Photos of a private version of my collaborations, printed by someone in 2008 who then transferred the stories that were shown off-line into these two volumes that he owns. Only two copies of each volume exist, his copy and the one he kindly sent me out of the blue in 2008.
Read Them, some linked on this site…
‘THE HORN’S LAST RITE’ — my collaborations with Margaret B. Simon
– fiction collaborations conducted transatlantically by paper post in the early nineteen nineties: https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/collaborations-with-marge-simon/
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My collaborations with Tim Lebbon over a similar period, group-entitled as LET’S EAT MONSTERS: https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/collaborations-with-tim-lebbon/
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Meanwhile, a book of many other different one-to-one collaborations during the same period: AFTER HIRAETH: https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/collaboration-book/
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Wordhunger Multi-Collaborations published here: http://www.lulu.com/shop/d-f-lewis/wordhunger/paperback/product-20476726.html
—————-
and Collaborations with Stuart Hughes entitled BUSY BLOOD here: http://exaggeratedpress.weebly.com/busy-blood.html
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Collaborations with my late father: ONLY CONNECT and HARVEST TIME: http://nemonymous123456.wordpress.com/megazanthus-press/
Filed under Uncategorized
Below are links to many of the collaborations with DFL ,
IF ANY LINK IS BROKEN, PLEASE CONTACT dflewis48@hotmail.com
“Two candles held close together shine brighter than two held apart.” from THE TEARS OF THE GODS by Ron Weighell (Passport Levant 2011) – a constituent of the TARSHISHIM Box.
Below are many of the collaborations with DFL over the years, some previously published, others not.
The name in brackets after each story is the author with whom DFL collaborated on that story.
In no particular order.
=====================================================
THE STORY COLLABORATIONS OF
DF LEWIS (1948- ) AND GORDON LEWIS (1922 – 2007)
THAT DO NOT APPEAR IN THE ‘ONLY CONNECT’ BOOK
charade
the last home game
the crime
matilda
a soul’s insurance
a feeding of the fire
connie
freighted by frights
secret ancestry
strangers knight
optimum pose
rain rain
blue murder
harvest time
a man to mean to be me
Above stories are now in the HARVEST TIME collection HERE.
======================================
Twelve collaborations with Tim Lebbon:
DIRTY PIPES (Peeping Tom 1999)
SQUALID FINGERS (Strix 1998)
WANDERING PIANOS (Blood From Stone 1999)
WASTED MEALS (Dread 1999)
SORDID LIMBS (Nasty Piece Of Work 1997)
WORDLESS WAFFLES (The Dream Zone 1999)
INKY STORIES (Hadrosaur Tales 2001)
SPITEFUL TABLES (Imelod 1999)
EMPTY BREAKFASTS (fantasque 2000)
DEAD PETS (unpublished)
SHED HAIR (unpublished)
PRESUMPTIVE SPIRITS (unpublished)
=============================================
Fifty collaborations with Wordhunger linked from here:
http://nemonymous.tripod.com/word_hunger/index.blog/1769656/wordhunger-individual-links/
Tale With An Unknown Collaborator c 1999 (any claims?)
https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/unknown-collaborator/
————————————————————————————————-
HERE NOW – collected collaborations with Stuart Hughes (in 2012):
http://weirdmonger.blogspot.com/2007/08/horns-last-rite.html
the horn’s last rite (Margaret B Simon)
http://www.ravenelectrick.com/ssraven/illusion.html
illusion (Anthea Holland)
http://www.sabledrake.com/2000a/purgatory.htm
the polish and the purgatory (Anthea Holland)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2004/09/02/
remission (Anthea Holland)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2004/09/04/
tungus (Jeff Holland)
http://wordonymous.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1810921/pyramid-selling/
pyramid selling (Jeff Holland)
twilight (Anthea Holland)
http://weirdmonger.blogdrive.com/archive/241.html
not even in legend (Anthea Holland)
http://augusthog.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1812973/cathy-come-home/
cathy come home (Anthea Holland)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2007/02/08/
a knack for knuckles (Jeff Holland)
http://weirdtongue.tripod.com/weirdtongue/index.blog/1813218/the-forgotten-envelope/
the forgotten envelope (Anthea Holland)
http://wordonymous.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1852580/three-suns-for-yesterday/
three suns for yesterday (Jeff Holland)
http://weirdmonger.mindsay.com/young_men.mws
young men (Anthea Holland)
http://www.myspace.com/megazanthus/blog/545789959
absent without leave (Anthea Holland)
https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/164/
the sound of children, a pretty pickle, the unhaunting of the house, too dark for humour, neaptide (all Anthea Holland)
http://augusthog.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1812972/home-is-where-you-lay-your-hat/
home is where you lay your hat (Anthea Holland)
http://blog.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&friendID=145421249&blogID=291341035&Mytoken=2EDAA080-05E4-43CA-8C1DF526E9CE486D61591525 dark sweat (3rd story here) (Jeff Holland)
https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/53/
deathworks (Mrs D Lewis)
http://weirdmonger.blogspot.com/2005/07/princess-and-rose.html
the princess & the rose (PF Jeffery & B Lewis)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2007/08/28/
the last pear of the wind (B Lewis): http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/90060.html
busy blood (Stuart Hughes); http://www.knibbworld.com/campbelldiscuss/messages/1/5478.html?1327392256
http://weirdmonger.mindsay.com/welcome_to_the_angst_hotel.mws
welcome to the angst hotel (Paul Pinn)
http://weirdmonger.blogspot.com/2007/08/reaching-for-nadir.html
reaching for nadir (Margaret B Simon)
http://www.aphelion-webzine.com/shorts/2000/12/visitors3c.htm
visitors (Keith Brooke and Lawrence Dyer)
[Info on the Brooke Dyer Lewis collabs: http://www.lawrencedyer.com/#collab ]
http://weirdmonger.mindsay.com/crystal_toppings.mws
crystal toppings (Margaret B Simon)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/26/queer-tumours.html
queer tumours (Stuart Hughes)
http://weirdmonger.blogspot.com/2007/08/he-believes.html
(he believes) (Craig Sernotti)
http://weirdmonger.mindsay.com/poppers_in_the_wine.mws
poppers in the wine (PF Jeffery)
http://weirdmonger.blogdrive.com/archive/240.html
a beacon to the dead (Kirk S King)
http://weirdmonger.blogdrive.com/archive/198.html
the quest of the mouther (Rhys Hughes)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2004/09/01/
the fat bat (Scott Urban)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2004/09/03/
pity the mother (PF Jeffery)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2004/09/06/
the silver saraband (Margaret B Simon)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/25/angel-delight.html
angel delight (hertzan chimera)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2004/09/08/
don’t drown the man who taught you to swim (David Mathew)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2004/09/11/
a skip for heroines (Margaret B Simon)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2004/10/07/
blood noodle (Kirk S King)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2005/08/12/
beyond the comfort zone (Stuart Hughes)
http://weirdtongue.tripod.com/weirdtongue/index.blog/1737893/the-curious-satchel/
the curious satchel (David Mathew & MF Korn)
/http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2005/08/23/
I consume that of the edge of exquisite taste (Craig Sernotti)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2006/05/24/
finnegan awake (Simon Woodward)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/2007/08/24/
in camera (Simon Woodward)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/220387.html
thieving grief (Simon Woodward)
http://weirdmonger.blogdrive.com/archive/244.html
crashing out (Simon Woodward)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/10/23/there-was-a-surge-of-anger-in-the-air.html
There was a surge of anger in the air (Scott Urban)
http://elizabethbowen.fortunecity.com/blog/entry80.html
hey garland, I dig your tweed coat (John Travis)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/25/manumission.html
manumission (Scott Urban & Craig Sernotti)
http://weirdmonger.mindsay.com/only_one_i.mws
only one I (Margaret B Simon)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/98232.html
bleak mansions (Margaret B Simon)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/25/quirky-title.html
quirky title (Scott Urban)
http://weirdtongue.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1808192/ultimate-creative/
ultimate creative (Margaret B Simon)
http://weirdtongue.tripod.com/weirdtongue/index.blog/1808513/the-moon-pool/
the moon pool (MF Korn)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/25/plaintive-static.html
plaintive static (Scott Urban)
http://augusthog.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1808981/the-welcome-mat/
the welcome mat (Chris Pelletiere)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/02/09/midnight-encounter.html
midnight encounter (PF Jeffery)
http://weirdmonger.blogdrive.com/archive/276.html
sojourn of strangers (John Travis)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/30/night-visits.html
night visits (Hertzan Chimera)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2005/06/01/late_night_jamming.html
late night jamming (Gary Couzens)
http://nemonymous.tripod.com/word_hunger/index.blog/1808983/the-good-neighbour/
the good neighbour (Margaret B Simon)
http//simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/29/obituary.html
obituary (PF Jeffery)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/25/screen-test.html
screen test (Scott Urban)
http://weirdmonger.mindsay.com/combing_the_brain.mws
combing the brain (Stuart Hughes)
http://weirdtongue.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1809488/torch-music/
torch music (MF Korn)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2008/05/02/the-fan-the-fenestra.html
the fan & the fenestra (PF Jeffery)
http://augusthog.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1737887/the-slippery-pearls/
the slippery pearls (Hertzan Chimera)
http://wordonymous.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1852582/unread-story/
unread story (Margaret B Simon)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/25/slumming-towards-heaven.html
slumming towards heaven (Scott Urban)
https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/55/
strafed by starlings (Margaret B Simon)
http://wordonymous.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1852584/hailing-helene/
hailing helene (David Mathew)
http://weirdtongue.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1737891/the-man-with-no-name/
the man with no name (MF Korn)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/29/babe-in-boots.html
babe in boots (David Mathew)
http://weirdmonger.mindsay.com/fluttering_hearts.mws
fluttering hearts (PF Jeffery)
http://weirdtongue.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1812008/hauled-from-hell/
hauled from hell (Kirk S King)
http://weirdmonger.blogdrive.com/archive/44.html
fact & fanglement (PF Jeffery)
http://weirdmonger.blogdrive.com/archive/75.html
disaffected blood (David Price)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/25/swine-before-pearls.html
swine before pearls (Scott Urban)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/25/by-the-weed-pool.html
by the weed pool (Craig Sernotti)
http://weirdmonger.blogdrive.com/archive/178.html
the sirocco-scarred city (Stuart Hughes)
http://wordonymous.tripod.com/blog/index.blog?entry_id=1642026
mustard kat (Paul Pinn)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/06/22/the-brom-cupboard-of-crossed-destinies.html
the broom cupboard of crossed destinies (Rhys Hughes)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/06/22/lavinia-s-eyes.html
lavinia’s eyes (PF Jeffery)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/07/24/nits.html
nits (Paul Bradshaw)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/02/09/meticulously-prepared-for-madness.html
meticulously prepared for madness (Stuart Hughes)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2006/12/10/errors.html
errors (Paul Pinn)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/25/weeping-sores.html
weeping sores (Craig Sernotti)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/25/the-void-in-the-voice.html
the void in the voice (Craig Sernotti)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2006/12/07/bad-moon-rising.html
bad moon rising (Stuart Hughes)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2006/12/04/know-thy-enemy.html
know they enemy (Scott Urban)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2006/08/02/a-fester-of-mysteries.html
a fester of mysteries (Simon Clark)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2006/07/11/a-titanic-breed.html
a titanic breed (Hertzan Chimera)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2006/06/13/the-lost-blurb.html
the lost blurb (MF Korn)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2006/05/24/the-mansion-with-two-bedsits.html
a mansion with two bed-sits (Stuart Hughes)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2006/04/27/chuckleberry-grin.html
chuckleberry grin (Rhys Hughes)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2006/02/28/gulpswollen.html
gulpswollen (Craig Sernotti)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2006/02/04/father-figure.html
father figure (Scott Urban)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/28/switch-sell.html
switch-sell (Paul Pinn)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2005/10/07/little-maids-all-in-a-row.html
little maids all in a row (David Mathew)
https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/57/
hierarchies (Margaret B Simon)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2005/08/14/tendring-hundred.html
tendring hundred (Margaret B Simon)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/28/towards-the-fire.html
towards the fire (PF Jeffery)
https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/59/
the anatomy of the total (Margaret B Simon)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2005/06/09/static_ataxia.html
static ataxia (Paul Pinn)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2005/05/18/the_mask_of_satan.html
the mask of satan (PF Jeffery)
http://augusthog.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1852596/locker-room/
the locker room (Magaret B Simon)
http://augusthog.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1852597/brunch-at-the-charnel-cafe/
brunch at the charnel cafe (Margaret B Simon)
http://augusthog.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1852600/chloes-elbow/
chloe’s elbow (Dawn Andrews)
http://weirdmonger.mindsay.com/knuckledraggers_inc.mws
knuckledraggers, inc.(John Travis)
http://weirdmonger.mindsay.com/flesh_teasers_a_harrowing_of_words.mws
flesh teasers (Paul Bradshaw)
https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/61/
a harrowing of words (Paul Bradshaw)
The London Fairground (Allen Ashley)
a sort of runic rhyme (2nd story) (Rhys Hughes)
alone together (4th story) (PF Jeffery)
http://elizabethbowen.fortunecity.com/blog/entry1.html
ambulance chasers (Stuart Hughes)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/25/impaled.html
impaled (Craig Sernotti)
http://weirdmonger.livejournal.com/220694.html
this flight tonight (Gary Couzens)
http://www.myspace.com/megazanthus/blog/545790110
dark footnotes (Craig Sernotti)
http://weirdmonger.blogdrive.com/archive/205.html
in the belly of the snake (Paul Pinn)
http://weirdmonger.mindsay.com/angel_under_par.mws
angel under par (Andrew Busby)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/28/floater.html
floater (PF Jeffery)
http://weirdtongue.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1812981/her-words-not-mine/
her words not mine (Allen Ashley)
cigwitch (Margaret B Simon)
http://weirdmonger.blogdrive.com/archive/204.html
what dreams may come (David Price)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2007/08/28/righteo.html
righteo (PF Jeffery)
http://weirdmonger.blogdrive.com/archive/242.html
maps of time (Scott Urban)
http://weirdmonger.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/even-dogs.html
even dogs could talk (David Price)
http://weirdtongue.tripod.com/blog/index.blog/1811700/hide-and-sleek/
Hide & Sleek (Stuart Hughes)
http://simplon.blogspirit.com/archive/2010/11/23/free-sex.html
FREE SEX (Stuart Hughes)
2007 Collaboration with Lawrence Dyer: THE SHOAL
There are more collaborations, including some with Dominy Clements, Richard Gavin, Tony Mileman,, Mark McLaughlin, John B Ford plus a number of tri-collaborations alongside MF Korn & Hertzan Chimera within single stories and not forgetting the world famous ‘The Lovecraft Cafe’ by DFL, MF Korn & Jeff VanderMeer – and other names possibly forgotten
Filed under Uncategorized
Artistic Nonscenic Photos (Part 60)
Continued from (59): https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/2024/10/24/artistic-nonscenic-photos-part-59/
SEE MY SCENIC PHOTOS HERE: https://nullimmortalis.wordpress.com
Link to all links to my Nonscenic Photos: https://nemonymousnight.wordpress.com/2024/04/18/some-favourite-nanosecond-photos/
SLIDE SHOW (IF NECESSARY, PLEASE CLICK ‘START’ BUTTON BELOW) :—Continued here: https://howivi.wordpress.com/2024/11/05/artistic-nonscenic-photos-part-61/
Filed under Uncategorized
Artistic Nonscenic Photos (Part 59)
Continued from (58): https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/2024/10/15/artistic-nonscenic-photos-part-58/
SEE MY SCENIC PHOTOS HERE: https://nullimmortalis.wordpress.com
Link to all links to my Nonscenic Photos: https://nemonymousnight.wordpress.com/2024/04/18/some-favourite-nanosecond-photos/
SLIDE SHOW (IF NECESSARY, PLEASE CLICK ‘START’ BUTTON BELOW) :—Continued here: https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/2024/11/03/artistic-nonscenic-photos-part-60/
Filed under Uncategorized
Artistic Nonscenic Photos (Part 58)
Continued from (57): https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/2024/10/06/artistic-nonscenic-photos-part-57/
SEE MY SCENIC PHOTOS HERE: https://nullimmortalis.wordpress.com
Link to all links to my Nonscenic Photos: https://nemonymousnight.wordpress.com/2024/04/18/some-favourite-nanosecond-photos/
SLIDE SHOW (IF NECESSARY, PLEASE CLICK ‘START’ BUTTON BELOW) :—Continued here: https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/2024/10/24/artistic-nonscenic-photos-part-59/
Filed under Uncategorized
Artistic Nonscenic Photos (Part 57)
Continued from (56): https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/2024/09/29/artistic-nonscenic-photos-part-56/
SEE MY SCENIC PHOTOS HERE: https://nullimmortalis.wordpress.com
Link to all links to my Nonscenic Photos: https://nemonymousnight.wordpress.com/2024/04/18/some-favourite-nanosecond-photos/
SLIDE SHOW (IF NECESSARY, PLEASE CLICK ‘START’ BUTTON BELOW) :—Continued here: https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/2024/10/15/artistic-nonscenic-photos-part-58/
Filed under Uncategorized
Artistic Nonscenic Photos (Part 56)
Continued from (55): https://weirdmonger.wordpress.com/2024/09/24/artistic-nonscenic-photos-part-55/
SEE MY SCENIC PHOTOS HERE: https://nullimmortalis.wordpress.com
Link to all links to my Nonscenic Photos: https://nemonymousnight.wordpress.com/2024/04/18/some-favourite-nanosecond-photos/
SLIDE SHOW (IF NECESSARY, PLEASE CLICK ‘START’ BUTTON BELOW) :—Continued here: https://dflcollaborations.wordpress.com/2024/10/06/artistic-nonscenic-photos-part-57/
Filed under Uncategorized
Upon Mansion Roofs
I flew in from the darker reaches of the night sky and settled on a roof.
In my home nest, they taught me things I should know on my journey to Earth and they taught me what I should do when I arrived there.
They said I would look like this … and I was shown a vision of a beaked dragon-like bird with snakes for limbs, new moons for claws and a devil’s bedding for wings. If attacked, I would attack first. But they furnished me not with weapons, for I looked too strong to fight. I would do this … was shown the “bird” that was me alighting on the roof of a mansion when night had relinquished all memory of the previous day and all hope of the next, and lowering my proboscis into the chimney to tease out any tasty flue-grubs. And I would sense this … was shown human beings in their beds, like beached baby whales, dreaming of creatures on the roof. And I would see this … was shown others like me, as far as my eyes could reach, roof-roosting contemplatively against a backdrop of stars. And, finally, I would dread this … was shown many bigger versions of myself flapping in, swooping across the sky, like giant vulture marquees, here to ensure the alert rapt attention of us sentries and enforcing the subtle curfew of the night.
There would come a time when they themselves would arrive, one solid pack of beings like myself in physical communion with every limb and feeler of each other, all previously dead things but by an interactive mutuality sparking off supreme faith in its own life-force.
=
There came a time when I needed more than just my own company during the interminable period before dawn. I had recited my prayers, counted the slates on my own particular roof-tree for the umpteenth time and re-learnt the consecration of the mansion. One word haunted my brain, one no doubt implanted by those others who are now a single entity. This was a strange echoey word, throwing up images of what humans called Heaven. My prayers were to what this word represented and even its sound (although it was different upon my tongue) brought a tingle to parts of my body. My limbs lengthened and turned stringy, my lower torso became loose chamois leathers ill-sewn together, and I wrapped the mansion into a parcel.
But then I knew something that I had not been taught. This special word could not possibly represent the immortality amid the stars which had been pledged following my tour of duty on Earth. It could not possibly be the sweet agony welling up along my winding extruding tentacles. It could not possibly be the key prayer to be passed from beak to beak, from roof to roof, in the lonelinesses of Earth’s dark side.
But it was shown to be the reason I and the others had been sent out weaponless into the unknown. Never shipped even a hand-spike…
Our naive strength had resided somewhere in that word, our primitive cowing in the face of the cruel mindless cosmos.
Then it dawned on what was left of me. The word in fact represented another human being! One of those human beings who, we had been taught, were as insignificant as the dreams they dreamt.
With that, I folded up my wing tents, cleared up the foot-thick stains I had deposited on the roof which were even now dangling into the gutter, straightened up the TV aerial, gave the chimney an affectionate adieu and, telling my companion roof-creatures that we should all stick together, I led them off in my wake into the realms of non-existence where we would perhaps feel more at home.
But not before joining up our loose ends into an unbounded ecstasy, eventually forming a weave of stars and poultry flesh which, for all I know, still wheels across the limitless wastes of a better mind than mine.
=
There were twelve terraced houses around a circular back-alley courtyard and each house had its own characteristics. The numbering system was quite straightforward, one to twelve with odd and even rubbing conjoined shoulders.
And unto these mansions there came signs which told mainly of mutancy and insanity. And upon the roofs of these came bodies none of which seemed human.
We crawled round an apparently circular loft area, with no dividing walls between; how long we had been travelling on hands and knees across the dusty beams was now unknown. We mis-recall entering, we mis-recall even if the direction was clockwise or anti-. We expected to meet others on the way, but maybe their direction was timed and spaced so that we would never meet.
We are twin brothers – and we had to be parted at birth, as if our love for each other was far too strong for our own good.
We had, they said, emerged side by side into the world … having been pulled from the tangled skein of strands that still wore the flesh of our mother. She it was who had to split down the middle with our lumbering arrival and, whilst we had to be unsewn and unpicked, she had to be re-aligned by the tireless darning and hemming of treadling seamster-surgeons.
We mis-recall the home in which we all lived. It was down a turnimg which led from blind alleys and double-ended culdesacs and, if we directed you there today, you would become lost in the world of dreams you had so desperately wanted to avoid.
We once knew a larger mansion, called Olive Villa, which stood close to the coast where a little boy who must have something to do with us once lived with a matriarch or two. He may have been one of us, he may not, but we did play in the villa’s garden on the clumsy swing, waiting for faces that did not please us to pop up and to reveal their long trifurcating tongues.
“Let’s play Corners … come on, do!” said one of us twins in the garden of that same Olive Villa, but now down beyond the alleys and culdesacs far from any sea or pier or naze…
“Don’t want to!”
And we skipped like the wings of a pastel-dusted butterfly amid the cabbage patches, towards a matronly figure reclining on the daisied lawn.
“He won’t play at Corners,” complained a bitter twin. “It’s so boring!”
The matronly figure unfolded as if it had been a sculpture with vibrant curves and angles that an artist had spent a lifetime formulating but was now sliding into a shape which was more human, if not completely finished.
She would point to certain things that no others could see. Up on the roofs, she said, were the wingy, stringy residue of creatures that once used the slates as sloping beds and the gutters as receptacles of their night soil. She would also tell us of a rogue creature who had stayed behind when all the others had gone back to where they originated. It cared not whether it be day or night: it did not honour the openness and candour of sunlight … and it would sit, wide-eyed and brown, so close to the tall chimney stack that one had to look twice to see it there at all. The slimy slivers of cuckoo-spit from its rear tuft of wings coiled down the slates toward the skewed guttering and must have given it away to the likes of our mother.
Giving us the nod, one day, she indicated that if we did not take the opportunity and look at it immediately and study its intricate plumage, its tangled cat’s cradle of tentacles, its postbox mouth and its underskirted collection hatch … then we may never have another chance to be among those very very few to see one of them. A chance of a lifetime.
But it flapped off, before we could even raise our pair of eyes.
She undergrunted, on other occasions, the names which only she knew or, if I mis-recall, was it that she was the only one who dared even to think such names? She told of two warring, but loving, “gods”, for want of a better expression. Both, apparently, wanted to rule the roost as far as the archetypal fears of general mankind were concerned. It was all very well, sending out cohorts of clucking wing-critters to scare the nineteen-fifties skin off houses and mansions. It was all very well, to breed, inbreed and cross-breed with chimney stacks, giving birth to clusters of TV aerials that would hand-spike the future skies. It was all very well, to formulate melting dreams which would sud the minds of future men. It was all very well…
But, one day, she said there would be a fight between the two reluctant protagonists. We twins would be the ones called to umpire and ensure their elbows remained on the table of the cosmos, as they strained and pushed, pulled and spluttered, like two giant vertical earthquakes. That’s what she said, anyway. We did not believe her. And, now, I even do not believe in her at all.
One night, she crawled out of our lives. Up the nursery chimney she went like a scrawny sweep. She had been starving herself for weeks in preparation. The waggling feet were the last things I saw of her, the soot in black snowfalls into the empty grate. Her voice lingered on for some little while as she continued to wriggle towards the roof, pleading for the two “gods” to lower their tentacle ladders to assist her ascendant sign…
I gained the impression from her last overgrunts that these two “gods” were in fact joined at the elbow. The words eventually died out somewhere mid-chimney.
Within this mansion of alleys, now, we listen to the interminable dual shuffling and shambling in the shuttered loft, around and around in ever-decreasing circles. But it may be the more distant scratching of claws on the slates … or the tugging out of aerials as tooth-picks … or, more likely, the scraping across the night sky of the hidden sun which never enters this our mansion of the stars.
Destiny is a core unto itself and we shall only be able to spend the rest of our lives elbow-fighting…
=
THE ELBOW FIGHT: a play in one short Act.
Scene a shuttered Olive Villa.
Voice: You say life is futile, don’t you?
Old man: No. It is futile to call life futile, for it is.
Voice: Your parents, did they give you a lot of love?
Old man: Yes, for that I am grateful. The rest is fiction.
Voice: Fiction as truth has always been my motto, especially when it makes a good story to suit a universal gestalt.
Old man: Yes, indeed. The Synchronised Shards of Random Truth and Fiction as the Nemonicon has it. The nemo versus id and ego. Indeed, amongst such ‘shards’, my mother used to mop up the night soil from under my bed. She used kerchiefs and muckenders to sop out the messes. Nearly every night it was but she received thanksgiving from her god…
Voice (V): How could you have let her do it … and then to leave her alone with what you considered to be her deceitful god?
Old Man (Om): I couldn’t sleep. I thought night-critters or such were clambering over the roof, trying to get at me.
V: Oh, we’re going back to them, now, are we? Where did such ideas come from? Did you think the things on the roof had minds?
Om: They either came from my own mind and, if so, even a Shakespeare or a Mozart may have had them … or they were from others’ minds, let loose to hound and hassle me. When I was younger I had dreamed of sweeter things, flowers and such, cuddle-me-to-you’s, herbs-of-grace, lady’s-fingers, love-in-a- mists, soft hobmadonnas, none-so-pretties, forget-me-knots … but stuck out in their midst was an ox- pith, pointing to future dreams emerging from the gathering clouds and dipping sun of puberty. Sorry, old age makes me wordy…
V: Yes, you mumble on so. You told me earlier, did you not, that the night-critters were not of your mother’s god or even a paradoxical version of the otherwise hard-to-believe Trinity, but things that were born from a greater god called… what? ‘Tis enough to bend any mind. Hear its violins, flutes and drums?
Om: Too true. And night-eaters fed off my doings that I’d shovelled under the bed. Great jaws champing at the merds of my adolescent loins.
V: Perhaps your so-called roof creatures got into the room to scrabble and play under your bed?
Om: You’re oh so clinical, medical, in your questioning.
V: Sorry, I’ll try to keep quiet. Tell me what you have to.
Om: I kept a wooden contraption above my bed – ill-made perhaps – teetering and creaking in rhythm to my fitful tossing. Bit it did keep them at bay. You see, the roof had gaps… And now, you’re actually telling me that they may have been the things under the bed all the time. It’s coming back to me now….
V: Blame not another for your own mind’s leaning.
Om: I’ll be straightforward, or as much so as seeping senility allows. I lived a long time in that groaning house. There were gaps above me that literally let in the moonlight. My mother cared for me and preached of her god, meaning nothing to me and pitch-kettling the Hanseatic-league of my wooden bed defences. Yes, I must keep it simple, none of that stuff and nonsense about night-snaps, larrikins and lop-eared macaroons. I’m nought but a goose-cap on Lady-day in Harvest, sailing a moon-sheered craft from imaginary mordant Venice to the plague-sores of Toulon…
V: Simple, you said
Om: She fed my night’s doings to the tank outside. Her one time lover, the lavatory man, stole it away in his stink cart under cover of day. ‘Tothers thought it compost he lugged…
V: To the point, old man..
Om: Undoubtedly to the point that there was no point. The next I recall was the funeral. I covered her coffin with cuddle-me-to- you’s, herbs-of-grace, lady’s-fingers, love-in-the-mists, soft hobmadonnas, none-so-pretties, forget-me-knots as well as all her used sops and muckenders.
V: I must go now, nice talkin to you and thanks for the drink.[exit]
Om: I’ve been pondering here for some time, but I’ve only stared at the beer and had crazy pub talk with myself. Ego and Id, Id and Ego, I don’t know. Nemo, perhaps. Time to go home, Andy and Teddy are waving goodbye. Maybe the mansion knew something about it. I think I will dream tonight of times long ago when Darkness was an Edge, for today it’s nought but a Shroud.
V (off stage): And he never even shipped a hand-spike.
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