The Citizen (KZN)

With a view to writing

HIGHER PURPOSE: ONCE GUESTHOUSE, NOW SEAT OF REFLECTION

- Marie-Lais Emond

Each week Marie-Lais looks out for the unusual, the unique, the downright quirky or just something or someone we might have had no idea about, even though we live here. We like to travel our own cities and their surrounds, curious to feel them out. This week, she learns this is now A Room with a View to creating something.

The story begins at the imposing iron gates of this once famous guesthouse, where we hear our hostess has the chicken pox and has wisely left. It cannot be helped and we continue with our mission to discover how the Most Luxurious Accommodat­ion of 2005 competes with its literary namesake of a century before that and what happens here today.

Heather and I continue our castelline climb, debating whether people can get chicken pox more than once, though Edwardian literary characters were more likely to suffer consumptio­n.

Like an E M Foster pension, this could be in Italy or France or one of his wildest architectu­ral dreams. It was a Melville guesthouse once regarded as the epitome of splendour to rival the Westcliff.

Lunch is in progress. My eyes dart around for clues about the nationalit­ies of these writers and academics.

I am delighted to renew a slight acquaintan­ce with the guest to my left, Saliko S Mufwene of the University of Chicago. He is currently exploring the role of language contact in language evolution. Over chicken and ratatouill­e, William Kellerher, a local linguistic ethnograph­er and he discuss their eyeglasses.

Emelia Kamena, the assistant here, assures me that, aside from this multilingu­alism colloquium, other writers come for retreats, spending a semester in this cre- ative environmen­t, taking in the waters of the Roman pool and producing a body of work, such as a play, film script, novel or publishabl­e research paper.

I know Fred Khumalo, Niq Mhlongo and Zukiswa Wanner have been through these portals and reflected in this eyrie. Kole Omotoso and Brooks Spector too.

The owner of the ex-guesthouse, where lucky candidates get to sojourn in the astonishin­g suites, is the Johannesbu­rg Institute for Advanced Study, a co-project between UJ and Singapore’s Nanyang University.

The multilingu­alists move to the Cartoon Room, the walls there full of local, thought–provoking cartoons, for a section of their seminar, while we dawdle in the upper reaches of the baroque-neoclassic folly with its statuary, turrets and ironmonger­y.

Climbing up a steep outer staircase to the top most room, I see the old sign for the guesthouse, A Room with a View.

 ?? Pictures: Heather Mason ??
Pictures: Heather Mason
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