Imbolc Valentine Moon
“I really fell in love with that part of the world,” says Cynthia Hopkins of the Arctic, where she journeyed with other artists in 2010. “I also fell in love with the boat we were on.” author of This Clement World opening at the Guthrie
My promiscuity. I shamelessly fall in love over and over again when I travel. Bangkok’s quirky Chinatown, especially on the weekend with all those restaurants set up on the sidewalks and folks walking in the densely trafficked street. Angkor in all its viney, scorpion infested, land-mined Hindu strangeness. Inverness and its smoky river, walking there with Kate. Why do we ever have to leave? That little restaurant, Crispie’s was it, just down from the Internazionale in Rome. The Ringstrasse in Vienna. The left bank in Paris.
(oh, yeah, Romania. A more recent love.)
Then there was Ushuaia, that frowsy scamp of a town as far south as you can get in the Americas. And, god, just before her, those Chilean fjords. Let me off the boat. Give me a small house, an internet connection and forget about me until, well, forever. Montevideo, too. Friendly, beefy, colorful. Old world European with a Latin twist.
I suppose I’d have to mention those old, first loves, too. Chicago, city of roast beef sandwiches, the Field Museum, the Shedd Aquarium, Hyde Park. D.C. and all its power, its monuments and museums. And yes, like so many before me, I had a brief fling with San Francisco, but she’s so expensive, a real high-maintenance gal.
Of course, there are a few I keep, stable-like, harems of places that I visit like a ghost Sultan, flitting in and out, but always returning for one more time. Lake Superior, especially the true north shore, the part in Ontario. The Georgian bay of Lake Huron. Those rocky mountains lying just at the limits of my home turf here in the U.S. All majesty and purple.
Savannah and Charleston, yes. The south is a guilty pleasure, that one with the dark desires, visited always with an eye to the road back north. New Orleans, oh yes. Dark queen of the south. I’m sure I could return to the Okefenokee swamp. And I confess to two trips to Red Cloud, Nebraska. Those Grand Tetons. Yes. Cody, Wyoming. Yes. Ely and the north woods. Yes.
You see, I’m the tramp really. Letting my heart go, letting it all go. Loving this place and that. I’m easy, I guess.