The Blue Danube
Rumor has it that my city's new master plan calls for restoring the Zilā Donava -- The Blue Danube, a saloon that was gutted by fire not long ago. As it was one of the few seedy bars to survive the clumsy gentrification of darkest Dvinsk, and as its character is now a rarity rather than the norm -- bravo! I append a brief, relevant fragment from The Penetralium. Other extracts from my work-in regress may be found here. The work pictured (paper, watercolor, ink) is "Padegs un astrālais" ("Padegs and the Astral") by Kārlis Padegs, 1939.Vegetable Street (literally the Street of Roots) runs parallel to
For years now, the Fortress is a place of internal exile. If you are unable to pay the “heating net” or the hot water (only on weekends in summer), and are delinquent for a few months, you are sent to the Fortress – “allocated space” – and live there with men who can no longer afford the aforementioned manhood. They gather by the yellow tanker trucks that sell beer, loll in the grass of the dry moats, torture their families (what is a family) and create hell as easily as I drift into doubt and ambivalence. The poetry of departure. In Hochsommer, the barges still function, bearing ordinary sand from as far as the rapids – this is an unnavigable river beyond Pļaviņas – the formerly proud tugboats lately sinking when they are not moved on time from the summer to the winter dock, the pressure of the ice, the pilots ensconced in the sorry Blue Danube or another nameless place known by a graffito of a crescent and star, where they were about to plow under the shuttered wooden hovels of Viduspoguļanka and build soc-houses, what leader are the buildings named after today, what is built, confused crones bearing sour cream to market, so that yesterday by mid-afternoon, when the hopeful enter despair and pack it up and head for their homesteads, the tables were still laden with cottage cheese and the eyes of those who milked that animal were dark... they look good, things here, from the bars the few foreigners enter, the ones where one beer would buy you seven at Uyut, and there is some fresh happiness in the ulitse Lenina, after all my daughter went to Denmark to study drawing and Sasha is working for that man behind the tinted windows of the Lincoln Navigator… and now is something akin to goldenrod, last night’s mussels in brine, I reacting to my sudden presence after two days dragging my lover into selfsame nightmare, an old and degenerate man rounding our house, peering at the garden, and entering I’s mother’s apartment, my not understanding a word he said as I led him away (how do I know what he wants? Once it was a man whose family squatted here when this house was abandoned during the tail end of the German occupation – he only wanted to see his memory – “my first bath, I had never seen a bathtub before”) … kak cauchemar, why have the Russians taken the French word for nightmare, did they not have them before?
Labels: alcohol, art, bars, culture, daugavpils, latvia, poetry, prose




4 Comments:
Good piece as always and reminds my 1989-1991 days in D-pils:) However, when you referre, "Agdam, half-liter jars of bad beer" then I remember that Agdam was a o,75 or 1liter champagne bottles of Azeri spirited wine.
"Agdam" the same as Bulgarian "Gamza" was particularly cherished by collective farm tractor drivers and other petit drunkards, as we used to say back those days of Brezhnevite "binge totale". Also, if one thinks about the ethimological meaning of Agdam in Russian - ak dam...ahh, give you a punch:)
Paldies, Veiko! Yes, the Agdam was the wretched "wine"; the full breakfast of the underclass ca. 1992 sometimes consisted of sips of Agdam between gulps of vodka, washing some unidentifiably fleshly belaši down with the maggoty beer...
Ah, well, lifestyles change -- a sedate mojito for 5 lati at the Rothko Bar doesn't come close!
Latviski lasošajiem -- tagad var baudīt Veiko emuāru arī V-dienā!
I could imagine strains of Tom Waits songs, wailing their way across the room before slowly sauntering their way downwards into oblivion, The excuses: "The Piano has been drinking, not me!" Before he thrown to the floor by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds who capture the attention of the bar-goers with their murder songs, they conjure to life the Pirate Jenny in the middle of that black night until the bells toll, their tintinabulation ringing in the late hour, when only the one and only lonely Leonard Cohen can talk some sense into all those who chose to stay in this city, who so humbly endeavour to persevere when reason has turned its back on them followed by an exodus of the mothers of fate and fortune, oh fortuna!
PC,
Russian has a phrase for nightmare: страшный сон. I think кошмар was probably just a je ne sais quoi c'est la vie zut alors affectation that caught on and stuck.
Blair
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