Posts Tagged Saracens

ALTOGETHER ELSEWHERE by David Selzer © 2008

ALTOGETHER ELSEWHERE is a tragi-comedy of errors. The screenplay explores the parallel lives of two people born on the same day in 1953 on opposite sides of the Atlantic, focussing on key episodes in their lives from 1961 to 2002.  The story, which takes its title from a line in W H Auden’s poem, ‘The Fall of Rome’, charts their lives from the ages of 8 to 50 and is set against a backdrop of the decline and fall of empires.

Annie from Liverpool and Dwight from Daytona grow up and begin their respective careers in the arts and the military – Annie becoming an acclaimed documentary and fashion photographer and Dwight a casualty of the Vietnam war eventually selling oranges by the roadside in Portugal.  Their paths cross for the first time in Greece, when they are 27.  Their lives become inextricably linked, not least through 9/11, though they never actually meet again until they are 50.

You can download this full length screenplay as a pdf: ALTOGETHER ELSEWHERE

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SAUDADE

'Saudade', Almeida Junior, 1899

'Saudade', Almeida Junior, 1899


We sheltered in the lee of the lighthouse

at what was once the end of the world,

the caliphate, for half a millennium.

Lovers still, we watched the squall move eastwards,

obscure the Sagres promontory -

whose fort’s white walls hold the Navigator’s

stone anemometer: shaped like a compass rose,

big as a bull ring, grooved like a millstone.

His caravels outflanked Islam, rounded,

at last, Cape Bojador and made the Slave Coast.

Below us, hunched in crannies on the cliffs,

their rods like jibs, their lines like skeins, anglers -

descendants of Phoenicians, Romans, Saracens

- waited stoically for bass or bream to rise.


The rain lifted. A container ship passed.

Drake, Nelson, and Browning passed: ‘Nobly, nobly,

Cape St Vincent to the North-west died away

…how can I help England?’ In Ireland,

the black rot was already in the fields -

the coffin ships all ready in the roads.


Later, drinking wine the colour of sea grass,

in O Retiro do Pescador, we

watched our black bream split, salted, sizzled, served

with sprouts. Ah, home thoughts! And Mrs. Browning:

‘…a voice said in mastery, while I strove,

“Guess now who holds thee?”  “Death, I said.”‘ We

smiled, as lovers do, and gossiped, as

lovers do, about our fellow diners

sotto voce: aging Caucasians

and a young Chinese couple with a child.

Somewhere, a radio played fado softly.

‘”Death”, I said. “Not death, but love.”‘

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