On Saturday mornings I learn the lanes of Edinburgh - track their trickles of life. . I came across Second Hands last week and I will certainly go back. Stacked full it was, jam packed - with nerve tingling bits of old bric-a-brac. Walking in - as you do - the inner earphone music looped - cocooned, as it were, in a personal soundtrack - you stalk softly through this neatly jumbled past on permanent display. As the feet shuffle the eyes dart - and extract rich colour codes - of pearl and puce, faded claret, sumptuous green, burnished gold, dust - You pick up and play - with silver shades of tiredness. A pile of cheap picture frames lazily reclaimed - queue for release. Some photographs of you - a lady, a beau, a brigadier - decompose gracefully, shelved - until such time as someone sets them sleeping once again - in their own Petri-dish attic of lost minutiae. Looking up - from invoices, charts, crinkled maps - the minutes of administrative meetings from ordered pasts - I spot - in an awkward, ramshackle line - pictures of the picturesque, profligately framed - one eye towards the sublime. And, in a lonely nook, alongside a pile of austere railway books, limp, bandy, barely standing but for a cord weaved through his varnished bones and a surrogate steel spine - an old medical skeleton, head empty and drooped, leers maniacally at the carpet. Idiosyncratic relic. No happy home can accommodate him. Think medical professors - long dead - obliging you to see through the poor soul’s disappeared flesh - and behold her grinning skull.
Tag Archives: Raeburn Place