- parisiana authors
- Alain Claret
- Le marché aux voleurs
- La Mort visite Montparnasse...
- "Croyez vous que je l'ai tué?"
- Un Flic lit Cicéron
- Des femmes et du vertige
- Home, sweet home
- Mon ami Newton
- Frieda la brune
- No man's land
- Un sale défaut
- Stabat Mater Dolorosa
- Elles blessent toutes, la dernière tue.
- Le Diable et la Victorine
- Un monde trop grand
- De l'alcool et des larmes
- Les papillons de Venise
- Les yeux de Manon
- Une leçon de solitude
- Paroles d'ivrogne
- Des bêtes autour de vous
- Chair triste
- Autopsie d'un chasseur.
- Les voleurs de temps
- Loufried
- Ma Cuisine
- Le marché aux voleurs
- Carlos Henderson
- Richard Jurgens
- Karen Margolis
- Henry Miller
- Einar Moos
- Andrés Monreal (1932-2012)
- Art
- Anthony Meyer
- Chris Newman SCRUPLES
- Curt Hoppe
- Denise Colomb dies at 101
- Dominique Obadia
- François Baschet
- Jacques Camus
- Jacques Villeglé
- Local Artist: Diarmuid Harrington
- Musée Guimet - East Asian Art
- Musée Picasso - Hotel Salé
- Nat Finkelstein - A Tale of One City
- Nedko Solakov
- Olga Luna
- Paris-Montmartre Museum of Erotic Art
- Richard Ballard
- Robin Derrick: Life Class
- Saverio Lucariello
- Shelomo Selinger
- The Bernheim-Jeune Saga
- Visiting with Shelomo Selinger
- EDEN
- Features
- Music
- Places
- Portraits
- Bandol
- Basile Saint Germain's Solen 2000
- COCO CHANEL
- Crossing reality
- Dr. Jacky Chan, MD
- Jacky Preys
- Jean Marie Gremillet and his Lafitte Foie Gras de Canard
- Jim Harrison
- Jim Haynes
- John Calder
- Jura ou Medoc?
- Marco et les courgettes
- Montlouis from Olivier Deletang
- My friend Désir
- Puki & Mailo
- Que savez-vous des morts?
- Salon Baba is cool!
- The other side
- Yuyutsu RD Sharma
- Sebastian Araveda
- bart plantenga
- William Prendiville
- Eddie Woods
- Nina Zivancevic
- Walter Q. Foxx
- César Vallejo
- Alain Claret
Old Man
William Prendiville
He has dined on Sundays at the same Brasserie for 25 years, on the corner of two grand boulevards in a quartier that was once famous for the artists who lived there, though it isn't anymore.
He walked up a road that descends towards the river and took a table overlooking the street, closer now that the Brasserie has extended its interior to where the old awning had been. He never expected the waiters to keep a table for him; he wasn't called anything beyond 'Monsieur'; but everyone liked him and the waiters knew that, unlike many others, he would always leave a fair tip.
Since he first began dining here, the quartier has changed much, from its more glorious past, celebrated in guide books, to the fashionable days, having become so gentrified that one might have thought its original appeal had gone. But somehow a few of these spots - this Brasserie, for example, and one or two others - have managed to guard something in the heart of them, as if, like ripening fruit caught and coated at just the right moment, they still hang, here and there, where everything else has been cut and pruned away.
Pictures of him sitting at his table might be the one constant by which to measure just how much things have changed. His hair is white and combed finely back. He sits erect before a tray of oysters and a glass of wine, and when others come to visit - nieces from his family overseas or sometimes old friends - he likes to treat them. He keeps his napkin folded; and if one were to try to locate his gravitas, one could point to where it almost physically lay: there, between the slightly raised chin and the rounded tip of his nose, as if, between the two, in what gives him, beyond his dark suits, an almost aristocratic air - there, pinched in some perfect dialectic, lies the whole balance of his being. He can be quite jovial with others but looks much different when sitting alone, dinner done, staring out the window, before finally getting up and going away.
He has not, of course, come every Sunday. That ritual really began after his wife died a number of years ago. Then, he had disappeared completely and when he returned the waiter had said, 'Bonjour Monsieur', with a certain understanding in the distance taken, and he had replied 'Bonjour Abdel', looking much older, his collar a little too starched and the scent of cologne a little too strong. He sat down at a table by the window and the chair across from him, where his wife should have been, seemed terribly alone, until with the years it became a sort of partner in itself.
At 65, he is still handsome, though of type that comes from a consciousness of past powers which warm his features as the declining sun lights aspects upon a building we have not noticed before, or an like artifact which, no longer of our time, sustains a dignity in its silence. Regarding Abdel, the waiter to whom he'd said 'Bonjour' - this had caused much speculation and began to make people say terrible things about him. It began when he used to leave Abdel larger tips than the others, and then, once, when Abdel had been sick, he had asked after the waiter's absence, 'Monsieur Abdel est parti?', his accent oddly disengaged from the words.
He had always been a great lover of women; even before his wife had died, he had brought a number of mistresses here to dine; but this had not stopped the rumours. 'C'est un vieux pede', one of the older waiters said, to which Abdel wryly smiles. And it is true that there is something effeminate to him, in the silk cravates he has begun to wear, in the excessive manicuring of his dress, especially of late. Or not so much effeminate as effete, something you can't quite put your finger on, like the frayed edges of an old epoch's dreams. « He was once rich but is now very poor », says one waiter. « He has known many great people », says another. « There are pictures of him here, somewhere, from long ago », claims a last while the old man sits beyond such speculation, looking out at the passing traffic, at the declining light, like one looking out to sea.
Whatever the case may be, they all step back as he leaves, after he has stood, fixed his cravate, put in his chair; and as he passes, briefly lifting his eyes to yours, you can feel it, something great and silent, even if they are only the years themselves, disappearing with him now down the same avenue from which he'd emerged, slow and steady, gently bobbing, like some buoy receding into the distance the rest of the world is leaving behind.
©2002 WILLIAM PRENDIVILLE
Submitted by parisiana on Tue, 07/06/2004
in
Main menu
- parisiana authors
- Alain Claret
- Le marché aux voleurs
- La Mort visite Montparnasse...
- "Croyez vous que je l'ai tué?"
- Un Flic lit Cicéron
- Des femmes et du vertige
- Home, sweet home
- Mon ami Newton
- Frieda la brune
- No man's land
- Un sale défaut
- Stabat Mater Dolorosa
- Elles blessent toutes, la dernière tue.
- Le Diable et la Victorine
- Un monde trop grand
- De l'alcool et des larmes
- Les papillons de Venise
- Les yeux de Manon
- Une leçon de solitude
- Paroles d'ivrogne
- Des bêtes autour de vous
- Chair triste
- Autopsie d'un chasseur.
- Les voleurs de temps
- Loufried
- Ma Cuisine
- Le marché aux voleurs
- Carlos Henderson
- Richard Jurgens
- Karen Margolis
- Henry Miller
- Einar Moos
- Andrés Monreal (1932-2012)
- Art
- Anthony Meyer
- Chris Newman SCRUPLES
- Curt Hoppe
- Denise Colomb dies at 101
- Dominique Obadia
- François Baschet
- Jacques Camus
- Jacques Villeglé
- Local Artist: Diarmuid Harrington
- Musée Guimet - East Asian Art
- Musée Picasso - Hotel Salé
- Nat Finkelstein - A Tale of One City
- Nedko Solakov
- Olga Luna
- Paris-Montmartre Museum of Erotic Art
- Richard Ballard
- Robin Derrick: Life Class
- Saverio Lucariello
- Shelomo Selinger
- The Bernheim-Jeune Saga
- Visiting with Shelomo Selinger
- EDEN
- Features
- Music
- Places
- Portraits
- Bandol
- Basile Saint Germain's Solen 2000
- COCO CHANEL
- Crossing reality
- Dr. Jacky Chan, MD
- Jacky Preys
- Jean Marie Gremillet and his Lafitte Foie Gras de Canard
- Jim Harrison
- Jim Haynes
- John Calder
- Jura ou Medoc?
- Marco et les courgettes
- Montlouis from Olivier Deletang
- My friend Désir
- Puki & Mailo
- Que savez-vous des morts?
- Salon Baba is cool!
- The other side
- Yuyutsu RD Sharma
- Sebastian Araveda
- bart plantenga
- William Prendiville
- Eddie Woods
- Nina Zivancevic
- Walter Q. Foxx
- César Vallejo
- Alain Claret



