Saturday, October 15, 2005

My Calvino



Now there's a good-looking and brilliant writer. He would have been 82 this year if not for the brain hemorrhage that took his blessed life. But I'm sure the heavens must be rejoicing the natal day of my favorite fictionist of all time!
"Lovers' reading of each other's bodies (of that concentrate of mind and body which lovers use to go to bed together) differs from the reading of written pages in that it is not linear. It starts at any point, skips, repeats itself, goes backward, insists, ramifies in simultaneous and divergent messages, converges again, has moments of irritation, turns the page, finds its place, gets lost. A direction can be recognized in it, a route to an end, since it tends toward a climax, and with this end in view it arranges rhythmic phases, metrical scansions, recurrence of motives. But is the climax really the end? Or is the race toward that end opposed by another drive which works in the opposite direction, swimming against the moments, recovering time? "
"Today each of you is the object of the other's reading, each reads in the other the unwritten story. Tomorrow, Reader and Other Reader, if you are together, if you lie down in the same bed like a settled couple, each will turn on the lamp at the side of the bed and sink into his or her book; two parallel readings will accompany the approach of sleep; first you, then you will turn out the light; returning from separate universes, you will find each other fleetingly in the darkness, where all separations are erased, before divergent dreams draw you again, one to one side, and one to the other. But do not wax ironic on this prospect of conjugal harmony: what happier image of a couple could you set against it? "
both from If On A Winter's Night A Traveler
"Yet, even now, every time (and it is often) that I find I do not understand something, then, instinctively, I am filled with the hope that perhaps this will be my moment again, perhaps once again I shall understand nothing, I shall grasp the other knowledge, found and lost in an instant."
from The Flash
"Among Chuan-tzu's many skills, he was an expert draftsman. The king asked him to draw a crab. Chuang-tzu replied that he needed five years, a country house, and twelve servants. Five years later the drawing was still not begun. 'I need another five years,' said Chuang-tzu. The king granted them. At the end of these ten years, Chuang-tzu took up his brush and,in an instant, with a single stroke,he drew a crab, the most perfect crab ever seen."
from On Quickness, Six Memos for the Next Millennium

1 Comments:

Blogger Dennis Andrew S Aguinaldo said...

ABA ABA ABA! at inangkin si Calvino! hehe. salamat sa pagrekumenda kina kit ng kwento. in the name, i take it. hindi ko alam kung ano ang kay bautista? anyway, paborito ko pa rin talaga kay Calvino invisible cities. kung ikaw ang magsusulat ng sixth memo, ano ang pamagat?

7:12 PM  

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