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    Circus Days and Nights

    Page 5
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      these graceful movers

      are asked to give a show.

      Mama,

      sitting in her chair

      at twilight,

      assumes (like the sun)

      the same position at twilight;

      after the glow,

      before dinner,

      the hour of rest,

      of gossip,

      of comings and goings.

      Mama sits in her chair and judicates;

      weighing the family,

      weighing the world,

      saying too bad at what is too bad,

      and laughing at what is funny.

      Mama, on the judge’s folding chair,

      sits in some town each day at twilight

      weighing the world with her eyes,

      pronouncing judgment

      with the corners of her mouth.

      Mogador,

      somersaulting on a horse,

      praises the Lord;

      Creator of horses and men,

      Creator of light wherein

      the acrobat disports

      with skill he has acquired,

      holding on the invisible wires

      on which the world is strung.

      Mogador, brightly dressed

      and riding in the light

      while music plays,

      is like the juggler at Our Lady’s shrine

      is like King David dancing before

      the Ark of the Covenant

      is like the athletes of God

      who sang their praises in the desert wind.

      Why does he look so intense.

      What makes an acrobat look burningly

      from his eyes,

      narrow them

      and burn for a particular thing.

      You have your answers, which are good.

      He is a younger brother

      in a family of talented acrobats.

      He wants to be as good as they,

      better than they to justify his existence.

      He is the younger brother of Lucio;

      the dreamer, the entrepreneur,

      the one who wants to start the great circus.

      He wants to do it with talent

      & taste, and acumen, and honesty.

      Mogador wants to be Lucio’s partner.

      He wants to have all Lucio’s qualities

      and an additional one:

      a taste for elegant showmanship

      (He likes this so much

      and considers it so much of the essence

      that he is willing to attribute it to Lucio,

      who has indeed some feeling for it,

      but Mogador knows that he has the most)

      He is the younger brother of Chita;

      a queen of elegance,

      the most graceful and beautiful

      bareback rider-principal act

      there ever has been,

      in his opinion.

      Mogador also rides principal.

      His riding is

      and must be

      in the same tradition as hers.

      It is not acrobatics on horseback.

      It is ballet.

      It is not comic ballet.

      It is appropriately dignified praise.

      An ancient

      and very pure form

      of religious devotion.

      It is easy to compare it

      to the childlike devotion

      of the jongleur de Notre Dame;

      But it is more mature,

      more knowing.

      Like the highest art,

      it is a kind of play

      which involves

      responsibility

      and control;

      An activity which involves

      awareness

      and appreciation;

      Its own symbolic value.

      Like the prayers

      of the old in wisdom,

      it has the joy

      and the solemnity of love.

      By day I have circled

      like the sun,

      have leapt like fire.

      At night I am a wise man

      on his palanquin.

      By day I am an acrobat,

      spinning brightly,

      a juggler’s torch.

      Nights I am contemplative,

      drinking deep of silence.

      Road, prairie, night

      go through me:

      Songs of praise

      like mist rise up:

      Blessings

      tumble down

      like dew.

      Into the dark the truck rolled, my eyes were on

      the road, the blond dirt road in the light of

      the headlamps, we sat high on the truck’s

      wide smooth seat, our luggage in back, there

      was plenty of room, for all we carried were

      the sandwiches in the brown paper bag and

      the thermos bottle.

      The night before, we had talked a great deal, of

      love, of women, Mogador had said that the

      kind of smile he liked in a woman was a smile

      as of the wind hitting flowers. And we

      said many another rare and true thing. Enough

      to make a man less than Mogador tend to

      close up, to be a clam on the subsequent night,

      but he did not. In truth we were both

      eager to talk. And yet for the first

      couple of minutes of riding in silence

      I felt some panic at my solar plexus

      thinking, what’ll I ask him now we’ve

      both been over the main things

      and we know so well what the other

      is thinking, about most of this.

      There is no point, in fact it is almost

      impolite to ask more questions.

      And further (particularly if

      Mogador doesn’t feel like talking)

      my questioning him and his

      lapsing into silence of

      reticence, or my driving him

      to utter a half truth (as we do

      when we’re weary or irritated)

      will make it a long unpleasant

      ride. And everything has been

      so good so far.

      We rode along a little farther.

      A wobble developed

      up front. The radiator cap, it

      was loose again. All the night

      before, we had had trouble with

      it rattling and falling off. We’d

      have to hop out with a flashlight, look

      around on the road behind us & pick it

      up. Usually a couple of the circus

      trucks would pass us as we searched.

      We got out again.

      “May as well put it inside the truck”

      I said.

      Mogador agreed

      “We’ll get it fixed tomorrow.”

      We started again.

      He was being very serious and “acting” serious

      at the same time. I was being serious and

      acting serious too.

      For every sort of conversation,

      open or secret,

      light or heavy,

      there is a convention

      and a tradition,

      an appropriate tone of voice,

      a proper stance

      or sitting position,

      a rhythm of give and take.

      People who are fond of form

      don’t try to avoid these conventions, unless

      to avoid them is also appropriate. Our

      talk was in the form of youthful speculation.

      We each may have felt ourselves to be a little

      old for it, but in our association we were

      still young. In establishing the

      terms of our conversation we

      were adolescent. And a return

      to that freshness (with new minds)

      I think was pleasant for us both.

      I was as thrilled on that

      ride as I could be. I guess I

     
    ; was as happy as I’ve ever

      been. I don’t know whether

      I could ever tell anyone

      how or why (I suppose

      someone could tell me how or

      why) and I don’t know

      why I should try to tell

      anyone anything about it.

      I think it’s partly just

      a nice instinct in me and

      in everyone to try to share

      all good things with everyone.

      I’d like to tell about it because

      I’d like to remember it. I’d like

      to have it in writing so I can look

      at it later. I think I’ll remember

      it all my life. But if I have it

      in writing (and have written it

      well and fully) it will be fun to

      reread later, to see how much of

      a self-enriching experience (or

      what gets better in the memory,

      and comes to mean more as the years go by)

      how much of it you appreciate as it

      happens, and shortly after it

      happens. I think if it happens

      at a good time (of maturity) a

      ripe moment, you appreciate most

      of it as it happens. That nothing

      can be added to it except the

      perspective of time, and even

      that addition is at the sacrifice

      of some detail

      or some immediacy.

      And so, although it

      is hard to write it well

      and fully

      and make it neat also,

      and do it as fast as I’d like

      (so the family can see it soon)

      and well wrought,

      graceful and

      as lastingly beautiful as,

      say, a Picasso harlequin;

      this one won’t be neat.

      Instead I think I’ll surprise

      my friends,

      my relatives,

      and loving readers,

      myself most of all,

      by showing

      just how badly

      I can write.

      The other reason I’d

      like to write it, and like to

      make it good (yea, wonderful)

      is that I’d like Mogador to see it. I’d

      like, just by way of debt-paying, to

      let him see that I meant it when I

      said I was going to write a Cristiani

      book and that it would be mostly about

      him. I’d like him to see that I

      understood what he was saying (a good

      part & maybe all of the time) that

      the sort of thing we said in long rides

      in the truck (though they sounded

      mystic even as they passed between

      us, and telegraphic too) could

      nevertheless be written down,

      stated directly (retaining their

      mystery) and restated clearly

      so that anyone whose soul was

      prepared, whose mind was

      attentive, could read and understand.

      And I’d like him to see,

      but I guess this is asking too much,

      that I can write a book,

      with all the joy and verve and grace,

      with all the seriousness and intensity,

      with the playful formality,

      the style and exuberance,

      the praise-rendering wonder,

      the dignity and humility,

      the elegance and flow,

      the tradition and originality,

      the control,

      the meekness,

      the youthfulness and grace

      with which he rides a horse.

      And I want to write it so

      Mark Van Doren, and my sister,

      Gladys, and all my friends who

      I wished were with me could

      come along. And so that some,

      reading the book, not

      knowing the family, may see

      their name on a circus sign,

      and go to the show and see

      what they see, and to some degree,

      see what I see too.

      (So grass if it knew itself

      would be less than it thinks

      and as great as it is

      and greater than it

      thinks it is)

      All in a single moment.

      And I’d like to write about this family,

      the serious and sober,

      the happy and playful Cristianis,

      who seem to be

      serious about living from generation to

      generation as entertainers, as bareback

      riders, graceful and skillful in

      an art of dancers & acrobats on

      horseback; extraordinary equestrians.

      (“Things that are difficult to do on

      the ground we do on horseback,”

      says Mogador)

      A family whose

      aim is to own a circus

      and to perform in it, and

      to do this thing, dynastically

      from generation to generation,

      giving each child a choice whether

      or not he will join the circus;

      but leaving them no room for

      choice whether they will love

      the family, for the children

      do love the family and

      are proud to be in it.

      I’d like to write about a

      family whose activities suggest

      one answer to a recurrent

      question of the skeptical young:

      Wouldn’t it have grown boring

      perhaps in Eden? (perhaps

      in Milton?)

      No, there would have been horses to ride,

      tightropes to walk

      trapezes to swing from

      ideas to discuss

      jokes to make

      laughter

      anger.

      All the emotions of the artist or

      acrobat confronted with his task.

      All of the joys and most (I guess)

      of the tensions of large family life.

      I want to write about these people

      because I love them as a group and

      love them individually. I like

      to think about them all;

      to know them all as well as I can,

      and to write about them in a book.

      And I’m pretty pleased about the way I

      questioned him, the way the Lord put it

      into my heart to question him; for I

      hardly questioned him at all.

      I kept silence,

      let us say attentive silence,

      as we rode along.

      If Mogador spoke,

      I listened.

      If one phrase puzzled me in

      what he was saying, I let it ride

      until he had spoken completely.

      Then I would ask him

      what he had meant by this phrase

      and he would tell me.

      Sometimes I’d ask

      him pointblank questions about

      his ideas; and often direct

      questions about the circus and the

      routine of the act. And sometimes

      I would ask questions rather

      obliquely, asking a question near,

      or with a rather direct,

      logical connection to the

      question I did want answered.

      And often in asking the first

      question, we would be led

      to a consideration of the very

      question I wanted answered.

      But we must not think

      of this means of questioning

      (with which we are all familiar)

      as a series of stratagems for

      coaxing truth from an unwilling Mogador.

      It was, I think, a cooperation

      with Mogador to coax truth from himself.


      For the man one talks to

      (when one talks to the inner self)

      is not at all the man the world knows.

      It can almost be said

      he is not the man

      the man himself knows.

      He is part of him

      (hidden in darkness)

      very often the noblest part,

      and very often

      very shy.

      The cab of the truck

      (jolt)ing through the dark,

      where most nights

      Mogador had ridden alone,

      thinking his own thoughts,

      was an excellent place in which to

      ask questions (for this discussion).

      For in that dark, in the long stretch

      between Kamsack and Humbolt, we

      were each sent, or each retired

      to our innerselves and when we

      talked and talked, it seemed from the

      center of our being. And of

      course it is true that we often rode

      for miles in perfect silence.

      He passed me an open pack of cigarettes

      “Light me one, will you?”

      I did.

      “Here I will give you the pack you can

      light them for me from time to time as

      we drive, if you will.”

      We drove through the first real darkness.

      In Saskatchewan, in summertime, there is

      waning day and dying sunset almost until

      eleven-thirty when the very last

      ray of the sun disappears in the (southwest).

      There is a short period of true night.

      Then at about two-thirty day begins to dawn.

      “I notice when you talk about anything that

      is beautiful, whether it is singing, or speaking,

      or love, or a graceful act in the ring, you have

      a gesture of the hand; moving it out from

      the diaphragm (or solar plexus). An easy,

      generous, giving gesture; your wrist

      leads and your hand opens at the end of

      the arc. An expansive gesture; bestowing

      the good you’re talking about, and

      showing the center of it seems to

      be near the center of the body,

      and moves out from there. Is that

      the way it seems to you?”

      “Yes” said Mogador “I think that

      might be true.”

      “And there’s a way your hand, when you

      somersault through the hoop, after your

      feet have landed and are secure (in fact

      as they are still coming down through

      the air) your arm begins to move up

      and when you land you toss

      your head back a little. Your

      arm completes the upward

      swing, your hand relaxed

      and graceful at the top of the

     


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