Where the Halling Valley River Lies by Carl Halling (read a book .TXT) š
Excerpt from the book:
A truly panoramic book consisting of five books of overt or subtle autobiographical origin, featuring culture, history, art, verse, despair, addiction, humour, redemption, faith, love and so much more besides; a truly incredible experience, chockful of fascinating facts and tales; and all with a Christian basis. But thatās not to say āWhere the Halling Valley River Liesā has attained its definitive state, because by its very nature, it can be added to ad infinitum. So that it remain perpetually fluid and perpetually inchoate. And in perpetual evolution.
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been tamed at long last. And quietly taken its place alongside Classical, Jazz and Folk as just another facet of the massive music industry. But then is that not its final victory?
Book Five ā Beachcombings from the Halling Valley Riverbank
Chapter One ā Bouzingo and Other Versified Remnants
1. Bouzingo ā The Gathering of the Poets
The boy was aged about eighteen,
Pale and pensive,
Weary and frail in appearance.
He could have been
Goetheās Werther,
Senancour's Obermann
Or Chateaubriand's melancholy hero,
Embraced by a generation
And about whom Sainte Beuve said:
" RenĆ©, c'est moi.ā
Tortured by a new mal du siĆØcle,
He sought refuge
In the Club Bouzingo.
Two young poets,
One dark, the other fair,
Drifted past. The first,
Whose black hair
Hung in ringlets over his shoulders,
Wore a small pointed beard,
Black velvet tails,
A white linen shirt
Loosely fastened at the neck
By a thin pink taffeta tie;
The second wore a tight coat
That opened onto a silk crimson waistcoat
And a lace jabot, white trousers
With blue seams,
And a wide-brimmed black hat, and
In one of his hands
He carried a long thin pink-coloured pipe.
They were soon joined
By some of their dandified companions.
The music had stopped playing, and
The poet-leader in cape and gloves,
Dark and pomaded
With a ThƩophile Gautier moustache,
Took to the stage,
Where he proceeded to declaim
Selections from his subversive verses
To delirious cheers,
As if sedition was imminent;
Only the boy-poet remained silent,
His pale cheeks
Soakād by the freshest tears.
āAprĆØs nous le dĆ©luge,ā
He said under his breath,
āOur leader preaches revolution
But provides no solution
As to the fate of coming generations,
Should the infant be cast out
With the bath water that is so filthy
In his sight
That, intent on doing right,
Gives no thought to the future,
Nor to what might supplant
The society he claims to despise.ā
The boy was aged about eighteen
Pale and pensive
Weary and frail in appearance.
He could have been
Goetheās Werther,
Senancour's Obermann
Or Chateaubriand's melancholy hero,
Embraced by a generation,
And about whom Sainte Beuve said:
"RenĆ©, c'est moi.ā
Tortured by a new mal du siĆØcle,
He sought refuge
From the Club Bouzingo.
2. Oh My My My (Call the FBI)
Couldnāt bālieve my peepers
When I first saw you
Couldnāt bālieve the beauty
Of your baby blues
I knew I had to ask you if youād
Like to dance
I knew I had to take heart and to
Take that chance
First you resisted me you said
You couldnāt leave
Your friends alone
But after our first dance you said
You thought they would be
Ok to find their own way home
Oh my my my
Call the FBI
I think I lost my pride
I think I found my bride
Couldnāt bālieve Iād ever
Find a girl like you
Couldnāt bālieve weād bond
As if by superglue
I knew I had such tender feelings
In my heart
I knew that I could fix it so weād
Never part
First you resisted me you said
You werenāt ready
To fall in love
But after our first dance you said
You thought youād give
This crazy swain another chance
Oh my my my
Call the FBI
I think I lost my pride
I think I found my bride
3. Some Romantic Afternoon
Some Romantic Afternoon
I will hear that haunting tune
The one that I would softly croon
By a lagoon
Weād go sailing to Cadiz
For a while it seemed like bliss
Now it alls seems just a myth
Like Brigadoon
Took a boat to southern Spain
Just to see her face again
She had gone forever
Not to return there
I could not control the tears
How they burned my eyes
As I lookād back at those lost years
Some Romantic Afternoon
I will hear that haunting tune
The one that I would softly croon
By a lagoon
4. For More than a Million Dreams
Keep on chipping
Right away at my heart
Because you touched it
Right from the start
If you were to leave me
And then
We were to part
It would really tear me apart
Donāt stop now,
Darling youāre getting to me
Donāt quit now
That youāre ahead
Donāt stop now
Youāve made an impression on me
Now thereās no getting you out of my head.
Keep on tearing
All my defences down
Because I feel that
Theyāre all going to fall
Keep on keeping up with
All of your charms
Because I feel
Iām going to give you my all
Donāt stop now,
You lit such a fire in me
Donāt quit now
Because that would be cruel
Donāt stop now
Darling, donāt tire of me
Iād feel such a fool and so confused
Youāre the one
I have longed for you
For more than a million dreams
Youāre the one
I have been strong for you
You donāt know how hard itās been
Donāt stop now,
Darling youāre getting to me
Donāt quit now
That youāre ahead
Donāt stop now
5. Melancholy Girl
Melancholy Girl,
With your pre-Raphaelite curls
You don't seem quite of this world
Such a strange and a sad-eyed girl
What happened to your smile
How came you to be so full of guile
Your eyes seem to stare for miles
For such a sweet and a tender child
There's someone you've got to meet
The truth can set you free
Eternally
Enigmatic babe
The way you live is a shame
Life is more than a game
Freedom's found in just one name
I'd like to show you another way
Where the dark can't harm you
Night or day
Melancholy Girl,
With your pre-Raphaelite curls
You don't seem quite of this world
Such a strange and a sad-eyed girl
6. My Travels
My travels start
Right here
Deep in my mind
My travels take me just where
I please I donāt have
To leave my warm room
My travels start
Sixteen sun
Beating down
Sinatraās crooning Jobim
And Iām just dreaming of my
Great romance to come
I donāt need a little ticket
Tells me I can take the train
I donāt even to risk it
Thereās no blistering sun
Or driving rain
And itās here that I remain
My travels end
With a sweet
And peaceful time
Iāve found such sense deep within
No more will I feel
The need to go travelling again.
7. Some Sun Drunk Day He Said
Emotions war against sense
And his mind remains
A pot pourri
And thoughts in his head
When he lies in his bed
Would make Dorian Gray
Appear pristine
He wishes to moralize
On a corrupt example
Yet from the wicked cup
He hath supped a sample.
He appears to think in extremes
He is beau-laid and realist
Whose inspiration stems from his dreams.
āLife is a beautiful strain for meā,
One sun-drunk day he said
But I pray I say what my soul needs to
Before the heavens decide me dead.
But his mind is a disorderly drawer
Full of confused categorizations
He has that Scott Fitzgerald illness
For dates, times, rhymes and quotations.
āI have a clear flowing mind
but I cannot foretell
When the clogging black clouds will arrive
For they will arrive
Live with the love, then bear the pain
Recurrent like the monsoon rain.
He is afraid of happiness
For the inevitable despair that must follow it
Afraid of happiness
For its cruel impermanence
Like Zola, the seasons in life, for him
Are inevitable.
āAll artists,ā he says, āare at once alike and unique
One day, itās clear,
The next, hazy, like a beery vision
The fulfilment that they seek.
Misty dreams of sweet-smelling roses
And swaying streams
Bring him chills and pains in his soul and being.
He lives his life through a melancholy tragedy
And has an ever-yearning mind.
8. Gallant Festivities
It was my evening, thatās
For sure
āItās your auraā¦ā
For sure -
At last Iām good
At something
āSpot the Equity cardā¦ā
āWhen are you going
To be a superstar?ā
Said Sara
That seemed to be
The question
On everyoneās lips.
At last, at last, at last
Iām good at somethingā¦
And so the partyā¦Zoe
called me...I listenedā¦
ā¦To her problemsā¦
References
To my āinnocent faceāā¦
Linda said:
āSally seems Elusive
But is in fact,
Accessible;
Youāre the opposite -
You give to everyone
But are incapable
Of giving in particular.ā
Madeleine was comparing me
To June Millerā¦
Descriptions by Nin:
āShe does not dare
To be herselfā¦ā
Everything Iād always
Wanted to be, I now amā¦
āā¦She lives
On the reflections
Of herself in the eyes
Of others...
There is no June
To grasp and knowā¦ā
I kept getting up to danceā¦
Sally said: āIām afraidā¦
Youāre inscrutable
Youāre not just
BlasƩ,
Are you?ā
I spoke
Of the spells of calm
And the hysterical
Reactions
Psychic Exhaustion
Then anxious elationā¦
9. The Wanderer of Golders Green
I awake each morning
With fresh hope
And tranquility
I might go for a saunter
Down quiet London backstreets
Soon my aimlessness
Depresses me,
And I realise
I'd been deceiving myself
As to my ability
To relax as others do.
I decided on a Special B
Before the eve.
I bought a lager
At the Bar
And chatted to Gaye.
Then Ray
Bought me another.
I appreciated the fact
That he remembered
The time he,
His gal Chris,
And Rory Downed
An entire Bottle
Of Jack Daniels
In a Paris-bound train.
A tanned cat
Bought me a (large) half,
Then another half.
My fatal eyes
Are my downfall.
I drank yet another half...
My head was spinning
When it hit the pillow
I awoke
With a terrible headache
Around one o'clock.
I prayed it would depart.
I slowly got dressed.
I was as chatty as ever
Before the exam...
French/English translation.
Periodically I put my face
In my hands or groaned
Or sighed -
My stomach
was burning me inside.
I finished my paper
In 1 hour and a half.
As I walked out
I caught various eyes
Amandaās, Trudyās (quizzical) etcā¦
I went to bedā¦
Slept ātill fiveā¦
Read OāNeill until 7ish...
Got dressed
And strolled down
To Golders Green,
In order to relive
A few memories.
I sang to myself -
A few memories
Flashed into my mind,
But not as many
as I'd have liked -
It wasn't the same.
It wasn't the same.
Singing songs brought
Voluptuous tears.
I snuck into McDonalds
Where I felt At home,
Anonymous, alone.
I bought a few things,
Toothpaste and pick,
Chocolate, yoghurts,
Sweets, cigarettes
And fruit juice.
Took a sentimental journey
Back to Powis Gardens,
Richness
And intensity,
Romantic
And attractiveā¦
Sad, suspicious and strange.
I sat up until 3am,
Reading OāNeill
Or writing (inept) poetry.
Awoke at 10,
But didnāt leave
My room till 12,
Lost my way
To Swiss Cottage,
Lost my happiness.
Oh so conscious
Of my failure
And after a fashion,
Enjoying this knowledge.
Chapter Two - So That it Remain Perpetually Inchoate
Being a
Book Five ā Beachcombings from the Halling Valley Riverbank
Chapter One ā Bouzingo and Other Versified Remnants
1. Bouzingo ā The Gathering of the Poets
The boy was aged about eighteen,
Pale and pensive,
Weary and frail in appearance.
He could have been
Goetheās Werther,
Senancour's Obermann
Or Chateaubriand's melancholy hero,
Embraced by a generation
And about whom Sainte Beuve said:
" RenĆ©, c'est moi.ā
Tortured by a new mal du siĆØcle,
He sought refuge
In the Club Bouzingo.
Two young poets,
One dark, the other fair,
Drifted past. The first,
Whose black hair
Hung in ringlets over his shoulders,
Wore a small pointed beard,
Black velvet tails,
A white linen shirt
Loosely fastened at the neck
By a thin pink taffeta tie;
The second wore a tight coat
That opened onto a silk crimson waistcoat
And a lace jabot, white trousers
With blue seams,
And a wide-brimmed black hat, and
In one of his hands
He carried a long thin pink-coloured pipe.
They were soon joined
By some of their dandified companions.
The music had stopped playing, and
The poet-leader in cape and gloves,
Dark and pomaded
With a ThƩophile Gautier moustache,
Took to the stage,
Where he proceeded to declaim
Selections from his subversive verses
To delirious cheers,
As if sedition was imminent;
Only the boy-poet remained silent,
His pale cheeks
Soakād by the freshest tears.
āAprĆØs nous le dĆ©luge,ā
He said under his breath,
āOur leader preaches revolution
But provides no solution
As to the fate of coming generations,
Should the infant be cast out
With the bath water that is so filthy
In his sight
That, intent on doing right,
Gives no thought to the future,
Nor to what might supplant
The society he claims to despise.ā
The boy was aged about eighteen
Pale and pensive
Weary and frail in appearance.
He could have been
Goetheās Werther,
Senancour's Obermann
Or Chateaubriand's melancholy hero,
Embraced by a generation,
And about whom Sainte Beuve said:
"RenĆ©, c'est moi.ā
Tortured by a new mal du siĆØcle,
He sought refuge
From the Club Bouzingo.
2. Oh My My My (Call the FBI)
Couldnāt bālieve my peepers
When I first saw you
Couldnāt bālieve the beauty
Of your baby blues
I knew I had to ask you if youād
Like to dance
I knew I had to take heart and to
Take that chance
First you resisted me you said
You couldnāt leave
Your friends alone
But after our first dance you said
You thought they would be
Ok to find their own way home
Oh my my my
Call the FBI
I think I lost my pride
I think I found my bride
Couldnāt bālieve Iād ever
Find a girl like you
Couldnāt bālieve weād bond
As if by superglue
I knew I had such tender feelings
In my heart
I knew that I could fix it so weād
Never part
First you resisted me you said
You werenāt ready
To fall in love
But after our first dance you said
You thought youād give
This crazy swain another chance
Oh my my my
Call the FBI
I think I lost my pride
I think I found my bride
3. Some Romantic Afternoon
Some Romantic Afternoon
I will hear that haunting tune
The one that I would softly croon
By a lagoon
Weād go sailing to Cadiz
For a while it seemed like bliss
Now it alls seems just a myth
Like Brigadoon
Took a boat to southern Spain
Just to see her face again
She had gone forever
Not to return there
I could not control the tears
How they burned my eyes
As I lookād back at those lost years
Some Romantic Afternoon
I will hear that haunting tune
The one that I would softly croon
By a lagoon
4. For More than a Million Dreams
Keep on chipping
Right away at my heart
Because you touched it
Right from the start
If you were to leave me
And then
We were to part
It would really tear me apart
Donāt stop now,
Darling youāre getting to me
Donāt quit now
That youāre ahead
Donāt stop now
Youāve made an impression on me
Now thereās no getting you out of my head.
Keep on tearing
All my defences down
Because I feel that
Theyāre all going to fall
Keep on keeping up with
All of your charms
Because I feel
Iām going to give you my all
Donāt stop now,
You lit such a fire in me
Donāt quit now
Because that would be cruel
Donāt stop now
Darling, donāt tire of me
Iād feel such a fool and so confused
Youāre the one
I have longed for you
For more than a million dreams
Youāre the one
I have been strong for you
You donāt know how hard itās been
Donāt stop now,
Darling youāre getting to me
Donāt quit now
That youāre ahead
Donāt stop now
5. Melancholy Girl
Melancholy Girl,
With your pre-Raphaelite curls
You don't seem quite of this world
Such a strange and a sad-eyed girl
What happened to your smile
How came you to be so full of guile
Your eyes seem to stare for miles
For such a sweet and a tender child
There's someone you've got to meet
The truth can set you free
Eternally
Enigmatic babe
The way you live is a shame
Life is more than a game
Freedom's found in just one name
I'd like to show you another way
Where the dark can't harm you
Night or day
Melancholy Girl,
With your pre-Raphaelite curls
You don't seem quite of this world
Such a strange and a sad-eyed girl
6. My Travels
My travels start
Right here
Deep in my mind
My travels take me just where
I please I donāt have
To leave my warm room
My travels start
Sixteen sun
Beating down
Sinatraās crooning Jobim
And Iām just dreaming of my
Great romance to come
I donāt need a little ticket
Tells me I can take the train
I donāt even to risk it
Thereās no blistering sun
Or driving rain
And itās here that I remain
My travels end
With a sweet
And peaceful time
Iāve found such sense deep within
No more will I feel
The need to go travelling again.
7. Some Sun Drunk Day He Said
Emotions war against sense
And his mind remains
A pot pourri
And thoughts in his head
When he lies in his bed
Would make Dorian Gray
Appear pristine
He wishes to moralize
On a corrupt example
Yet from the wicked cup
He hath supped a sample.
He appears to think in extremes
He is beau-laid and realist
Whose inspiration stems from his dreams.
āLife is a beautiful strain for meā,
One sun-drunk day he said
But I pray I say what my soul needs to
Before the heavens decide me dead.
But his mind is a disorderly drawer
Full of confused categorizations
He has that Scott Fitzgerald illness
For dates, times, rhymes and quotations.
āI have a clear flowing mind
but I cannot foretell
When the clogging black clouds will arrive
For they will arrive
Live with the love, then bear the pain
Recurrent like the monsoon rain.
He is afraid of happiness
For the inevitable despair that must follow it
Afraid of happiness
For its cruel impermanence
Like Zola, the seasons in life, for him
Are inevitable.
āAll artists,ā he says, āare at once alike and unique
One day, itās clear,
The next, hazy, like a beery vision
The fulfilment that they seek.
Misty dreams of sweet-smelling roses
And swaying streams
Bring him chills and pains in his soul and being.
He lives his life through a melancholy tragedy
And has an ever-yearning mind.
8. Gallant Festivities
It was my evening, thatās
For sure
āItās your auraā¦ā
For sure -
At last Iām good
At something
āSpot the Equity cardā¦ā
āWhen are you going
To be a superstar?ā
Said Sara
That seemed to be
The question
On everyoneās lips.
At last, at last, at last
Iām good at somethingā¦
And so the partyā¦Zoe
called me...I listenedā¦
ā¦To her problemsā¦
References
To my āinnocent faceāā¦
Linda said:
āSally seems Elusive
But is in fact,
Accessible;
Youāre the opposite -
You give to everyone
But are incapable
Of giving in particular.ā
Madeleine was comparing me
To June Millerā¦
Descriptions by Nin:
āShe does not dare
To be herselfā¦ā
Everything Iād always
Wanted to be, I now amā¦
āā¦She lives
On the reflections
Of herself in the eyes
Of others...
There is no June
To grasp and knowā¦ā
I kept getting up to danceā¦
Sally said: āIām afraidā¦
Youāre inscrutable
Youāre not just
BlasƩ,
Are you?ā
I spoke
Of the spells of calm
And the hysterical
Reactions
Psychic Exhaustion
Then anxious elationā¦
9. The Wanderer of Golders Green
I awake each morning
With fresh hope
And tranquility
I might go for a saunter
Down quiet London backstreets
Soon my aimlessness
Depresses me,
And I realise
I'd been deceiving myself
As to my ability
To relax as others do.
I decided on a Special B
Before the eve.
I bought a lager
At the Bar
And chatted to Gaye.
Then Ray
Bought me another.
I appreciated the fact
That he remembered
The time he,
His gal Chris,
And Rory Downed
An entire Bottle
Of Jack Daniels
In a Paris-bound train.
A tanned cat
Bought me a (large) half,
Then another half.
My fatal eyes
Are my downfall.
I drank yet another half...
My head was spinning
When it hit the pillow
I awoke
With a terrible headache
Around one o'clock.
I prayed it would depart.
I slowly got dressed.
I was as chatty as ever
Before the exam...
French/English translation.
Periodically I put my face
In my hands or groaned
Or sighed -
My stomach
was burning me inside.
I finished my paper
In 1 hour and a half.
As I walked out
I caught various eyes
Amandaās, Trudyās (quizzical) etcā¦
I went to bedā¦
Slept ātill fiveā¦
Read OāNeill until 7ish...
Got dressed
And strolled down
To Golders Green,
In order to relive
A few memories.
I sang to myself -
A few memories
Flashed into my mind,
But not as many
as I'd have liked -
It wasn't the same.
It wasn't the same.
Singing songs brought
Voluptuous tears.
I snuck into McDonalds
Where I felt At home,
Anonymous, alone.
I bought a few things,
Toothpaste and pick,
Chocolate, yoghurts,
Sweets, cigarettes
And fruit juice.
Took a sentimental journey
Back to Powis Gardens,
Richness
And intensity,
Romantic
And attractiveā¦
Sad, suspicious and strange.
I sat up until 3am,
Reading OāNeill
Or writing (inept) poetry.
Awoke at 10,
But didnāt leave
My room till 12,
Lost my way
To Swiss Cottage,
Lost my happiness.
Oh so conscious
Of my failure
And after a fashion,
Enjoying this knowledge.
Chapter Two - So That it Remain Perpetually Inchoate
Being a
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