> From: Malcolm Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> There is one thing I have wanted to do for a while [...]
 > to take a picture at the same location
> with the same view every day at the same time for a year.

You may enjoy the introduction to a little story that I post every
Christmas:


Auggie Wren's Christmas Story
By Paul Auster

I heard this story from Auggie Wren.  Since Auggie doesn't come off too
well in it, at least not as well as he'd like to, he's asked me not to use
his real name.  Other than that, the whole business about the lost wallet
and the blind woman and the Christmas dinner is just as he told it to me. 

Auggie and I have known each other for close to eleven years now.  He works
behind the counter of a cigar store on Court Street in downtown Brooklyn,
and since it's the only store that carries the little Dutch cigars I like
to smoke, I go in there fairly often.  For a long time, I didn't give much
thought to Auggie Wren.  He was the strange little man who wore a hooded
blue sweatshirt and sold me cigars and magazines, the impish, wisecracking
character who always had something funny to say about the weather, the Mets
or the politicians in Washington, and that was the extent of it. 

But then one day several years ago he happened to be looking through a
magazine in the store, and he stumbled across a review of one of my books. 
He knew it was me because a photograph accompanied the review, and after
that things changed between us.  I was no longer just another customer to
Auggie, I had become a distinguished person.  Most people couldn't care
less about books and writers, but it turned out that Auggie considered
himself an artist.  Now that he had cracked the secret of who I was, he
embraced me as an ally, a confidant, a brother-in-arms.  To tell the truth,
I found it rather embarrassing.  Then, almost inevitably, a moment came
when he asked if I would be willing to look at his photographs.  Given his
enthusiasm and goodwill, there didn't seem any way I could turn him down. 

God knows what I was expecting.  At the very least, it wasn't what Auggie
showed me the next day.  In a small, windowless room at the back of the
store, he opened a cardboard box and pulled out twelve identical photo
albums.  This was his life's work, he said, and it didn't take him more
than five minutes a day to do it.  Every morning for the past twelve years,
he had stood on the corner of Atlantic Avenue and Clinton Street at
precisely seven o'clock and had taken a single color photograph of
precisely the same view.  The project now ran to more than four thousand
photographs.  Each album represented a different year, and all the pictures
were laid out in sequence, from January 1 to December 31, with the dates
carefully recorded under each one. 

As I flipped through the albums and began to study Auggie's work, I didn't
know what to think.  My first impression was that it was the oddest, most
bewildering thing I had ever seen.  All the pictures were the same.  The
whole project was a numbing onslaught of repetition, the same street and
the same buildings over and over again, an unrelenting delirium of
redundant images.  I couldn't think of anything to say to Auggie, so I
continued turning pages, nodding my head in feigned appreciation.  Auggie
himself seemed unperturbed, watching me with a broad smile on his face, but
after he'd seen that I'd been at it for several minutes, he suddenly
interrupted and said, "You're going too fast. You'll never get it if you
don't slow down." 

He was right, of course.  If you don't take the time to look, you'll never
manage to see anything.  I picked up another album and forced myself to go
more deliberately.  I paid closer attention to the details, took note of
the shifts in weather, watched for the changing angles of light as the
seasons advanced.  Eventually I was able to detect subtle differences in
the traffic flow, to anticipate the rhythm of the different days (the
commotion of workday mornings, the relative stillness of weekends, the
contrast between Saturdays and Sundays).  And then, little by little, I
began to recognize the faces of the people in the background, the
passers-by on their way to work, the same people in the same spot every
morning, living an instant of their lives in the field of Auggie's camera. 

Once I got to know them, I began to study their postures, the way they
carried themselves from one morning to the next, trying to discover their
moods from these surface indications, as if I could imagine stories for
them, as if I could penetrate the invisible dramas locked inside their
bodies.  I picked up another album.  I was no longer bored, no longer
puzzled as I had been at first.  Auggie was photographing time, I realized,
both natural time and human time, and he was doing it by planting himself
in one tiny corner of the world and willing it to be his own, by standing
guard in the space he had chosen for himself. ...
 

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