street life

hungry in Spain

hungry in Spain
Written by Cathoel Jorss,

I saw three Spanish boys doing parkour in the gardens. I have run out of money and am hungry: it’s temporary. To a Spaniard gardens means a large, bare, gravelled expanse with formally clipped hedges and dark, clotting trees. The smell of the cyprus is familiar from home. I sat on a bench under the trees and watched these boys for half an hour. They were trying to climb a sheer twelve-foot wall using their speed and hands and concentration and willpower. To my right a couple in puffer jackets were smoking some excellent weed. I sat watching the three boys in their baggy grey pants intently concentrating, doing it for themselves, and was overcome with dark sexual longing. I adored them. They went at it over and over, always exactly the same, one of them actually scaled the wall and stood on top clutching the railing with both hands before he dropped lightly back to earth like an angel, I thought: were it not for tree-planting and feeding the hungry I think this would be the noblest pursuit a young man can throw himself into, in this messed-up, traffic-scarred, urbanised world.

A child of four or five threw his teddy up in the air again and again for his mother to catch and hurl back to him. His teddy-loving days, I thought, are numbered, and not high. Another couple hid inside the boy’s parka hood and with intense delicacy grazed on each other’s faces. I saw a man cycle past guiding with one hand the back of his child’s tiny bicycle, he had a large paper butterfly she had hand-painted with sparkles attached to his backpack and flapping. Spanish girls with their luscious long hair. On every corner a hairdresser, a pharmacy. The underground train which is livid with voices laughing, chatting, like a big, relaxed club. The five elders sitting side by side, four men and one lady, formally attired and letting the last drops of sunlight fall on them along the lip of a large statue, in granite, of some soldier or some prince.

4 comments on “hungry in Spain

  1. Cathoel Jorss says:

    Thank you, Diane. I love hearing that you liked it.

  2. Jess O says:

    I am so lucky that this has become a regularly familiar sight for me. On the corner where my husband’s parents live (south of Barcelona) there is indeed a hairdresser and a pharmacist (and a hardware store and two bars!) Thanks for your magical vision-conjuring words. xx

    • Cathoel Jorss says:

      Thank you for reading, Jess. Oh, parents-in-law who live south of Barcelona! That sounds wonderful. During my short times there it was so entrancing – the livedness of life. Its poetry and pragmatism.

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