From my Bob Calver archive
Martyn White
white at BORG.MED.ECU.EDU
Fri Feb 23 16:02:28 EST 1996
[Originally posted by Seb Welton, BOC-L, 1993]
This was originally printed in Sounds in 1974 and was reprinted in Hawkfrendz
no.18. Seeing as this is just a limited edition of only 1000 copies and they
seemed to (kind of) ignored the copyright and whatever, I thought it would be
a decent thing to pass it on to others. Enjoy.
Cattle At Twilight
Robert Calvert
28-12-1974
...they're so weary of it all. "Nostalgia seems the latest
thing," says Noel Coward. He wishes he'd known that was all
there was to it when he was Down There. Jimi Hendrix is
puzzled: "You mean a hankering after the past?" There's even
nostalgia for the future. A fantasy.
Noel Coward, dressed in a gold lame evening suit, is seated
in a great wing chair of swan and ostrich feathers. He is
looking downwards through the legendary heavy-lidded eyes,
smoking a leopard skin cigarette in an ivory holder. The
wings of the chair are raised, and the whole thing appears
to be floating against the glaring white background of
eternity.
Enter Jimi Hendrix, dressed in a coat of many and moving
colours. As the colours change the light around him is left
stained by the glow of their radiance. He wears a battered,
black felt hat in which six metal feathers are fixed that
jingle, like spurs when he moves. His skin is silver.
Hendrix: You still sitting there?
Coward: I am. And I think I shall continue sitting here
until I'm tired of sitting here. And when that moment
arrives, I shall wait. Until I'm tired of being tired of
sitting here. And so I shall continue to sit.
Hendrix: That sounds logical.
Coward: It isn't.
Hendrix (peering over Coward's shoulder): You still watching
them down there? What's going on?
Coward: Nostalgia seems to be the latest thing.
Hendrix: Nostalgia? Sounds like a disease.
Coward: More of a symptom really.
Hendrix: It means like trying to hang on to things that you
ain't got any more, right? Hankering after the past.
Coward: It's more like handkerchiefing after it...
Hendrix: So what's all this nostalgia for?
Coward (rapidly): The Twenties. The Thirties. Occasionally
the Forties. More often the Fifties. And I don't like the
way they're looking at the Sixties.
Hendrix: So? Let 'em get on with it.
Coward: I don't care what they do with the Fifties. Dreadful
greasy decade. But the Twenties was my invention.
Hendrix: You mean all those chicks with short skirts and
flower-pots on their heads. Waving beads around?
Coward: Certainly.
Hendrix: Yeah? OOH Wack a Doo...baggy pants and short, shiny
hair?
Coward: Well it was only a prototype really. The Thirties
was by way of being an improvement. But I'm afraid it all
went a bit wrong towards the end. Very depressing.
Hendrix takes what appears to be an intricately jewelled
six-gun out of his coat pocket. He aims into the air and
pulls the trigger. Instead of going bang, it emits a
brilliant rainbow chord of sounds. He spins the pistol round
his finger like a gunslinger and slides it back into his
pocket.
Coward: What on Earth was that?
Hendrix: It was just a dream I once had. It was nothing on
Earth at all.
Coward: That's one of the advantages of being up here, I
suppose.
Hendrix: Yeah, I guess there are a few. Do you ever get any
of those nostalgia feelings?
Coward: I suppose I do. But only in my weaker moments.
Mostly for silly, isolated fragments of childhood. Tiny
fractions of time in which nothing spectacular actually
happened. But for some reason, whenever I recall them, they
have that exquisite aura of ever inviting sadness shimmering
through them. I don't dress it up in period costume trying
to evoke them though. I would certainly look very silly in
short trousers and a school-cap. No...it's not for any of
the great, grease painted, applause-swollen moments that I
feel nostalgia...it's more...let me see...I had it somewhere
in a song of mine... "I'm so weary of it all...Other voices
call...the cattle at twilight...the birds in the sky
light...of dawn."
Hendrix: Before I was born I wanted to be an Eagle. I guess
I wasn't assertive enough. Maybe the reason I joined a
parachute mob was just so I could get my share of the sky. I
told them I wanted to be a soldier. They gave me a gun. And
a parachute. And then they said jump. And I jumped into
twenty thousand feet of air. And in those few seconds of
falling free I didn't feel like I was falling at all. I was
climbing. I was rocketing away from the plane. Upwards.
Into the blue. Then suddenly this great white membrane burst
out of my shoulders. It grew. Like a speeded up botanical
film.
Coward: You mean it was like a pair of wings?
Hendrix: No, it was worse than wings. Sure, wings hold you
back. But this was more like a drag. A huge dome of silken
resistance like the shell of a giant aerobatic snail. It
held me back. It was dragging me down.
Coward: I know the feeling well, dear boy.
Hendrix: I looked down into this organic canopy...I mean I
was looking down into it...not looking up.
Coward: You were upside down, looking down.
Hendrix: No, it's entered in the books up here that I jumped
from a plane. And my parachute never opened. I wrote it
myself.
Coward: I don't suppose there was much room left in the book
after I'd written my own account. I did my best to live as
many lives as I could. All at once. They were all quite,
quite imaginary.
Hendrix: What are they doing now?
Coward: Down there? They're doing a play about the Beatles.
Hendrix: They're not dead are they?
Coward: Not enough to bury.
Hendrix: Who's that cat with the orange hair?
Coward: That's David Bowie. He's somehow managed to create a
feeling of nostalgia for the future.
Hendrix: They'll be doing a play about him next.
Coward: If they do I'm sure it'll be based on purely
circumstantial evidence.
Hendrix: What's that other guy doing over there with that
guitar?
Coward: He's impersonating you.
Hendrix: Did I really sound like that?
Coward: No, but you looked as if you did.
Hendrix: I guess you get a lot of impersonations, huh?
Coward: My dear boy. I'm constantly being impersonated out
of my wits. Look at them all. In nightclubs everywhere. On
television. At private parties. All they have to do to
induce floods of laughter is to stand there, talk through
clenched teeth and wave a cigarette-holder about. I only
wish I'd know that that was the secret.
Hendrix: Who's that cat in the leopard skin suit?
Coward: That one over there? In the white jacket and
bow-tie?
Hendrix: Yeah, the one in the blue jeans and tee-shirt.
Coward: That must be the Scarlet Pimpernel.
Hendrix: Hey, I've just seen a guy write a song lyric with
his eyes closed.
Coward: Yes. He's the ringleader of a band of rebellious
cocknies. He was probably just signing autographs.
Hendrix: I though he might have been writing a note for the
milkman.
Coward: I don't think he discriminates
The sound of Celestial engines is heard. They both look up
and see a fair-haired girl approaching on a golden
motor-cycle. The white mists of Eternity spiralling around
her wheels.
Hendrix: Here comes Janis. We're going starbathing together.
Wanna come? Bring Cole Porter and Ivor Novello. We'll make
it a party. Take a crate of Nectar along.
Coward: Cole is still giving Ivor his versification lessons.
I'm sure they wouldn't thank us for interrupting them. Poor
Ivor, he won't give up 'til he's learned everything Cole
Porter knows. I suppose eternity should be long enough.
Hendrix: What about you?
Coward: Thanks for the offer. But as for me...I think I
shall continue sitting here until I'm tired of sitting here.
And when that moment arrives, I shall wait. Until I'm tired
of being tired of sitting here. And so I shall continue to
sit.
The volume of the Celestial Engine reaches such a pitch as
the bike arrives that speech is no longer feasible. Hendrix
climbs aboard pulls blue and sparkling goggles over his
eyes, and the bike takes off. The surging colours of his
psychechromic coat merge into a solid blue that grows more
and more electric-looking as it recedes into the distance.
Copyright (C) it's original publication. No breaches of copyright
intended or implied.
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