The photo was taken by daughter Occasional Speeder. She captioned it: "What a place."
I seem at peace with the world, ignorant of the ill-health that lay ahead for V and me. There are hints I am in France; the village of Montypeyroux to be exact, sitting outside a restaurant which we reserved for occasions when we felt deserved a treat.
At the time the prospect of a last visit to France was far from my mind. It has now occcurred (actually, a year ago) and I am left to ponder. What was it that took me back year after year?
I'd like to say it was the language but that's not strictly true. Rather it was the use of language and to that end I took weekly lessons continuously from mid-1973 to late 2017. Read about fifty French novels. Followed radio transmissions from France Inter. Wrestled with the ultra-demanding slangy prose of L'Equipe, a daily newspaper devoted to sport. Some people say they loved French but I'm not among them. It's a real bastard of a language and there were great holes in my knowledge of everyday conversation.
But what I did know endowed me with the enormous gift of confidence. I relished all opportunities to wade in and grab French attention. The point being I overcame my lack of idiom by planning what I had to say and coming up with the unexpected. The punchline reserved for the final sentence. My rewards consisted of watching facial reactions change: at first alarm, then attention, then the suppression of laughter. For to have laughed out loud would have been to admit that I had shown dominion over them. A Brit? Jamais.
One other thing: the huge middle of France is high level, under-populated and known as the Massif Central. It tickles my fancy turning an adjective into a noun. Also, the two words call out to you
Ah - the Massiff Central - where your countryman Simon Yates (no relation to W.B.) won impressively in stage 10 of the 2025 TDF. Ennezat to Le Mont Dore. There are so many delightful names, but if I had to pick one (from those known to me now - not many, all from le Tour) I’d go for “Col de la Croix de Fer”. No wonder you cry.
ReplyDeleteThe publish button is so unforgiving. Let’s make that “ No wonder we cry.”
ReplyDelete