100 Days And Nights 1000 Years Ago

Rapidly written micro fictions accompanied by medieval motives found or created in the wayward course of researching a new novel about the dark ages—a part of the 100 Days 2011 project.

At 24, with most of his teeth missing after much manly battle fighting, Vecelin von Wasserburg was looking for personal transformation. His last name indicated that his ancestors dwelt on or near a moated castle, but whether such a place had actually existed or not, it didn’t now: Vecelin had no home of his own and was a vassal to the king. What further remained from that ancestral dominion was a watery disposition, an inclination to become tearful and fall into a sadness that he found hard to lift at times, not even by prayer or sword play. Vecelin had never known what brought it on but he was acutely aware of the need for change. In his environment, however, change was not welcome. Transformation was seen as, if not sin, then as dysphoria, a deep disagreement with the divine plan. Now, so close to the turn of the millennium, which could bring the Last Judgement itself, people high and low longed to bring their affairs to a close, not stir them up in the name of the moon goddess whom nobody liked to name though many kept her alive in their heart, the lady of the crossroads. And those who rejoiced at the idea that the world might come to an end were not the company Vecelin enjoyed: flagellators, repentant sinners, crazies in hair shirts – folks who weren’t just running away from sombre moods but who were enthusiastically burning up in the fire of their own rapture. When he explained the complex context of his ambivalences to a traveling gypsy, the king of the road said simply: perhaps you should have someone to warm your feet at night, Sire. A breast to cuddle up to will help you forget these sorrows.

#5/100 Days 2011. Photo: Jonah and the whale from the Steinhövel window, Speyer 1280 

Posted at 11:14pm and tagged with: Vecelin von Wasserburg, Jonah, sadness, 1000, sin, judgement,.

At 24, with most of his teeth missing after much manly battle fighting, Vecelin von Wasserburg was looking for personal transformation. His last name indicated that his ancestors dwelt on or near a moated castle, but whether such a place had actually existed or not, it didn’t now: Vecelin had no home of his own and was a vassal to the king. What further remained from that ancestral dominion was a watery disposition, an inclination to become tearful and fall into a sadness that he found hard to lift at times, not even by prayer or sword play. Vecelin had never known what brought it on but he was acutely aware of the need for change. In his environment, however, change was not welcome. Transformation was seen as, if not sin, then as dysphoria, a deep disagreement with the divine plan. Now, so close to the turn of the millennium, which could bring the Last Judgement itself, people high and low longed to bring their affairs to a close, not stir them up in the name of the moon goddess whom nobody liked to name though many kept her alive in their heart, the lady of the crossroads. And those who rejoiced at the idea that the world might come to an end were not the company Vecelin enjoyed: flagellators, repentant sinners, crazies in hair shirts – folks who weren’t just running away from sombre moods but who were enthusiastically burning up in the fire of their own rapture. When he explained the complex context of his ambivalences to a traveling gypsy, the king of the road said simply: perhaps you should have someone to warm your feet at night, Sire. A breast to cuddle up to will help you forget these sorrows.

#5/100 Days 2011. Photo: Jonah and the whale from the Steinhövel window, Speyer 1280 

She held on to the coat throughout the night. Stood on a rim on the castle wall looking out over the valley, smelled everything, wished her coat would turn into wings. Felt meat in her stomach turn as if still alive. Knew more about death than she should have. Wrote it all up for the bishop who burnt the pages in front of her, threatening her: didn’t she know how frail Christendom was still? Did she want to upset the divine order? Up on the wall, it seemed to her there were no walls. She knew she could touch the sky if she wanted to. Stretched out her hand. Flew like a stone thrown by itself.

#1/100 Days 2011. The photo shows Uta von Naumburg born Uta von Ballenstedt around the year 1000 in the Harz region of Germany. She died in 1046. She was married to Count Ekkehard II of Meissen with whom she lived in the castle of Naumburg on the Saale river. The couple had no children.

Posted at 11:05pm and tagged with: 100days2011, uta, naumburg, meissen, harz, stone, wings, Christendom, stonemason, 1000, Ballenstedt, Germany,.

She held on to the coat throughout the night. Stood on a rim on the castle wall looking out over the valley, smelled everything, wished her coat would turn into wings. Felt meat in her stomach turn as if still alive. Knew more about death than she should have. Wrote it all up for the bishop who burnt the pages in front of her, threatening her: didn’t she know how frail Christendom was still? Did she want to upset the divine order? Up on the wall, it seemed to her there were no walls. She knew she could touch the sky if she wanted to. Stretched out her hand. Flew like a stone thrown by itself.
#1/100 Days 2011. The photo shows Uta von Naumburg born Uta von Ballenstedt around the year 1000 in the Harz region of Germany. She died in 1046. She was married to Count Ekkehard II of Meissen with whom she lived in the castle of Naumburg on the Saale river. The couple had no children.