Gypsy and Ginger
Eleanor Farjeon
language
(, July 20, 2018)
When Gypsy and Ginger got married--Oh, but before that I ought to say that those were not their names.Hers was the name of the most beautiful of women, and his the name ofthe most victorious of men. But they were not a bit like that really.Parents make these mistakes, and the false prophecies they invent fortheir infants at the font continue to be their delusions through life.But nobody else’s. As they grow up the children find their level, andare called according to their deserts. And so Gypsy was called Gypsybecause his hair wasn’t really quite as black as a gypsy’s; and Gingerwas called Ginger because her hair was the sort of hair that those whoadore it love to insult. It was anything but ginger; or rather, itwas everything besides. Such as mace, and cinnamon, and nutmeg, andcayenne, and ochre, and burnt sienna, and vandyke brown and a touch ofchrome no. 3; and one hair, named Vivien, was pure vermilion. It wasa ridiculous mixture really, and resembled the palette of an artisttrying to paint beechwoods in Autumn. No, it didn’t; it resembled thebeechwoods. In thinking of Ginger’s hair you must begin again, and washout all the above colours, which are not really colours, but paints.Ginger’s hair, like all the colours of earth and sky, was made offire and light. That is why colours can never be painted. I’m sorryto have gone on so long about Ginger’s hair, but I couldn’t help it;yet I should have been able to, for the hair itself was short. Whenshe combed it over her head and face it hung as low as her upper lip,and so on all the way round, very smooth on the top, very thick at thebottom, and doing a lovely serpentine in and out just below the levelof her eyebrows. When it got to her lip it did another one in, andnever came out again. . .