Willie and Jeannette: Fragments from a New England Marriage...

Willie and Jeannette. Together, those two names sound nice, don't they! Warm and poignant, even melliflous in the musical sense -- their combined sound rolls rhythmically off the tongue like the title of some lovingly preserved French folk song -- and with a welcome wisp of nostalgia, not unlike that silk scarf you found one Sunday morning on the vacant chair of a restaurant, prettily flowered and infused with some indefinable perfume from a day in the city or perhaps a long-forgotten tryst.

I learned of Willie and Jeannette from a recent frame shop customer of mine who brought her parents' 1950's Era snapshots in for framing. While her Mom and Dad are no longer alive in the temporal sense, I could tell from talking with that customer that in her mind and especially in her heart, they're still very much alive.

The moment I saw those two snapshots, I knew I wanted to write at least a little something about these two elusive New Englanders with their quixotic smiles and easy-going appearances.

Jeannette, quite dashing in her stylish hat
and coat and her warm, winning smile...
There was something emotionally powerful in that image of Jeannette -- something elegant and mysterious in her hair, her eyes, her hat and coat and her demeanor -- that made me want to capture her story and hold it gently in my writer's hands, if only for one sweet, evanescent moment in the relentless onrush of Time.

All I know -- and all that I suspect I'll ever know -- about Jeannette is that she was born in Newmarket, New Hampshire of parents with a rich French heritage, and that like countless other young women with northern New England roots, she toiled for many years in shoe shops to make a living. The rest of what I know of her will remain purely conjectural and must be gleaned from a long and caring look into her eyes.

As for Willie, the man perched so jauntily on the hood of his c. 1950 Plymouth, I learned from his daughter that he was born in Biddeford, Maine, drove a taxi at times to earn his keep, and played both the harmonica and the accordion -- instruments that can claim a proud history as the instruments of choice for New Englanders of French Canadian heritage.

Our Willie must have fallen instantly in love with his Jeannette, perhaps when she hailed a taxi and found that handsome and yet self-effacing young man behind the wheel, cheerfully asking her where she needed to go. Had I been that driver, I know that I would have been swept quietly off my feet by the sight of this woman in my rear view mirror, she with her playfully off-center hat, elegantly designed winter coat and impish smile, dressed for an event that simply had to be far, far away from her ploddingly repetitious days in the mechanical din of a darkly lit shoe shop.

Willie the Taxi Driver, enjoying a relaxing
moment on the Hood of his smiling Plymouth...
Where might Jeannette have been going that day? And did her ride in Willie's taxi lead quickly to a string of more purposeful encounters, sans taxi? Perhaps their story took a very different turn that day, and like two tiny, delicate seeds planted in the freshly turned soil of a field on a country road in the village of Newmarket, their serendipitous encounter on a city street needed  the better part of a sunlit summer season to grow into love.

Did Willie wait a week or two, ask Jeannette to be his partner in a Friday night dance party, then play straight into her heart on his shiny red accordion, fingers flying across the keys and over the buttons, sending a musical message of the most intense attraction, pleading with his song to take her into his taxi driver's arms and become his wife? And did Jeannette hear both the passion and sincerity of his plea and agree without hesitation to join him in the certain-to-be adventure of their still youthful existences?

In a very real sense, the story of Willie and Jeannette is the story of early Twentieth Century life in northern New England: Two earnest, optimistic children of immigrants, new to life in an unfamiliar city, coming together by chance, then going together, hand in hand and with characteristic American optimism, into a future both joyful and unpredictable in its yet-to-be experienced details.

What, then, did you see when you looked into the eyes of Willie and Jeannette?

Perhaps, like me, you suddenly and happily realized that you could have been looking at yourself. And I suspect that would have been just fine with you.
                                                                
                                     -- Ross Bachelder January 28th, 2011

What's on My Mind Today...

Drip and Splash

Me,
I drip and splash --
Just like Jackson, I've been told --
Through the numbingly prosaic,
Blurred and blended days
Of my quirky little pilgrimage,
Entirely bare-foot and lacking any caution,
Across the blood-drawing shards of time.

Planning is anathema.
I stumble through the stacks
Of the virtual library of my mind,
Blindfolded sans equilibrium,
Then stop dead in my tracks
When the spirit moves me,
Regaining what little composure
I imagined however foolishly I had,
Then choosing that one thin volume high above me --
The one with the frayed green spine
And coffee stains on the cover --

The one lone book, I feel certain, that has
The emotional heft and singular power
To provoke me into action
And make at least nominal sense
Of the next fifty moments of my aliveness.

I drip,
And then I splash.
And drip and splash again.

And then I fold up my easel,
Clean out my brushes,
Don my favorite hat --
The one that can no longer contain
My ropey Repunzeling hair (not to mention
The headstrong turbulence of my murcurial emotions) --
And head out into the traffic-choked streets
Of the urban wilderness,
Moving less than carefully --
A brave and wreckless toreador,
Surrounded by chromed-and-lacquered
Pavement-pawing bulls
With raucus horns and glaring headlights --
And me, more determined than ever
To harness the relentless onrush of those screaming beasts
And that angry pride of internal lions --
Or perhaps even occasional bursts of contentment --
That invade my teeming psyche
And make me want to paint.

RB
January 4th, 2011

One Path Into the New Year: Walking the Middle Bridge in Portsmouth...

Jan 1, 2011
Portsmouth, New Hampshire
photos: 13 – 17 MB
Public on the web

Each New Year's Day, which also happens to be my birthday, I find a beautiful, peaceful place to walk. This year I chose to walk the Middle Bridge on the edge of downtown Portsmouth, New Hampshire. The Middle Bridge, as everyone in the Seacoast NH/Southern Maine region knows, is in danger of being closed forever, so it is with more than a touch of latent sadness that we walk this magnificent bridge that lifts on command to allow water traffic to enter the harbor for both pleasure boating and nautical commerce. When exporing a site I'm more interested in the details -- the forgotten minutia which altogether form the larger picture -- than in the broader, tourist's-eye view of a site. This collection of photographs will show you just how detailed my approach tends to be. My walk was both a pleasure and a gift to myself for having made it this far in my journey on the planet. Allow me, then, to share it with you. -- Ross Bachelder January 1st, 2011

NOTE: Click the slideshow to go to Picasa, where you can view images larger and slow down the slideshow if you like.