Tuesday, November 3, 2009

everythingliterature - Joan Didion's The Year of Magical Thinking


I have been a writer my entire life. As a writer, even as a child, long before what I wrote began to be published, I developed a sense that meaning itself was resident in the rhythms of words and sentences and paragraphs, a technique for withholding whatever it was I thought or believed behind an increasingly impenetrable polish. The way I write is who I am, or have become, yet this is a case in which I wish I had instead of words and their rhythms a cutting room, equipped with an Avid, a digital editing system on which I could touch a key and collapse the sequence of time, show you simultaneously all the frames of memory that come to me now, let you pick the takes, the marginally different expressions, the variant readings of the same lines. This is a case in which I need more than words to find the meaning. This is a case in which I need whatever it is I think or believe to be penetrable, if only for myself.

M. C. Escher - A Man's Intuition


everythingliterature - truth in beauty


0 REMAIN, DEAR ONE...


"O remain, dear one, I love you,

Stay with me in my fair land,

For your dreamings and longings

Only I can understand.



You, who like a prince reclining

O'er the pool with heaven starred;

You who gaze up from the water

With such earnest deep regard.



Stay, for where the lapping wavelets

Shake the tall and tasseled grass,

I will make you hear in secret

How the furtive chamois pass.



Oh, I see you wrapped in magic,

Hear your murmur low and sweet,

As you break the shallow water

With your slender naked feet;



See you thus amidst the ripples

Which the moon's pale beams engage,

And your years seem but an instant,

And each instant seems an age."



Thus spake the woods in soft entreaty;

Arching boughs above me bent,

But I whistled high, and laughing

Out into the open went.



Now though e'en I roamed that country

How could I its charm recall...

Where has boyhood gone, I wonder,

With its pool and woods and all?


Poem by Mihai Eminescu - Version by Corneliu M. Popescu

Transcribed by Gabriela Brancovici

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

everythingliterature - Imagine

The decision to prohibit books is a sign of weakness and fear. The gesture invites to laziness and discontent. A book is art. Art is inspiration. Between covers there is paper and hard work. Imagine the man who built his house. There is science and love and pain. Banning books anywhere is an unemotional act. Those who hate other people hate them anyway. They find new ways to pick on them. Political correctness is not correct. What we feel is correct. PC cannot ban what we feel. A book has powers over emotions. It can change how we feel. Artists work with the untouchable. They are not good at other things. Most are not good at living, all consumed. Some writers become mad and commit suicide. Words don’t help anymore. They do it so well, is hard to believe they’re mad. Some are happy writers. They play with words. To the blank eyes, they seem a bit odd or impaired. Banning impaired is not PC.
By ICL

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Saturday, October 10, 2009

everythingliterature - Scheherazade



The Story of the Porter and the Ladies of Baghdad - Fragment


She next stopped at the shop of a fruiterer, and bought of him Syrian apples, and ‘Othmani quinces, and peaches of ‘Oman, and jasmine of Aleppo, and water-lilies of Damascus, and cucumbers of the Nile, and Egyptian limes, and Sultani citrons, and sweet-scented myrtle, and sprigs of the henna-tree, and chamomile, and anemones, and violets, and pomegranate-flowers, and eglantine: all these she put into the porter’s crate, and said to him, Take it up. So he took it up, and followed her until she stopped at the shop of a butcher, to whom she said, Cut off ten pounds of meat;—and he cut it off for her, and she wrapped it in a leaf of a banana-tree, and put it in the crate, and said again, Take it up, O porter:—and he did so, and followed her. She next stopped at the shop of a seller of dry fruits, and took some of every kind of these, and desired the porter to take up his burden. Having obeyed, he followed her until she stopped at the shop of a confectioner, where she bought a dish, and filled it with sweets of every kind that he had, which she put into the crate; whereupon the porter ventured to say, If thou hadst informed me beforehand, I had brought with me a mule to carry all these things.
The lady smiled at his remark, and next stopped at the shop of a perfumer, of whom she bought ten kinds of scented waters; rose-water, and orange-flower-water, and willow-flower-water, &c.; together with some sugar, and a sprinkling-bottle of rose-water infused with musk, and some frankincense, and aloes-wood, and ambergris, and musk, and wax candles; and, placing all these in the crate, she said, Take up thy crate, and follow me. He, therefore, took it up, and followed her until she came to a handsome house, before which was a spacious court. It was a lofty structure, with a door of two leaves, composed of ebony, overlaid with plates of red gold.

Friday, October 9, 2009

Ask Eve - what do you see from where you are?



I see the beauty, the symmetry and the perfect mechanism of the leaf, there is light

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

everythingliterature - Simonides Melicus - Encomium


Fragment 01

WHEN, upon the well-wrought chest,
Fiercely heat the howling wind,
And the oceans heaving breast
Filled with terror DanaCs mind ;
All in tears, her arm she throws
Over Perseus, as he lay
0, my babe, she said, what woes
On thy mothers bosom weigh!

Thou dost sleep with careless breast,
Slumbering in this dreary home,
Thou dost sweetly take thy rest,
In the darkness and the gloom.

In thy little mantle there,
Passing wave thou dost not mind,
Dashing oer thy clustering hair,
Nor fhe voices of the wind.

Yet if thou, my beauteous one!
Felt the weight of this deep woe,
Not unconscious would my son
Hear his mothers sorrows now.

Yet sleep on, my babe, I pray,
Sleep thou too, tumultuous deep
And th unmeasured cares that stay
On my heart,let them too sleep!

Father Jove! I ask of thee,
Vain their evil counsels make!
And, though bold the prayer may be,
Right my wrongs, for Perseus sake.

the absurd - the essential - the manifesto

The man and woman prepare chairs for invisible guests including an invisible Emperor. In between the arrival of invisible guests the man and woman sit on opposite chairs listen to the conversations between their invisible guests. After the invisible guests have arrived the man states that he and his wife can finally die knowing that his story and philosophy will be told and they commit suicide by throwing themselves out of the window. When the Orator finally speaks to the invisible crowd it is revealed that he is a deaf mute and neither the sounds he makes nor the words he writes on the blackboard can be understood. The play ends with the Orator leaving - plot summary from the web

At the end, at the end of the end of the city of Paris, there was, there was, was what?" — Old Man
"The further one goes, the deeper one sinks. It's because the earth keeps turning around, around, around, around" — Old Man

Eugene Ionesco - The Chairs


Constantin Brancusi






DADA knows everything. DADA spits everything out.

BUT . . . . . . . . .

HAS DADA EVER SPOKEN TO YOU:
about Italy
about accordions
about women's pants
about the fatherland
about sardines
about Fiume
about Art (you exaggerate my friend)
about gentleness
about D'Annunzio
what a horror
about heroism
about mustaches
about lewdness
about sleeping with Verlaine
about the ideal (it's nice)
about Massachusetts
about the past
about odors
about salads
about genius, about genius, about genius
about the eight-hour day
about the Parma violets

NEVER NEVER NEVER

DADA doesn't speak. DADA has no fixed idea. DADA doesn't catch flies.

THE MINISTRY IS OVERTURNED. BY WHOM?


BY DADA

The Futurist is dead. Of What? Of DADA

A Young girl commits suicide. Because of What? DADA
The spirits are telephoned. Who invented it? DADA
Someone walks on your feet. It's DADA
If you have serious ideas about life,
If you make artistic discoveries
and if all of a sudden your head begins to crackle with laughter,
If you find all your ideas useless and ridiculous, know that

IT IS DADA BEGINNING TO SPEAK TO YOU
Dada Manifesto

Monday, September 7, 2009

everythingliterature - David Foster Wallace - In Memoriam



The Genius at Work:

I grant that mysterious invisible room cleaning
is every slob's fantasy, like having a mom
without the guilt. But there is also a creeping
uneasiness about it that presents-at least in my
own case-as a kind of paranoia. Because after a
couple days of this fabulous invisible room
cleaning, I start to wonder how exactly Petra
knows when I'm in 1009 and when I'm not. It's
now that it occurs to me that I hardly ever see
her. For a while I try experiments, like all of a
sudden darting out into the lO-Port hallway to
see if I can catch Petra hunched somewhere
keeping track of who is decabining, and I scour
the whole hallway-and-ceiling area for evidence
of some kind of camera monitoring
movements outside the cabin
doors. Zilch on both fronts. But then I see that
the mystery's even more complex and unsettling
than I'd first thought, because my cabin gets
cleaned always and only during intervals when
I'm gone for more than half an hour. When I go
out; how can Petra or her supervisors possibly
know how long I'm going to be gone? I try leaving
1009 a couple of times and then dashing
back after ten or fifteen minutes to see whether I
can catch Petra in delicti, but she's never there. I
try making an ungodly mess, then leaving and
hiding somewhere on a lower deck, then dashing
back after exactly twenty-nine minutes again
when I come bursting through the door
there's no Petra and no cleaning. Then I leave
the cabin with exactly the same expression and
appurtenances as before and this time stay hidden
for thirty-one minutes and then haul ass
back-again no sighting of Petra, but now 1009
is sterilized and gleaming, and there's a mint on
the pillow's new case...
...The shower itself overachieves in a very big
way. The HOT setting's water is exfoliatingly
hot, but it takes only one
preset manipulation of the
shower knob to get perfect
98.6-degree water. My
own personal home
should have such water
pressure: the showerhead's
force pins you
helplessly to the stall's
opposite wall, and the
head's MASSAGE setting
makes your eyes
roll up and your sphincter just
about give.24 The showerhead and its flexible
steel line are also detachable, so you can hold
the head and direct its punishing stream just at
your particularly dirty right knee or something.
But all this is still small potatoes compared
with 1009's fascinating and potentially malevolent
toiler. A harmonious concordance of elegant
form and vigorous function, flanked by
rolls of tissue so soft as to be without perforates
for tearing, my toilet has above it this sign:
II ' ozodoesR t
1 era Cab; I 111y
n stezoard J
J I k.?nOh.
ZOllen I'. IV
111In and J 111y r00111
ZOllenl' ,
111 not?
THIS TOILET IS CONNECTED TO A VACUUM
SEWAGE SYSTEM. PLEASEDO NOT THROW INTO
THE TOILET ANYTHING [SIC] THAN ORDINARY
TOILET WASTE AND TOILET PAPER
The toilet's flush produces a brief but traumatizing
sound, a kind of held high- B gargle, as of some gastric disturbance on a cosmic scale.
Along with this sound comes a suction so awesomely
powerful that it's both scary and
strangely comforting: your waste seems less removed
than hurled from you, and with a velocity
that lets you feel as though the waste is going
to end up someplace so far away that it will
have become an abstraction, a kind of existential
sewage-treatment system.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

ask eve - what do you see from where you are?



I see signs of a new period of Enlightenment starting soon and through the next 4 years from England

Friday, August 14, 2009

Fernando Botero - Colombian figurative artist



everything literature - books subject to prejudice - Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird

The following quotations contain a word that many people may find offensive

'There's a lot of ugly things in this world, son. I wish I could keep 'em all away from you. That's never possible.'-Atticus

'Why reasonable people go stark raving mad when anything involving a Negro comes up, is something I don't pretend to understand.' ~ Chapter 9, spoken by the character Atticus

'They're certainly entitled to think that, and they're entitled to full respect for their opinions... but before I can live with other folks I've got to live with myself.' ~Chapter 11, spoken by the character Atticus


Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird was banned from a Secondary School in Canada following a lone complaint from a parent about the use of a racial slur. Ironically, the book talks about racial injustace.

http://classiclit.about.com/b/2008/09/28/save-a-banned-book-today.htm

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

ask steve

Island Zen
Songs swim over silhouettes
swinging around a thickets' curves
rotating, rising then tottering
before tumblin' into a flutter of wings
by Steve


mind the mind?

- through feminism we gained freedom from discrimination and we lost the gentile intention

Sunday, August 9, 2009

hanging around

everythingliterature - Rabindranath Tagore

Stillness

Stillness soars as a mountain peaks,
Seeking its greatness in height.
Movement stops in a silent lake,
Seeking in depth its limit.
The fish in the water is silent,
the animal on the earth is noisy,
the bird in the air is singing.
But man has in him the silence of the sea,
the noise of the earth
and the music of the air.
There is a point where in the mystery of
existence contradictions meet;
where movement is not all movement
and stillness is not all stillness;
where the idea and the form,
the within and the without, are united;
where infinite becomes finite,
yet not losing its infinity.

Jack Vettriano - photographer and painter from Scotland


Saturday, August 8, 2009

other than words

everythingliterature - from Geof Huth on the web


I don't know what happens when one dies, but I think that I'd like to have my ashes poured into a laser-printer cartridge and used to print....

To be a poet, a text-based poet as almost all of us poets are in one way or another, is to create text for a page, so what could be a better end for a poet than to be the physical, instead of merely the intellectual, source of the poem? Is that not the greatest transubstantiation we could imagine for a poet?

Sleep well, Planet Earth, and all you poets who crawl upon it. If you wake up dead, we know what to do with you. By Gary Barwin

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Monday, August 3, 2009

everything literature - vwoolf


I write without wearing my glasses, I leave words and letters come together on their own, I let them converse with each other, find out what it is that they want. I only ask integrity of them: honest and true  and yes, free meaning, pure meaning? I'm not sure, are they the same?is purity  a little like integrity only without awareness?
I let my words fly far away, I let them see how the world looks like from high above as I do right now, I train them to be incorruptible, daring and kind, at times I ask them to stay still, each stroke of meaning felt under the skin, I only add scent and memories.
 Tribute by  I

Sunday, August 2, 2009

alessandro bavari - magic and mystic


everything literature - from suchithewriter




Hues
The heart's language is punctuated with shrill laughter that makes you want to weep with joy and sad tears that you smile at in spite of yourself.

The mind can only speak silence.

"But I want it. Give it to me, I want it, and I just cannot to without it." This is the Heart.

"Why?" This is the mind.

Conflict and harmony, in conflict, in harmony.

3 sparks

Classified under Abstract, Faith, Life, Prayer, Security, Thoughts

Saturday, August 1, 2009

listen please

literature and sense - Cesare Pavese

Little known in North America Italian writer of 20th century, arrested for his antifascist convictions. His love frustrations and disillusionment with politics brought him to suicide in a hotel room after the war, apparently mimicking a scene from one of his novels.

Quote -the only joy in the world is to begin

Novels -The Beach, The House on the Hill, Among Women Only, The Devil in the Hills - His style is known as escruciatingly honest: while his experiences fuelled his fiction, he found that LITERATURE is the medium to understand their significance.

Deola's Return
I'll turn round in the street and look at the passers-by,
I'll be a passer-by myself. I'll learn
how to get up and lay aside the horror
of night and go out walking as I used to.
I'll apply my mind to work for a time,
I'll go back there, by the window, smoking
and relaxed. But my eyes will be the same,
my gestures too, and my face. That empty secret
that lingers in my body and dulls my gaze
will die slowly to the rhythm of the blood
where everything vanishes.

I'll go out one morning,
I won't have a house any more, I'll go out in the street;
the night's horror will have left me;
I'll be frightened of being alone. But I'll want to be alone.
I'll look at passers-by with the dead smile
of someone who's beaten, but doesn't hate or cry out,
for I know that since ancient times fate -
all that you've been or will ever be - is in the blood,
in the murmur of the blood. I'll wrinkle my brows
alone, in the middle of the street, listening for an echo
in the blood. And there'll be no echo any more,
I'll look up and gaze at the street

About Me

My photo
I started writing poetry and fiction when I was about 11 years old. I was awarded 2 top national literature prizes at an early age.Later I became involved in numerous literary circles in my native country, Romania. This project is a dedication to my mother, inspired teacher of literature and independent thinker.

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