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Roman Cosmology, Part 2 of ?

white-wine-glass_2

Part 1

Lunch with her mother was a weekly occurrence for Imogen. Sandy had a sound philosophy for why this should be.

“We’re both housewives now. Kept women. You have plenty of time to let me make you poppy seed chicken salad. And if it’s after noon we can have white wine.”

Sandy was on a high. Widowed at thiry-eight, she had just remarried at sixty-one. She acted like a girl most of the time, excitable, busy, and always ready to talk about her newly established sex life. The details were graciously kept to a minimum, but the images entered Imogen’s mind anyway: her mother’s legs wrapped around the dimpled hips of her seventy year old husband, his sweaty nose and chin buried in her freckled cleavage.

Why was it allowed for her mother to possess better stories every Wednesday? How could a woman supposed to be walking into her sunset years have the sex drive of an eighteen-year-old boy? Imogen had heard several times that women reach their sexual peaks at thirty. It could be true, but only if the women boast advancing careers and eighteen-year-old husbands.

“How’s Mark?” Sandy blinked into the sun as she rinsed out the wine glasses in the sink. She looked surprisingly beautiful, Imogen decided, the light touching her blonde lashes and painted lips. The lines and peach fuzz only gave her the faintest sign of matronly grace, and Imogen sighed in response to everything.

“Excellent as usual. He’s very busy right now with this lesson of his. A junior class is lucky enough to have him balancing dangerously close to teaching Christianity with a ball of glass that has little people inside.”

“What?”

“It’s called ‘Roman Cosmology’. Apparently it has something to do with the development of both Christian doctrine and modern astronomy.”

“Okay. I’m already lost, but go on.”

“See, the Romans believed that the earth was at the center of the universe, the cosmos, the creation.” Imogen made a fist and waved her free hand over and around it. “It was made of rock, but outside, there were spheres of glass that encircled the earth. They were in layers, like seven of them, and in each layer there were beings. Each layer got better and better, like, first layer, sun, next, planets, next, stars, next, spirits, on and on. The higher spheres could move around and exchange beings and affect the lower spheres. Anyway, the Romans thought that the creator existed outside of the spheres, and was superior…”

“Why are the stars and planets better than the sun?”

Imogen froze her hand mid-wave. “Huh?”

“The sun. I thought the sun would be like a god.”

“Well, the astronomy part is that the Romans thought whatever was largest was closest. So, the sun, being kind of bigger than everything else, was closer than the itty bitty stars.”

“Ahh. My little smart cookie. How do you know all this?”

“Mark told me. When you’ve been married as long as I have you talk sometimes.”

“Stop it.” Sandy flipped the dishtowel in Imogen’s direction and flashed a mischievous grin. “I talk.”

“You might. So, in conclusion, class, Mark has a glass and porcelain model of the earth rock surrounded by glass spheres and supernatural things and tells these kids it is the basis for western progression. Meanwhile you’re here with your life and I think I am dormant.”

Sandy poured two generous glasses of Piesporter. She was silent for a moment and then looked steadily at her daughter. “I’m not so fabulous. I’m happy as a goose but not because of activity. I am happy because I have a reason to enjoy being still.”

A silence rang against the fluted wine glasses and Imogen studied her mother’s content disposition. “After your father died I thought that if I just kept busy I would be able to overcome the emptiness. But the emptiness was in my home, and what I really wanted was to be there, still. I knew middle age was approaching. When Bob came along I knew I could be still with him.”

“Oh.”

Photo courtesy of charlesscicolone.wordpress.com

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Roman Cosmology, Part 1 of ?

Cosmology

“But it is nobler and more perfect to be at rest than to be moved. Therefore, the highest sphere ought to be at rest…”

-John Buridan, early 14th Century

Imogen walked into her dining room and found Mark at the table, hunched over a clear glass ball. She could see small objects inside the globe, layers within layers. An onion universe of crystal and porcelain, resting in her husband’s palms. Like he was God. The scrunch between his nose and eyes kept pushing down his glasses, and his mouth was pulled up into a rabbit-like sneer. Ugly, sort of, but indicative of deep concentration. So motivated.

It felt like years since Imogen’s fall from grace into structureless living. An enjoyable and productive summer, ending all too soon, decided for her that thirty was the perfect age at which to take a hiatus. No shifts or classes wormed into her time, though her schedule was full of holes. The frills and pretensions that came packaged with occupational success held no place with the gardening and sock sorting. Imogen’s days became longer and quieter, so that she was certain the ages were passing. Years escaped her. But really it had only been since the autumn, and the snow had only just begun to stick.

There was nothing else to do. “What is that?” she asked Mark. “That ball has little people in it.”

“A very complicated project, my love. I am trying to explain the development of world religions to a band of eleventh graders, and am resorting to an antique model. I wish I could let them hold it, but it belongs to Dr. Wade, and is very old.” Mark held the ball up at eye level in his left hand, raising his eyebrows and squinting his eyes. The rabbit sneer was gone, but he looked sinister, nonetheless, and said, “They don’t deserve to be God.”

“What I was thinking exactly. Shall we go out for dinner? Or there is left over macaroni.”

“Out. I ate the macaroni for lunch.”

*

Mark and Imogen met when they were both twenty-four. He was in grad school and she was a lingering junior, hoping to stick with a major, any major, for the duration of its program. Too many choices, not enough fiery passion. Imogen could not decide if it was worse to be ungraduated and unemployed or cashing in a paycheck that reminded her of discontent with every signing. There was nothing she could do for big money anyway. With British history, resurrected bog bodies, and the evolution of color in film as her major interests, she knew that the options remained teacher or professional student. Both remained undesirable.

Mark worked as a teaching assistant to one of her history professors, and later claimed it was her papers that attracted him to Imogen.

“You always chose such weird topics. ‘The Advent of Wool’, ‘Pediatrics in Early Spain’, ‘Gothic Sex’. Christ, how could I resist?”

“I can give you good reasons for each title, and it would have more to do with modern civilization than does your current understanding of female anatomy.”

“Burn. My love, she cut me deep!”

Three years later they married. Imogen took a semester off to plan her new life and didn’t go back for another two years. Now here they were, Mark’s plans for his Ph.D. scrapped and replaced by a calling to teach teenagers, and Imogen working her way through to a history degree. But not at the moment. Today was about catching up on mail.

Imogen told herself that it wasn’t stagnancy, but primitive and sometimes creative needs that kept her from spending more than three consecutive semesters enrolled. Her physical and emotional states changed with marriage and home ownership and age. It only made sense that her academic pursuits would adapt. And that was that.

Part 2

Photo courtesy of godandscience.org

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