Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Our man

 Nostromo slowly crossed the large kitchen, all dark but for the glow of a heap of charcoal under the heavy mantel of the cooking-range, where water was boiling in an iron pot with a loud bubbling sound.  Between the two walls of a narrow staircase a bright light streamed from the sick-room above; and the magnificent Capataz de Cargadores stepping noiselessly in soft leather sandals, bushy whiskered, his muscular neck and bronzed chest bare in the open check shirt, resembled a Mediterranean sailor just come ashore from some wine or fruit-laden felucca.  At the top he paused, broad shouldered, narrow hipped and supple, looking at the large bed, like a white couch of state, with a profusion of snowy linen, amongst which the Padrona sat unpropped and bowed, her handsome black-browed face bent over her chest.  A mass of raven hair with only a few white threads in it covered her shoulders; one thick strand fallen forward half veiled her cheek.  Perfectly motionless in that pose, expressing physical anxiety and unrest, she turned her eyes alone towards Nostromo.

The Capataz had a red sash wound many times round his waist, and a heavy silver ring on the forefinger of the hand he raised to give a twist to his moustache.

"Their revolutions, their revolutions," gasped Senora Teresa.  "Look, Gian' Battista, it has killed me at last!"

Nostromo, a Tale of the Seaboard
Joseph Conrad



The 'navigator and grand adventurer' who was the inspiration for Conrad's characterisation.

Tuesday, February 16, 2021

Marsden Hartley, Modernist

















































The two pieces directly above were early references to his homo-erotic sensibility.  Kv.F are the initials of Karl von Freyburg, his German lover who was killed at the beginning of the First World War.  The work is entitled Portrait of a German Officer.  The pomp of the horse guards in The Warriors above the portrait notes his delight of masculine pageantry.  

He seemed unlucky in love.  In 1935, at the age of 58, he made his way to Nova Scotia.  He made two trips, leaving again for Nova Scotia in 1936.  At Eastern Point Island he lived with the Mason family and there fell in love with one of the Mason sons, a nineteen-year-old fisherman called Alty.

Making their way back to the island during his second trip in 1936, the brothers and a cousin drowned.  He was heartbroken.  "Never have I known anyone like them," he wrote to a friend in New York. "Never a mean thought or act, drunk or sober, and their only fault was drinking now and then.  They were fond of me, and I loved them."

Adelard the Drowned, known to be a depiction of Alty



Stormy Seas No. 2 and 3, chronicling the boys' fate and his despair.