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Spend a day reading Pablo Neruda


 

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  • Lucy The Elephant
  • Boston

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    johnste3 sees beauty everywhere.

    Pablo Neruda Super Star 8 months ago

    If Neruda were alive today would he be a rockstar?

    Would he wear tight black tee-shirts and sunglasses like Bono?

    Would Neruda host telethons to raise money for some good cause and cry as the night wore on?

    Would he sell his likeness on bottles of beer in Tokyo train stations or would he read his poems in town-hall meetings?

    Would he be chased down by the paparazzi in motor scooters as he sped through the tunnel of our emotions?

    Would he patrol the streets of Baghdad in camouflage and carrying an M-16 loaded with Portuguese verbs?

    Would Neruda sell hedge funds describing their complicated, inexplicable workings in terms so romantic and desirable that everyone, every living soul were forced to buy?

    Would he read us the evening news?

    Would he eat special foods and show us the photos of him before the diet helped him trim unwanted inches off his waist and give him the energy of a twenty-year old?

    Like Neruda: I have no answers. Only questions.



    johnste3 sees beauty everywhere.

    Powerful Neruda 9 months ago

    “I’m Explaining a Few Things” Pablo Neruda

    This is a very challenging read. Not due to its complexity, rather because of its content: set in Spanish revolution.

    “You are going to ask: and where are the lilacs?
    and the poppy-petalled metaphysics?
    and the rain repeatedly spattering
    its words and drilling them full
    of apertures and birds?
    I’ll tell you all the news.

    I lived in a suburb,
    a suburb of Madrid, with bells,
    and clocks, and trees.

    From there you could look out
    over Castille’s dry face:
    a leather ocean.
    My house was called
    the house of flowers, because in every cranny
    geraniums burst: it was
    a good-looking house
    with its dogs and children.
    Remember, Raul?
    Eh, Rafel? Federico, do you remember
    from under the ground
    my balconies on which
    the light of June drowned flowers in your mouth?
    Brother, my brother!
    Everything
    loud with big voices, the salt of merchandises,
    pile-ups of palpitating bread,
    the stalls of my suburb of Arguelles with its statue
    like a drained inkwell in a swirl of hake:
    oil flowed into spoons,
    a deep baying
    of feet and hands swelled in the streets,
    metres, litres, the sharpmeasure of life,
    stacked-up fish,the texture of roofs with a cold sun in which
    the weather vane falters,
    the fine, frenzied ivory of potatoes,
    wave on wave of tomatoes rolling down the sea.

    And one morning all that was burning,
    one morning the bonfires
    leapt out of the earth
    devouring human beings—
    and from then on fire,
    gunpowder from then on,
    and from then on blood.
    Bandits with planes and Moors,
    bandits with finger-rings and duchesses,
    bandits with black friars spattering blessings
    came through the sky to kill children
    and the blood of children ran through the streets
    without fuss, like children’s blood.

    Jackals that the jackals would despise,
    stones that the dry thistle would bite on and spit out,
    vipers that the vipers would abominate!

    Face to face with you I have seen the blood
    of Spain tower like a tide
    to drown you in one wave
    of pride and knives!

    Treacherous
    generals:
    see my dead house,
    look at broken Spain :
    from every house burning metal flows
    instead of flowers,
    from every socket of Spain
    Spain emerges
    and from every dead child a rifle with eyes,
    and from every crime bullets are born
    which will one day find
    the bull’s eye of your hearts.

    And you’ll ask: why doesn’t his poetry
    speak of dreams and leaves
    and the great volcanoes of his native land?

    Come and see the blood in the streets.
    Come and see
    The blood in the streets.
    Come and see the blood
    In the streets!”



    johnste3 sees beauty everywhere.

    Ah, Neruda! 21 months ago

    “I no longer love her, true, but how much I loved her
    Love is so short and forgetting so long”

    Pablo Neruda’s lines of lost love are painful and evoke emotion like no others. These lines from “Saddest Poem” bring me to tears almost everytime that I read them.

    Great poems distill emotion down to a super-concentrated few words that rip out the heart, but leave us longing for more.

    So few people read poetry. So few people with whom to read and discuss the great writers.

    There are only four people who want to read Neruda!




     

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