When Cities Dream
I walked along the canal, boots crunching frost flowers. I left shiny impressions of my previous position on the path with each footstep, crushed silver ghosts. I exhaled dragon breath, stuffed my hands deep into my pockets and kept moving south.
The pavement of Little Lebanon was untouched by the cocaine spill whiteout. Its storefronts still a riot of colour as crimson cherries fought for space with pillar box red chillies and Tyrian purple aubergines. Even on a frosty London morning, some of the area’s shops still exude a sense of Middle Eastern heat
Finding my pockets too short of coins for either a Beirut breakfast or a coffee, I turned into the Georgian plush of Connaught Square. I made my usual nod to security and was frozen in place not by the Heckler & Koch holders, but the vision at the end of Stanhope Place. Instead of the usual burst of green, under frost and low mist Hyde Park was transformed into an inland sea. The street now ended at the start of an illusion I did not wish to shake.
For a few moments I was caught in the City’s dream of itself, a reverie of tides and rolling spray. When we dream we may become other people. When cities dream, they become other places. In trance, London allows itself to become so large and fantastic its imagined maps even include nautical charts.
Labels: Canalside, Connaught Square, Dreaming, Hyde Park
18 Comments:
Great description David. I think I get what you're saying.
It snowed here last weekend and my daughter spent the night at her friend's house. I went to pick her up and could not find the house. I'd only been there in summer. Her friend's mother came out after I'd passed their house three times. Boy did she laugh.
oh wow! you are a brilliant writer! magnificent imagery! i just want to read this again and again. what a gem you are. i will save some time to come here just to savor your words.
Beautiful! I once watched a news on tv about a mirage that would happen from time to time, where a city seemed to emerge from the ocean, and then disappeared. Sometimes I wonder if I dreamed it, or what kind of natural phenomenon would produce such an image.
Short on coins, but not short on sentiment or imagination, nor the ability to portray what is in your mind's eye.
Thank you for ehancing my own wonderful memories of London.
I love those magical moments and places. You tell this so well, David. I stopped in my steps with you.
Thanks for this. I wish i had seen it.
Beautiful! It sounds like the beginning of a novel I would like to read.
did you just change your template or am i imagining things?
Thank you all for your kind words. I do not take praise easily, but thank you. As for templates, I leave all the technological magic to the HTML Fairy.
I really enjoyed this...so beautiful and could be the beginning of a big story... the words touch.
:-) Magic.
Well, here's to plenty of Beirut breakfasts in 08 my friend!
The crisp frost and dragon-breath sounds more appealing than the overcast grey Seattle seems to endlessly suffer under.
3 days to my favourite day of the whole year, the day the daylight starts to return!
Lovely. Is it the Winter Wonderland? I haven't seen it yet...
Puss
I wrote something on my site about your writing so you may expect some new visitors.
You were perchance dream-aling on my soggy blog yonder this day,,
so I thought I would venture forth and peruse yours and see what could be found of your misusing of the English verb and noun…
I found much along Thames Avon to gaze apon,, but as so many have done,,I wandered and then wondered about,, about such a strange moniker as Author…For it is no common toe to heel,, a first name as that,, so I ask thee in much glee and harmony,, why does thee not use David to shout
about?...Author??.. I shall with eyes quick and fingers nimble,, look it up within the Wikipedia,, for as you have seen I am very thick……… ;-)
well I thought I had posted something, but I am not seeing it. Came by way of merelyme. Enjoyed your post, lovely.
Merelyme sent me, and I am so glad she did.
This little snippet reminds me of Mark Helprin's Winter's Tale, and your last line sent chills up and down me.
Beautiful. Thanks.
David, it feels as if you took each one of us individually by the hand, and led us on a private walk with you. I could feel the snow crunching under my own feet. Thank you for that.
David,
Reading this makes me want to go to London so much more now, which has been on my Christmas list for years. One day I will in London at Christmas, and I am hoping that it will be in the next year or two. I can see the everything dusted white. Thank you so much for the imagery.
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