Impression
Dec. 18th, 2009 08:29 pmTitle: Impression
Author: Anteros
Characters: Horatio Hornblower / (Archie Kennedy)
Rating: PG
Spoilers: Retribution
Notes: Hmmm, not sure about this at all. Overly angsty and slightly mangled attempt at second person inspired equally by
thehappyreturn's "You construct intricate rituals which allow you to touch the skin of other men" and Muireadhach Albanach's "M’anam do Sgar Riomsa A-raoir" (ref below). Both beautiful in their own way.
At the very least you expected the world to stop turning. Or the light to fail. Or your heart to stop beating, when his stopped beating. But it didn't. You're still here, still breathing. The world is still here and you are still in it. But it's different; a different world, new, colder. Now that he is gone from it.
And how can that be? How can it be that someone who lived so hard can just cease? Just stop? In an instant. You'd been preparing for this moment of course, steeling yourself for it, retreating into yourself, into your shell, building walls, defenses. He once said you were like a hermit crab and had picked one up from some shore as a gift. "A companion for you Mr Hornblower." Shells, walls, defenses to keep out the one person who had breached every last one. You made yourself believe you had succeeded. You kept your distance, behind the barricades, to the very last. Choking down the desperate need to feel, to touch, to rage. You would win this last siege. Thought you had won. Until he laughed. Damn it Archie, why did you have to laugh? You had to have the last laugh. And you just can not bear it.
When death came it was oddly mundane. Ordinary yet inexplicable. The inevitable consequence of a life lived. And oh how you lived. But you still can not understand how it happens so. Even though you heard his last breath, saw the spark fade from those blue blue eyes. Where are you Archie? Where did all that life just go?
They talk of hearts breaking, but you don't feel broken. This is rawer, bloodier. More like mutilation, like part of you has been torn away, as sure as if a canon short had ripped away a limb. Part of you is missing, the part that was his. That man was half your life and it's a poor share that is left. Surely it is unconscionable to go on living?
They came to remove the body. The body? It was still you, still you Archie. You were still there. Still there but not there. Still here. Clive came, and others. He spoke to you, something meaningless, before lapsing into his usual latinate medical jargon, something about "...rigor mortis...putrefaction...this heat you know...". Then they wrapped your lover in the sheet and carried him away.
But you're still here and you can still see the impression of his head on the pillow. And you remember his face as he lay beside you. The smooth cheeked boy sleeping fitfully in a hammock on Justinian. The unrecognisable wraith on the filthy cot in a Spanish cell. Across your narrow cabin on Renown, face slightly pinched with strain even as he slept. Mostly you remember the man, the one who laughed at you, and made you laugh, who you trusted with your life even when he panicked, who was always just there. Friend, lover, other words that would never come to your tongue. He had never been afraid of these words, as you were. The lightest voice, but never afraid to speak. No need to conquer your fear now, no need for these words again. Locked away in that empty place. The space that he has left.
You stare dumbly at the empty bed. You were here Archie. A faint indentation still visible on the mattress and all you can think of is his weight and his warmth when his body lay on yours. Body like a flame. Really, will you never feel that weight again?
Now there is only absence where once there was weight and warmth and life and light. The hollow impression of what had been but is gone. You still have your shells and walls and defenses but now, right now, what is there left to protect inside?
Reference
Maclean, M. and Dorgan, T., (2002), An Leabhar Mor: The Great Book of Gaelic, Cannongate Books, Edinburgh.
Since all I knew of brightness died
Half of me lingers, half is gone.
Much of imagery, and more than a few of the lines, in this piece are lifted directly from the Gaelic poem "M’anam do Sgar Riomsa A-raoir" written around 1300 by Muireadhach Albanach. Most of the poetry that survives from this period is professional praise poetry which follows formal and complex metrical systems. This poem is rare in that it is an intensely personal expression of loss that still speaks clearly today over 700 years after it was written. You can find an abridged version at the Leabhar Mor website. If anyone would like to read the full text of the poem, let me know and I'll forward.
Author: Anteros
Characters: Horatio Hornblower / (Archie Kennedy)
Rating: PG
Spoilers: Retribution
Notes: Hmmm, not sure about this at all. Overly angsty and slightly mangled attempt at second person inspired equally by
At the very least you expected the world to stop turning. Or the light to fail. Or your heart to stop beating, when his stopped beating. But it didn't. You're still here, still breathing. The world is still here and you are still in it. But it's different; a different world, new, colder. Now that he is gone from it.
And how can that be? How can it be that someone who lived so hard can just cease? Just stop? In an instant. You'd been preparing for this moment of course, steeling yourself for it, retreating into yourself, into your shell, building walls, defenses. He once said you were like a hermit crab and had picked one up from some shore as a gift. "A companion for you Mr Hornblower." Shells, walls, defenses to keep out the one person who had breached every last one. You made yourself believe you had succeeded. You kept your distance, behind the barricades, to the very last. Choking down the desperate need to feel, to touch, to rage. You would win this last siege. Thought you had won. Until he laughed. Damn it Archie, why did you have to laugh? You had to have the last laugh. And you just can not bear it.
When death came it was oddly mundane. Ordinary yet inexplicable. The inevitable consequence of a life lived. And oh how you lived. But you still can not understand how it happens so. Even though you heard his last breath, saw the spark fade from those blue blue eyes. Where are you Archie? Where did all that life just go?
They talk of hearts breaking, but you don't feel broken. This is rawer, bloodier. More like mutilation, like part of you has been torn away, as sure as if a canon short had ripped away a limb. Part of you is missing, the part that was his. That man was half your life and it's a poor share that is left. Surely it is unconscionable to go on living?
They came to remove the body. The body? It was still you, still you Archie. You were still there. Still there but not there. Still here. Clive came, and others. He spoke to you, something meaningless, before lapsing into his usual latinate medical jargon, something about "...rigor mortis...putrefaction...this heat you know...". Then they wrapped your lover in the sheet and carried him away.
But you're still here and you can still see the impression of his head on the pillow. And you remember his face as he lay beside you. The smooth cheeked boy sleeping fitfully in a hammock on Justinian. The unrecognisable wraith on the filthy cot in a Spanish cell. Across your narrow cabin on Renown, face slightly pinched with strain even as he slept. Mostly you remember the man, the one who laughed at you, and made you laugh, who you trusted with your life even when he panicked, who was always just there. Friend, lover, other words that would never come to your tongue. He had never been afraid of these words, as you were. The lightest voice, but never afraid to speak. No need to conquer your fear now, no need for these words again. Locked away in that empty place. The space that he has left.
You stare dumbly at the empty bed. You were here Archie. A faint indentation still visible on the mattress and all you can think of is his weight and his warmth when his body lay on yours. Body like a flame. Really, will you never feel that weight again?
Now there is only absence where once there was weight and warmth and life and light. The hollow impression of what had been but is gone. You still have your shells and walls and defenses but now, right now, what is there left to protect inside?
Reference
Maclean, M. and Dorgan, T., (2002), An Leabhar Mor: The Great Book of Gaelic, Cannongate Books, Edinburgh.
Since all I knew of brightness died
Half of me lingers, half is gone.
Much of imagery, and more than a few of the lines, in this piece are lifted directly from the Gaelic poem "M’anam do Sgar Riomsa A-raoir" written around 1300 by Muireadhach Albanach. Most of the poetry that survives from this period is professional praise poetry which follows formal and complex metrical systems. This poem is rare in that it is an intensely personal expression of loss that still speaks clearly today over 700 years after it was written. You can find an abridged version at the Leabhar Mor website. If anyone would like to read the full text of the poem, let me know and I'll forward.
no subject
Date: 2009-12-18 10:09 pm (UTC)I do wish the Hornblower fandom, and the H/A aspect of it in particular, was more lively because I do think the stuff you've produced in just a week deserves to be more widely read.
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Date: 2009-12-18 11:03 pm (UTC)...the absurdity of death...
Yes! That's definitely what I was going for. Was a bit worried all I'd managed was mawkish angst.
H/A fandom does seem to be rather moribund :( I cross posted to
Have just finished a short solstice piece. Almost angst free! *dies of shock* Will post on Monday :)
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Date: 2009-12-19 12:15 pm (UTC)Wow, that must be the world's longest sentence I've just written. :)
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Date: 2009-12-19 01:05 pm (UTC)*hands
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Date: 2009-12-19 03:03 am (UTC)It all just flows from one part to the next so beautifully as well. And starting sentences partway through sometimes, and some really short sentences. I think it works really well for the perspective you're writing from. But now I'm feeling a bit ridiculous writing all this.
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Date: 2009-12-19 09:06 am (UTC)Part of you is missing, the part that was his. That man was half your life
That was lifted almost directly from the 14th century poem. I just changed the gender. God, I'm such a plagiarist ;)
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Date: 2009-12-21 11:14 am (UTC)I also like that your Horatio is actually acknowleding that Archie's death has affected him so much - his thought processes sometimes are hard to judge.
(and there's nothing wrong with overly angsty :) )
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Date: 2009-12-21 11:38 am (UTC)Thanks :) I don't subscribe to the suffering victim view of Archie. He must have been a pretty tough cookie to survive the movie canon story arc.
his thought processes sometimes are hard to judge.
One of the things that makes him such fun to play with ;)
here's nothing wrong with overly angsty
No? ;)
And thanks so much for commenting again. It's so lovely to know there are a few folk out there reading!
no subject
Date: 2009-12-21 11:54 am (UTC)Oh I totally agree,
I don't know if you've noticed but I love Bush and I love Archie and I'm fond of Horatio :P but I've not often thought about writing much from his perspective and I don't know if thats because the movies and books are from his, so I want to try something different or if its because I don't see him as clearly as I see the other two? I think I shall try writing something around a particular event but then write it from all three POV's and see what I come up with. (Sorry to spam with you my thoughts!)
Yeah you won't be able to get rid of me now ;)
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Date: 2009-12-21 12:49 pm (UTC)I had an inkling.... ;)
Sorry to spam with you my thoughts!
Not at all, it's always great to discuss ideas. (Even tho I should be working right now ;) Y'know writing the same event from three perspectives is an _excellent_ idea. You should give it a go. It would also be a really interesting way to put forward quite conflicting points of view. You've got me thinking now! For what it's worth, I usually just jot down abstract bits and pieces as they come to me and tack them together into stories once I've got a more coherent idea. That's why most of my fics are divided up by section breaks. Can't do "proper" structure! ;)
you won't be able to get rid of me now
Definitely not complaining!
no subject
Date: 2009-12-21 01:50 pm (UTC)*nods in agreement* It's often speculated in fic that Horatio as he gets older becomes more and more of a cold, hard, man but I've often thought Archie may have been even colder and harder if he'd stayed in the Navy and lived. I think the main difference is Horatio feels guilt, where as I don't think Archie does, I don't think he'd see the point in it (that pragmatism again).
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Date: 2009-12-21 03:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-21 09:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 09:50 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 10:23 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 01:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 09:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 10:34 am (UTC)Totally agree with your analysis. It's the fatal combination of incompetence and injustice that pushes Archie to act.
Regarding Bush, I think Archie would definitely have accepted his command. With a few sarky comments here and there of course.
yes we're going to spam your journal
Please do. Otherwise I'd be talking to myself here!
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Date: 2009-12-22 01:49 pm (UTC)Well it wouldn't be Archie without a few sarky comments :P I do wonder about that situation and all the different ways it could play out. Hmmm...I'm thinking its time I pick up that writing thing again.
Oh and talking to yourself is fine, I do it frequently :P
no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 11:23 am (UTC)I remain unconvinced about Archie's class (although I usually just go with it for fic purposes), 'my father's gillie', my aunt petunia.
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Date: 2009-12-22 12:11 pm (UTC)What a wonderful thought!
I remain unconvinced about Archie's class (although I usually just go with it for fic purposes),
Really?? Suppose all that hanging around Drury Lane is more than a little suspect.
'my father's gillie', my aunt petunia.
My arse.
(I'm sorry, I do apologise, lowering the tone again...)
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Date: 2009-12-22 12:41 pm (UTC)Exactly! That and the fact he was stuck on Justinian in the first place, was left to rot in prison without being ransomed (why didnt he just say 'write to my father, care of his gillie?) and the fact there seemed to be no problems pinning the blame for the mutiny on him without any fear of repurcussion. The Kennedy's basically owned Ayrshire, you'd think there'd be a danger in pissing them off.
Of course you could come up with fairly reasonanble explanations for all of this, but another explanation is his Dad wasn't 'Mr Kennedy, Lord of the manor' but 'Mr Kennedy, fishmonger' and his gillie was actually his pal George down the pub. My own favorite alternative explanation is his Mum was an actress.
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Date: 2009-12-22 01:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 02:37 pm (UTC)*happy dance*
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Date: 2009-12-22 02:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 02:43 pm (UTC)*Swoons in disbelief*
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Date: 2009-12-22 01:58 pm (UTC)Although good point about not ransoming etc..but like you said there are so many possibilities.
Fiddlesticks now that I've thought about it too much I'm now thinking of the idea that Archie steals the real Mr Kennedy's identity for some reason fic.
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Date: 2009-12-22 02:37 pm (UTC)There's money in fishmongering, I'm sure! :P
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Date: 2009-12-22 02:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 02:44 pm (UTC)I shall continue to insist they made their money in fish though. :P
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Date: 2009-12-22 02:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 03:00 pm (UTC)Scarily enough I really do!
I actually want to watch Frogs & Lobsters again, his reactions to Edrington might give some indication about how he handles being around those with money and whether he considers himself to be one of them.
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Date: 2009-12-22 03:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 05:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-23 12:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-23 10:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-23 10:45 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 02:36 pm (UTC)another explanation is his Dad wasn't 'Mr Kennedy, Lord of the manor' but 'Mr Kennedy, fishmonger' and his gillie was actually his pal George down the pub.
Would that make Mrs K a fishwife? That would certainly explain the boy's sharp tongue ;)
My own favorite alternative explanation is his Mum was an actress.
I read that fic too, brilliant idea!
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Date: 2009-12-22 02:41 pm (UTC)Was that one of mine or is there another one? I'd be interested to see if it occured to anyone else.
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Date: 2009-12-22 02:48 pm (UTC)Another explanation I don't think I've ever seen is simply that he's a bastard. Plausible enough, although maybe a bit tooo obvious.
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Date: 2009-12-22 02:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-22 03:23 pm (UTC)Not to mention he has no reason to impress Horatio with his father's wealth, unless it was love at first soggy sight?
_Of course_ it was!
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Date: 2009-12-22 02:58 pm (UTC)I think I did a fic where it was alluded to he was ilegitimate *tries to think which one it was* but yeah, that's something that's occured to me too. That's the great thing about Archie's backstory, there's hints to work with and the rest you can fill in.
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Date: 2009-12-22 01:50 pm (UTC)