Elizabeth Tudor
The frame of my mind is accepting, it lets death into
the picture. It is not morbid though, as death and life give each other such
power. Today is the 15th anniversary of the death of my father, whose
resemblance to Henry 8th always made me hope I would grow up to be Elizabeth
1st. I liked her fierce brightness, her big dresses. I didn't want to be Mary,
all glum and locked up. My brother is nothing like sickly Edward either, so the
Tudor analogy is humorously selective.
Here is a little old diary juxtaposition:
'June 11, 1998
death is too much, too final… one moment and
everything changes… You keep going over it: there: gone: there: gone…
June 19, 1998
My Dad eased from life to death: no fitting or
terrible pain: gradually his breathing was slower, breaths far apart, then no
breathing… It was hard to tell the moment when he stopped breathing.'
The best preparation and comfort for that moment, whether clearly cut or
vaguely lingering, comes from the embrace of life. Which is why there was a
heap of clothes on the riverbank earlier, and a partly dressed dragon conqueror
making waves.
Circa 1992. Pendennis Castle, Falmouth: with Stepmum, Dad and Girl |
Falmouth Registry Office, December 1997 |
Tamar River, 2013. The water is deeper than I thought. Just out of my depth here. |
Rather ungainly ascent, and Dog decides it is not her sort of thing. |
Look ridiculous: feel radiant. |
Ditto. |
Comments
Jacqueline: ridiculously radiant is a brilliant goal :-)
I love it. And I actually don't agree that you look ridiculous. You look like you feel.