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Las Ruinas Del Corazon
Juana the Mad married the handsomest man in Spain and that was the end of it, because when you marry a man
more beautiful than you, they say you pretty much lost control of the situation. Did she ever listen? No. When he was away
annexing more kingdoms, she had horrible dreams of him being cut and blown away, or spread on the rack,
or sleeping with exotic women. She prayed to the twin guardians of the Alhambra, Saint Ursula and Saint Susana, to send him home
and make him stay forever. And they answered her prayers, and killed Philip the Handsome at twenty-eight.
Juana the Mad was beside herself with grief, and she wrapped his body in oils and lavender, and laid him out in a casket of lead,
and built a marble effigy of the young monarch in sleep, and beside it her own dead figure, so he would never think
he was alone. And she kept his body beside her, and every day for the next twenty years, while pungent potions filled the rooms,
she peeked into his coffin like a chef peeks into his pot, and memories of his young body woke her adamant desire.
She wanted to possess him entirely, and since not even death may oppose the queen, she found a way to merge death and life
by eating a piece of him, slowly, lovingly, until he was entirely in her being. She cut a finger and chewed the fragrant skin,
then sliced thick portions of his once ruddy cheeks. Then she ate an ear, the side of a thigh, the solid muscles of the chest,
then lunged for an eye, a kidney, part of the large intestine. Then she diced his p***s and his pebble-like testicles
and washed everything down with sweet jerez. Then she decided she was ready to die.
But before she did, she asked the poets to record these moments in song, and the architects to carve the song in marble,
and the marble to be extracted from the most secret veins of the earth and placed where no man could see it,
because that is the nature of love, because one walks alone through the ruins of the heart, because the young must sleep
with their eyes open, because the angels tremble from so much beauty, because memory moves in orbits
of absence, because she holds her hands out in the rain, and rain remembers nothing, not even how it became itself.
Gamalinda, Eric
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The mad dream of Joana of Castile eating her sovereign is the mad dream of mothers who lose their sons of powerless women who have nothing else but the paltry flesh of their seducers of men who have wronged tiresome girls gently obsessed with the holy tale where Jesus revealed incarnadine rot within pharisees, hypocrites and the dogmatic.
It is the mad dream of Eric Gamalinda entangled in the imperial taste of the English language blind, deaf and numb to the shackled saxon Cnihts who cried out at the overcast swan-paths, or the bleeding roods forged into cruciform swords; utterly ignorant of Canute's reforms and the tragedy of language in front of Byzantine where the axes broke a second time a roman dream torn to excelsior
Such a language cannot be tamed by fitting Grecian tales into lies about Spanish royalty or by describing outrages that are meant to touch the universal which should go beyond any constraint of syntax or accent.
Simply unfetter English until all the buried hurts and songs of swordsmen failing to conjugate langue d'oui verbs or Shakespeare jarring the scriptorium illuminators into polyhedral dreams that Joyce glimpsed at swallowing the empire of thought.
-Leo-
germanicus2 · Thu May 29, 2008 @ 09:50am · 3 Comments |
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