roller kindly despatched to me by his human companion. They are, in theory, black. But, in practice, due to my dear acquaintance, not. Sentiment dissuades me from attacking them with adhesive rotary contraptions. I'll wear them as they are, almost a furry beast in their own right. I'll be sure to sit down a lot on public transport and in pubs and people's homes. The coating of fine white hairs on my own clothing won't be much dimished, but enough of their number will transfer to the garments of others. I'm just a humble disciple and courier, really.
16 September 2008
There is no need to apologise, for the pain has somewhat abated
Last night, walking home, about two-ish, smell of something like creosote in the air around Portland Place, as if RIBA and the BBC had just redone their garden fences for the winter.
On Baker Street, Indian couple, looking lost, asking for directions to the night buses, I think they expected them to all be in one place. Turned out they wanted to get to Wembley so pointed them up to Marylebone Road, but really wanted to give them the cash for a taxi. They did look so very young and disorientated and the 18's a bit sht at the best of times and probably doesn't improve with an N prefix, but I couldn't think of a way to offer.
A fox was zig-zagging in and out of the pillars at the front of the Swiss embassy, I'm sure it was doing it for fun, a sort of nocturnal slalom. It will look good on their CCTV tapes.
On Baker Street, Indian couple, looking lost, asking for directions to the night buses, I think they expected them to all be in one place. Turned out they wanted to get to Wembley so pointed them up to Marylebone Road, but really wanted to give them the cash for a taxi. They did look so very young and disorientated and the 18's a bit sht at the best of times and probably doesn't improve with an N prefix, but I couldn't think of a way to offer.
A fox was zig-zagging in and out of the pillars at the front of the Swiss embassy, I'm sure it was doing it for fun, a sort of nocturnal slalom. It will look good on their CCTV tapes.
10 September 2008
On the Large Hadron Collider
There was always the hope, this morning, that it would go mildly wrong and the scientists would turn on Andrew Marr and offer him up to the gods as a placatory sacrifice. Of course I don't believe for one moment that today was the first time they had tried it out, the thing's probably been up and running for ages. To begin with there would have been a lot of faffing about, with dialogue boxes popping up saying 'cannot find drivers for new hardware', and they'd have lost the set-up CD that came with the thing (and you can imagine how much packaging there'd be to go rooting through). Then there'd be a good twenty minutes phoning the helpdesk in Mumbai at 2.19CHF a minute, who would finally tell them to do something really simple like switch off the anti-virus or the screensaver.
Sorry to be banging on about this, but it looks as though I shall have to have that meeting after all. Anyone who has read Orwell's account of being called upon to shoot a Burmese elephant will understand my feelings.
I know there are consolations. My father had high hopes for his runner beans next year and, though he would not say so aloud, his carrots. I may yet see 'Whistlejacket' restored to its rightful place in the National Gallery. I've got about thirty-five quid to get through on my Oyster card. There'll be a big new Waitrose opening on the Edg Rd in December, just where Woolies used to be.
But then, but then. Palace have got off to a really poor start this season and prospects aren't good. I've still got to get around to arranging some arcane bank account thing. Lots of laundry needs doing, and most of what is clean needs ironing. Have been invited to a friend's wedding in October, really they're both fine people but I'd rather not. And, again, that meeting.
So if it can still go proper tits-up, preferably between now and about half-three tomorrow afternoon, I wouldn't entirely mind.
Sorry to be banging on about this, but it looks as though I shall have to have that meeting after all. Anyone who has read Orwell's account of being called upon to shoot a Burmese elephant will understand my feelings.
I know there are consolations. My father had high hopes for his runner beans next year and, though he would not say so aloud, his carrots. I may yet see 'Whistlejacket' restored to its rightful place in the National Gallery. I've got about thirty-five quid to get through on my Oyster card. There'll be a big new Waitrose opening on the Edg Rd in December, just where Woolies used to be.
But then, but then. Palace have got off to a really poor start this season and prospects aren't good. I've still got to get around to arranging some arcane bank account thing. Lots of laundry needs doing, and most of what is clean needs ironing. Have been invited to a friend's wedding in October, really they're both fine people but I'd rather not. And, again, that meeting.
So if it can still go proper tits-up, preferably between now and about half-three tomorrow afternoon, I wouldn't entirely mind.
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