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Solzhenitsyn

A SENTIENT PLACE

This day marks fifty years since we came to live

in this square, detached, and spacious house, built

to a design from a Georgian pattern book

one hundred and eighty two years ago –

when the First Opium War ended, the First

Afghan War began, and the Mines Act

prohibited women, and girls, and boys

under 10 from working underground.

 

***

 

We moved in on a Valentine’s Day, the day

Solzhenitsyn began his enforced exile,

the Soviet Union like the Roman

Empire, and, indeed, Jehovah himself,

considering banishment from paradise

as the most exquisite of punishments.

 

***

 

We celebrated the move into this

domestic, suburban arcadia

by collecting a Chinese takeaway

from round the corner, and sharing it

with two close friends – one now long dead, the other

utterly lost to forgetfulness.

 

***

 

Dawn lights the birch tree through the eastern windows.

On the sedum in the small, railed garden

at the front sun sets. For two generations

lives in all their motley have found a way

to thrive beneath the roof’s adamantine slates,

among aspidistras and peace lilies,

among books, prints, paintings, among ceramics

and furniture, among music and voices,

the memorabilia of our lifetimes.

 

***

 

This is a sentient place, filled with

the light touch of fond spirits, indifferent

to the noisy dust of empires falling.

 

 

 

 

HINDSIGHT

From Moscow to London, Stockholm to Venice

the world froze at 10, 12, 15 below

for three months. Wine froze in bottles, cows in byres,

and wolves came down to villages scavenging.

Tree trunks shattered. Church bells once rung fractured.

Travellers crossed the Baltic on horse-back,

skaters glided under the Rialto.

 

The War of Spanish Succession was paused

for more clement weather – and regiments

of Swedish soldiers died in Russian blizzards,

ceding victory in the Great Northern War

to Peter the Great almost by default.

(Both Napoleon and Hitler ignored

that hard lesson about Russian winters).

 

Climatologists cannot agree

on what caused the Great Frost: the prolonged absence

of sunspots, perhaps, or volcanic ash

from recent eruptions, Vesuvius,

Santorini. Trade stopped. Hundreds of thousands

perished in a flu pandemic, or starved

to death. Louis XIV ordered bread

be given to the poor. Even the Sun King,

at his new palace in Versailles, felt obliged

to try to save the lives of mere strangers.

 

***

 

In The Gulag Archipelago’s Preface

Solzhenitsyn quotes a peasant proverb:

‘Dwell on the past and you’ll lose an eye.

Forget the past and you’ll lose both eyes’.

 

He opens the Preface with an anecdote,

a story he encountered in a magazine.

Political prisoners, from one

of the many Kolyma labour camps

in the Siberian tundra, by chance

dug up a frozen subterranean stream,

with fish preserved in motion for tens

of millennia. The prisoners

broke the ice, ate the fish.