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*Walter, I just want to sit on my *** and **** and think about Dante.* —Samuel Beckett All this fractures the Wolf. The ancient leaves amid the ancient woods, wind riffling wind in eddies she can see but she can’t hear, the braying of a fatted calf which she could eat, if she could hear thy call, O Wolf. The tympani pretend to be a thunder roll, the crashing cymbals mean to simulate the distant lightning, all the strings—cello, base, violin and viola—play the pizzicato of rain commencing… The Wolf sits to watch—what?—the floodlights fill the stadium? the baton poised? the crowd about to have their daily dose of not quite silence served up yet again? She hates that they have come to watch a prophecy. It’s raining full blast now, the Wolf’s exchange for music, how things balance out, how rain fornicates in the forest, with its pools and puddles, how it tenders lakes and rivers and shadows… It can’t be! Ahead she sees him. She sees Dante, the poet of the prophecy, the one she has to drown. It’s why she’s deaf. She will not hear him wail. **** him so he will rot in hell before the other poet comes. **** him and spare the world another poem about another world. The rain and music grow so dense around her soul. She is so quick, too quick for him to flee. She drags him still alive, drags him to the lake of his heart. Sink and die. In Paradise only bubbles rise. The tympani pretend to be a thunder roll, the crashing cymbals mean to simulate the distant lightning, all the strings—cello, base, violin, viola—play it soft, so soft, as if the rain is about to start… The Wolf and I walk the slopes of hell. When Farinata and Cavalcante rise up to ask her, ‘Who were thy ancestors?’ and ‘Where Is ***** she howls. O Wolf. O Tuscan. She howls.
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Aug 25, 2010
Aug 25, 2010 at 5:51 PM UTC
O Wolf, O Tuscan
*Walter, I just want to sit on my *** and **** and think about Dante.* —Samuel Beckett All this fractures the Wolf. The ancient leaves amid the ancient woods, wind riffling wind in eddies she can see but she can’t hear, the braying of a fatted calf which she could eat, if she could hear thy call, O Wolf. The tympani pretend to be a thunder roll, the crashing cymbals mean to simulate the distant lightning, all the strings—cello, base, violin and viola—play the pizzicato of rain commencing… The Wolf sits to watch—what?—the floodlights fill the stadium? the baton poised? the crowd about to have their daily dose of not quite silence served up yet again? She hates that they have come to watch a prophecy. It’s raining full blast now, the Wolf’s exchange for music, how things balance out, how rain fornicates in the forest, with its pools and puddles, how it tenders lakes and rivers and shadows… It can’t be! Ahead she sees him. She sees Dante, the poet of the prophecy, the one she has to drown. It’s why she’s deaf. She will not hear him wail. **** him so he will rot in hell before the other poet comes. **** him and spare the world another poem about another world. The rain and music grow so dense around her soul. She is so quick, too quick for him to flee. She drags him still alive, drags him to the lake of his heart. Sink and die. In Paradise only bubbles rise. The tympani pretend to be a thunder roll, the crashing cymbals mean to simulate the distant lightning, all the strings—cello, base, violin, viola—play it soft, so soft, as if the rain is about to start… The Wolf and I walk the slopes of hell. When Farinata and Cavalcante rise up to ask her, ‘Who were thy ancestors?’ and ‘Where Is ***** she howls. O Wolf. O Tuscan. She howls.
© Jim Kleinhenz
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Aug 25, 2010
Aug 25, 2010 at 5:51 PM UTC
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