Несовременные записки. Том 3 - страница 22

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Impressive as it is, the picture of the old burg would not be so charming without a church which towers above the right bank and the houses clustering thereupon. Not a chef d'oeuvre of architecture, an edifice of clumsy and awkward appearance — when you examine it from near — it looks magnificent and at the same time exquisite at a distance which conceals its architectural drawbacks and emphasizes merits, the perfect combination with the landscape being the first and incontestable one. Viewed from different points of the vast hollow where the town is strewn, the church blends with the scenery in different ways, but invariably reigns over the locality. Like a conscientious custodian called upon to retain the town in its original antiquity, the church keeps the primeval fascination of the old modest dwellings, with its magnificence ousting high newly-built structures, such as a TV-mast or a factory stack, but into the background of the sight.

Houses on the left bank are not so numerous though are bunched as densely as their counterparts on the other side. This half of the hollow is scarred far and wide with deep ravines, their steep slopes grown over with young pines about twenty feet high, their beds shadowed with old thickset poplars — mixture of woodland and urban trees. There are several brooks flowing into the river, their channels overrun with tall weeds and stunted bushes; they dry up in hot summers and get frozen down to the bottom in winters. Quite an unsophisticated landscape, judging by the words describing it; but when it opens up before your eyes from elevation you can't but feel that our trivial three dimensions wouldn't have been sufficient to create the intricate yet precise contours of this picture — a projection of the bizarre terrestrial relief, a fragment of the multifaceted space brought into being a long time ago.


Situated almost in the middle of a great continent the town stands far away from ocean coasts though sometimes cold breath of the Arctic or warm and moist air of the Atlantic — regardless of season — reach it and make townsfolk grumble customarily about changeability of the weather. But a little boy who one cold windy day at the beginning of June strode along a path winding between hills and ravines of the left bank didn't intend to complain of the climatic vicissitudes to a man who was with him, for all these chats about the weather are the privilege of mature age, whereas the boy was only five and had a lot of more interesting things to talk about.

Slim and in a childish way slightly awkward in movements, he went hand in hand with the man continually throwing up his head to glance at his companion and talking something in a clear voice with lively boyish intonations. His big brown eyes were sparkling, and his auburn hair was showing from under his knitted cap giving his lovely face a bit mischievous yet serious expression — that of an experienced traveller.

The boy's companion was a burly man with green eyes and dark hair. He had recently reached the age of John Bonham — the unexcelled genius of drum-craft who passed away in a desolate cottage in 1980 being thirty-one years old and was now the subject of a conversation between the two.

'Was John Bonham born by a mummy, like me?' the boy asked.

'Of course, kiddy.'

'And Robert Plant too?'

'And Robert Plant too.'

'And Jimmie Page too?'

'And Jimmie Page too, and John Paul Jones too. All the people are born by their mothers. So don't ask all the same about each.'

'I see,' said the boy, customarily throwing up his head and giving the man a look of his brown eyes. 'Do you know why I like him? Because I like the way he plays drums… Oh, let's go here!' he shouted when they got to the very brink of a steep ravine, and pointed downwards, at a lazily flowing brook.

'Why here?' the man asked.

'Cause I want,' the boy responded, in a-matter-of-course way, but not capriciously — just trying to explain the reason of his choice.

They cautiously descended the steep slope and stopped by the babbling flow for a minute. Then the boy pointed upwards, at the opposite brink of the ravine: