Saturday, December 16, 2006

Some Different Views

At Aun Estamos Vivos, Jeff and I have been exchanging comments about various subjects, including football, anarchism, the Catholic hierarchy, and Spain, especially Toledo and Castille. He included a recent photograph of his son in action as a linebacker. It reminded me of a similar photo of myself when I was young. Unfortunately, after digging around in the basement for an hour, I still couldn't find the picture I wanted. I did find one from the same time period and in the same uniform, though. Here's a young Texas boy who dreams of being the great (and mean) linebacker LeRoy Jordan, #55 on the Dallas Cowboys .

I'm not exactly looking "Texas football tough" in this photo, am I? More like I'm getting ready to go to church. I couldn't even manage a good scowl. Something tells me my grandmother was in the room and I was trying to look like a "nice young boy."

Man, that helmet definitely dates me.

Anyway, while going through photos, I came across a picture from my first trip to Toledo, Spain, in December 1989 or early 1990. It's a photograph of a young American couple that I happened to meet while in Madrid. My girlfriend and I had gone to the Prado Museum, and, exhausted after a full morning of taking in Goya, Velázquez, etc., we wound up in the Museum cafe. It was packed, so we actually sat down on the floor and leaned against a wall. Soon, another young couple came in and sat down on the floor next to us.

I heard them speaking English, so I asked the tall, gawky guy, "Hey, do you know where the Bosch paintings are?"

"Sure," he said.

It was fun to meet another young couple from the U.S., so we ate our lunches together and got to know each other a bit. Then he led us through the museum to Bosch's "Garden of Earthly Delights." By the time we had reached that astounding and disturbing painting, he and I had figured out that we both were poets, we both were named William, and that we both loved the work of Frank O'Hara.

The four of us wound up hanging out a few times in Madrid, and we had a lot of fun, but then my girlfriend and I left for Salamanca to study Spanish. At one point, she and I took a car trip with some other students from the school. It was a wonderful journey through the region of Extramadura, and then over to the towns of Toledo and Segovia. While walking through the streets of Toledo, I noticed a young couple hanging out in a small plaza. I was stunned. It was the same young couple we had met back in Madrid a month or two before!

So, Liam, bet you haven't seen this picture in a while. Hah!



Those are the steps of a building across from the entrance of the cathedral in Toledo. And though it may be hard to see in this version, that wine bottle next to Liam is completely empty.

Anyway, I had a strange feeling that day that the cosmos might have more in store for this other poet and I. It was just a little too bizarre to run into him and his girlfriend the way we did.

Liam stayed in Spain and I went back to Denver. I got engaged to my girlfriend, got dis-engaged, and then esacaped to New York. Six years later, I finally made it back to Spain, and Liam was there to meet me at the airport. I crashed at his place. Before I had even been in the country 24 hours, he mentioned this American poet he gotten to know. She was from New York, he said. She was really good and I had to meet her.

"Does she have dark hair?" I asked.

She did.

When I finally met her, I liked her, but she didn't want anything to do with me. Incredibly, this beautiful poet from Rye, New York had met a guy from Austin, Texas while she was in grad school in Seattle, Washington. They had been pretty serious and had lived together for a couple of years. Now, suddenly, in Madrid, Spain, she meets another guy from Austin, Texas. To make matters worse, her ex and I had even gone to the same high school. And, finally, to top it all off, it turned out that he and I actually knew each other! It was just a little too much deja vu for her.

"I also thought you were kind of arrogant," she tells me later. "With your cowboy hat and your cowboy boots."

For the record, I was wearing hiking boots when I met her. But it was still too much.

Anyway, to make a long story short, I pursued her and she resisted. I pursued more, and she resisted more. She was already dating someone else, she said. Etc, etc. I gave up on her. She finally showed up one morning at the cafe where I used to hang out and write. I was literally writing in my journal about how everything was over with her, when she walked up that Sunday morning. I never even finished my sentence.

I eventually proposed to her in the Gardens behind the Royal Palace in Madrid. Liam had gone there ahead of time with a bottle of champagne and a boom-box so she and I could dance (to Fats Waller and Ben Webster.)

And Liam finally got to see his two friends get married and live happily ever after. . . .






















Yeah, right.

The bride's not even sure what's she's doing with this guy!
















He, on the other hand, seems enraptured by the whole spiritual nature of the occasion, the great and powerful love he feels for this amazing woman. Who doubts him. Who can't believe he wears cowboy boots. Who can't believe he watches football!

We had a bilingual ceremony, with an American priest performing the mass in English and Spanish, and the choir singing in Spanish. It was held at Nuestra Señora de la Asunción, in the village of Chinchón, Spain. Chinchón is famous for its anis and for its beautiful, circular plaza. The bullfighting scene in the original Around the World in 80 Days was filmed there. Orson Welles lived in Chinchón briefly. And Goya would go there to see his brother, who was the parish priest. One of the few religious pantings by this great Spanish artist hangs over the altar in the church. (That's probably what the groom was staring at while the bride showed her concerns about him.)

Here's the circular plaza, looking up at the church.
La Reina and I actually lived in Chinchón for almost a year. We were in the big house on the right-hand side, with the three green windows. It was a wonderful experience, with a number of tales to tell, but those will have to wait for another day.

6 comments:

crystal said...

What a great story - so romantic! You and Liam have been friends for a long time :-)

cowboyangel said...

Crystal,

I'm going to assume you intended two completely separate thoughts there:

1. The story of how I met my wife was romantic.
2. Liam and I have been friends for a long time.

Just to clarify. :-)

Although Liam can be awfully romantic when he wants to be.

crystal said...

Heh :-)

Liam said...

It has been a long journey, batman. Nice to see the pictures again.

Jeff said...

William,

Great post!

I don't know, I think you put on a pretty good "Don't Mess With Texas" face there, son. Look at those facebars. Real hard-core... What a throwback.

The bride's not even sure what's she's doing with this guy!

lol! The photograph is pricless, although I'm sure it really wasn't that way. From the way she looks and the way you describe her, I have a feeling your better half doesn't look too kindly upon letting the Cowboy lounge around all day Sunday, going from the NFL on CBS, to FOX Football Sunday, to Football Night in America, etc, etc..., and if she's anything like Anne, I bet she's just thrilled by your new blogging habit.

What a beautiful church. I can tell you my wedding was very different, in a very stark, Protestant-looking church on Nantucket Island. We had one of the fastest receiving lines going for any wedding I've ever seen, because there were platters of enormous jumbo shrimp fresh from Nantucket Sound just beyond us. Everyone was saying "Hi...very nice, congrats, excuse me while I get at some of that shrimp..."

The apartment in Chinchón looks amazing, right there at the foot of the Church, and overlooking the bullring. It must have been like ex-pats living out of a Hemingway novel. I'll leave it to Liam to decide if he wants to slap you up for bringing up stories and photos of old girlfriends, if he's so inclined to do so. I'd love to read some stories sometime. At some point I might put up some photos and just a couple of little stories, like...

Me, playing it like Jimmy the Dunce, trying to ignore the Tricorned Guardia Civil guy with the sub-machine gun upon my arrival at Barajas.

The gitanos who shined my sneakers at the Don Quixote y Sancho Panza Monument in Madrid.

My bocadillo con cucaracha in Ronda.

cowboyangel said...

Liam,

Hope you don't mind my posting a picture of you and Amy. I couldn't resist. You can smack me when you get back from SLC.

Jeff,

>I have a feeling your better half doesn't look too kindly upon letting the Cowboy lounge around all day Sunday, going from the NFL on CBS, to FOX Football Sunday, to Football Night in America, etc, etc...

Actually, I was kidding around. She gets upset with me, but only because she's become hooked on football herself. She came home mad at me the other day, because she had broken down to read the sports section of the NY Times to find out about the Jets. I knew I had married the right woman one Sunday a couple of years ago, when the Jets were called for holding and she, disgusted, said, "I can't believe Mawae was holding." Not only did she know the name of the center for the New York Jets, but she knew his uniform number and had pinned him for the crime before I was able to! I'm a very lucky man. :-)

But then, she was an athlete herself, winning a field hockey scholarship to Johns Hopkins, so it comes out.

It was an amazing church, yes. I didn't even post the best pictures, where you can see the entire altar area. I remember very clearly during the wedding looking up and thinking to myself, "I can't believe I'm getting married here." Still can't.

No shrimp at weddings on Nantucket. I'll remember that. I bet it was great getting married there, though.

>The apartment in Chinchón looks amazing, right there at the foot of the Church, and overlooking the bullring. It must have been like ex-pats living out of a Hemingway novel.

It was the best year year of my life up to now. Except that my beloved didn't share my enthusiasm for Spanish village life. The house was great, but it was built a long time ago and didn't have any heat. I chopped wood every morning (which I loved), but it didn't help much. I went to college in the middle of the Rockies, where it was 50 below zero once, but I have never in my life been as cold as I was in that damn house. Even so, I was ready to get a dog and a gun (to do some rabbit hunting). I could have stayed forever.

>I'll leave it to Liam to decide if he wants to slap you up for bringing up stories and photos of old girlfriends, if he's so inclined to do so.

Yeah, I may have breached some net etiquette there - Do NOT publish pictures of your friends and their exes on a blog for everyone to see.

>At some point I might put up some photos and just a couple of little stories

You should. Only, that's a terrible story about Ronda. What a tragedy to have that as a memory of such a beautiful place!