Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/10/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]hi lugnutz, a few years back i entered radiojohn's "win an argus 555p toy camera" essay contest -- the topic of which was something like "how i came to love the argus 555p toy camera". since it also deals with leica's, i'm bouncing it along to the list, for what it's worth. i hope you find it amusing. be forewarned; it's fairly long, but shorter than than the collection of ms-tnef files we usually get. i won the 555p, btw, and as far as toy camera's go, it's a gem. kc - ------------------------ begin sillyness ----------------------- Luggers and Loggers or How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Love the Argus 555p by kyle cassidy Cartier-Bresson lurched towards the car -- he was drunken as a Marine at Marti Gras, but that was Hemingway's fault. "They busted up my Leica's!" cried Bresson. "Shut up and run," shouted Hemingway, shoving him in the back, then turning once more to wave his fists at the persuing crowd, "I could crush you all!" he boasted, before leaping into the back seat on top of Henri as I roared away. I could hear banging sounds as they pelted us with rocks and garbage. "My Leica's!" cried Bresson again. "Oh shut up," repeated Hemingway. They both stank like whiskey. "They called me a colaborationist!" The French countryside began to roar past us. The crowd was nowhere in sight, but I wasn't taking any chances. Those pesants were crazy, and mad as otters. "I had some good photos! I was just taking photos!" "With a German camera you were taking photos," said Ernest, rooting under the seat, looking for the bottle. "No one said a thing until you began to whistle _Deutchland Uber Alles_ and point to my Leica. What in hell were you thinking Ernest?" "Bah," said Hemingway, "we could have taken that whole bar. It was full of lightweights and cross dressers. Not a man among them. All the real men are out blowing up bridges. I have no tolerance for lightweights and cross dressers." "They busted up my Leica's!" said Henri once more, waving his hands in the air. The road was rutted with veins of dried mud a foot high, I was forced to slow down. "You keep going on about that," said Hemingway, "we'll get you another camera." "You do not understand," whispered Bresson, "there are no other cameras." * * * It was late at night. I'd been following Papa and Henri from one bar to another for days, we'd seen not a sober minute. Anyone who closed an eye for a second was in grave danger of being slapped by Hemingway and called a cross dresser. "We must drink!" he said, "this is France and we must drink. We must drink, and we must kill German soldiers. First, we will drink." And the next thing you'd know, he'd be squeezing a wine skin down your neck and everything would go fuzzy. That man was an animal and I was tired of babysitting. Outside Aurls we'd broken into a barn to sleep and caught a Nazi officer and a local girl collaborating. Ernest had snatched the officer's pants and his pistol and run out the door, laughing and hooting like a monk, leaving Henri and I and the girl and the soldier stairing at one another in an embarrassed silence. Then Henri spied the soldier's Leica laying in a leather bag in the straw. Caught up in the moment, or caught up by the weeks of debauchery, he suddenly scooped up the camera and ran after Hemingway. After a minute of awkwardness, I smiled idiocally and backed slowly out of the door, the german yelling after me "Das pants! Schieser! Ferdemte Schiserkoff! Vo ist mein pants?" So Cartier-Bresson was back in business, snapping photos wherever we went; of people kissing, soldiers ogling, Hemingway drinking, me barfing. It was a magical few weeks. Henri developed the negatives in coffee and mailed them out to Life magazine in New York. Papa had taken a nail and engraved "La" in front of the "Leica" name on the camera and put an accent circumflex over the "a". Everyone thought it was French camera. Hemingway made sure of this by smearing the film plane with bree and urine so the thing reeked like Paris. We were fine comrads in those days. Whenever we'd pull into town Henri would snap some pictures, Ernest would set something on fire and I'd follow them around trying to keep us out of trouble. It went on like this for most of the summer, until Ernest left the La Leica in the back of a taxi in Mont Martre one evening. Henri was on the down side of a bender when he found out and he began weeping, "Mon La Leica! Tu est une idiot, Papa, tu est une imbecille! Mon dieu! Ces't dumage! Mon La Leica!" It was a sorry sight. Papa got a little self conscious and knocked him a shot in the side of the head with a cabbage. He didn't shut up, but he quieted down considerably. "Look," said Papa, pouring wine into a bowl of breakfast cerial, "I'll get you a new camera." "It must be the Leica!" said Bresson in between sobs. "Why?" said Papa, "you think I give a damn what pencil I use to write?" "No, no, it is different," said Bresson, "it is very different. The Leica, she is fast, she is light, like air, she has no mirror, she makes no noise when she takes the picture, just click, like the air. Only the Leica." So Papa went out to look for a camera for Henri, but Ernest knew as much about cameras as he did about table manners and he came back with the wrong thing. "What is this?" said Henri, snatching it from Papa's paws, "ces't magnifique! she is so very light! Much moreso than mon Leica! and whisper! she is so quiet! Yes! Yes! truely, this is the camera for me! This 555P!" "And it's damn cheap," said Hemingway, pulling the cork out of a bottle of Old Crow with his teeth, "if you leave that one in a taxi, we'll roll a drunk and buy another." A few months later, during the liberation, we were seperated. I ran into Hemingway once, years later, in a jail in Turky. But Henri I never saw again, though once, there was a photograph of him in Le Monde that I saw. Bobby Kennedy was lying on the floor, in a pool of blood in 1968, Henri was leaning out from the crowd behind him, you could only see half on him, but in his hands you could clearly see that he was holding the 555P that Ernest got for him back in Vichy. kc