An
early summer day at Björn Nilsson’s grave
(Midsummer
2005)
Väster Våla
graveyard in the light of early summer
and with
the kindly southwesterly wind over
Brusling’s
meadows that must have been there
that
mild morning in the sixties
when we
invented the Monster in Bo Gryta.
The
monster was a huge mole, and we needed it
to have
something to write about in Expressen.
(It was
one of those irritating weeks
when
everything refused to happen,
world
history hesitates or meditates
on what
the next really lousy surprise
is to
look like and no star had broken his leg.)
Bo Gryta
is a deep-hole in the Åmänningen lake
To be
found a few kilometres outside
the
villages of Bodarne and Vretarne, on a line
between
the former Boda harbour, where the wreck
of an
ore smack that capsized and sank is said
to lie,
though no one knows where, and Dentist’s Point.
How deep
is this deep-hole? Nobody knows.
Many
have tried with plummet and line.
And when
the line came up, snipped
just as
elegantly as with a razorblade
or the
chain they tried instead,
the cut
just as shiny and neat
from
what can only be
extremely
large teeth, the attempts
were
abandoned. Christopher Middleton
described
them in his poem ‘The Mole’.
This
really had an effect:
for a
couple of summers latter a busload
of
Englishmen, eccentrics and experts
came for
the monsters of the deep. They sounded
and took
notes. Per Brusling offered them coffee,
now an
old man who knows quite a lot about the lake.
The
summer wind passes over Björn Nilsson’s grave.
And I’m
afraid I am the only one left who knows
how it
really happened.
The
expedition returned
deeply
convinced that this giant mole
not only
gigantic and malevolent,
is also
sly, extremely sly,
and
knows how to hide in murky depths
whenever
anyone comes there
in
search of it.
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