Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Sanguine by Paul Cameron Brown
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Sanguine

    By Paul Cameron Brown



    "The clock indicates the hour but what does enternity indicate?"
        Whitman

    Imagine, being told cubism isn't painting. That
    Beardsley didn't die at 26, unheralded as a boy genius
    or Corot didn't come to Paris after all.

    Imagine, The Louvre without a rooftop, the
    intelligentsia sitting down to a ragged table
    surrounded by sawdust intellects, Proust not being
    able to write his name.

    Now that's splendour    -    that's in-depth "feeling".
    That's emotion to pull your socks or catch the bus on
    a brittle day.

    It's easy. Try to "feel" the event. It's 1896. People are
    perturbed (or so we are told) because the century's
    getting old. Time's rushing by. There's an alarm clock
    set to buzz at eternity's gate, Midnight 1900.

    In probing the malaise that hit Europe circa 1881,
    psychologists would have us believe the world grew
    despondent. Despondent because a whole hundred
    year cycle was about to elapse; despondent because
    life itself was running out. Those poor Edwardians!
    Poor lovers of the elegant, the late Victorians, belle
    epoquers. A penny for their thoughts when
    confronting a Picasso without the vantage of
    hindsight.

    If Europe and its child bride, America, grew uneasy in
    the declining years of the past century. How then our
    era? (These same psychologists pinpoint people's
    spirits rise in the opening years of a new century.)
    Now we're poised for the "really big one": the
    cataclysm. What a boon for the absurdists. Peaches
    and cream    -    not just one century dangling but the
    culmination of ten.

    There's even a word for it. Millenium, I'll say it again.
    Better yet, a mere two millenia since Christ's
    departure, we are poised again on the threshold. Half
    & half. Like a party twelve pack    -    six of one, half
    dozen of the other.

    Remember. when contemplating your ennui or
    malaise (whichever word is currently most
    fashionable), you can hardly figure for less. Eternity's
    given to you, my peers, a singular opportunity. And
    from what we know of the 20th century. it should be a
    grand slam homer. Already the clean-up batter is
    staged for action. The bat looms over the plate.
    There's so much bad news it's enough to make an
    optimist greedy. After all, with this much horror there
    is caused only for danse macabre celebrations.

    1985. Only 15 years left before the digital watch rolls
    over. before the cannon with the flower pops out.

    Those forward looking voyeurs of hundred years
    back must have felt cheated when mentally reversing
    their lot with the denizens of the 20th century.

    Page 13
    In 1885, you could only gripe about the aging process
    of a single tenth of one component. In 1985, you've got
    that and the Millenia. Trendy things like atmospheric
    pressure, negetive ions, adverse body rhythms and a
    welter of other pseudo impressive formula abound to
    help out in your witchhunt.

    Surprise. 1066 saw comets, omens. signs coded in
    stars speeding ecross the sky    -    a host of ditlurbing.
    natural phenomena to boot. The vigilant saw meteors
    at Caesar's, death.

    The National Enquirer predicts Australia will break
    into the sea. Californians will be upstaged. The
    futurists will all need waterwings. The Club of Rome
    hints the next years auger more chilling holocausts.

    Everywhere, survival scenarios proliferate. Pro-lifers
    will rearrange proverbial deck chairs on the
    Titanic. Soothsayers will become all the rage as we
    plot myriad escapes. A year's supply of canned goods,
    anyone?

    1885 has a lot to teach us. Umbrellas, a gentle ennui
    like fine mist compounded by traffic in & out of the
    Moulin Rouge. Perhaps a surfeit of absinthe helps just
    as its equivalent does today. "Cheer up, there will
    always be an England" doesn't sound so bad after all.

    And there's always that one recruiting poster, "What
    did you do in the Great War, daddy"?



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