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There are, dear daughter, oceans between us (At your insistence, though I say this without rancor) A buffer from the memories of our sad antics, Pottery reduced to shards, doors slammed in such a manner That the very jambs ached in regret, The hinges wept in the weight of their sadness, Though the human heart, mapped by its own wan geography, Is immune to such trifles as mere distance. We have tarried in foul gardens of sophistry, Engaged in predictable shows of dramatics, As if our outbursts can be measured in some calculus Seeking to ascertain our devotion In the rending of garments, the shrieking collapse upon the floor, For it has been revealed to me That the spectacle of our grand lamentations, Worn by us like the finest silver-threaded garments, Are no more than the strutting and preening Of some noisome, foul peacock. No, we must accept, indeed embrace, the notion That our love is as imperfect as our selves, And that we must approach its altar Not with grandiloquence and haughty pomp, But meekly, bearing the simple gift our person Modestly cloaked in the simple black gown of humility.
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Mar 20, 2017
Mar 20, 2017 at 9:48 AM UTC
In Which We Excerpt From The Heretofore Undiscovered Letter XLVII Of The Marqesa de Montemayor
There are, dear daughter, oceans between us (At your insistence, though I say this without rancor) A buffer from the memories of our sad antics, Pottery reduced to shards, doors slammed in such a manner That the very jambs ached in regret, The hinges wept in the weight of their sadness, Though the human heart, mapped by its own wan geography, Is immune to such trifles as mere distance. We have tarried in foul gardens of sophistry, Engaged in predictable shows of dramatics, As if our outbursts can be measured in some calculus Seeking to ascertain our devotion In the rending of garments, the shrieking collapse upon the floor, For it has been revealed to me That the spectacle of our grand lamentations, Worn by us like the finest silver-threaded garments, Are no more than the strutting and preening Of some noisome, foul peacock. No, we must accept, indeed embrace, the notion That our love is as imperfect as our selves, And that we must approach its altar Not with grandiloquence and haughty pomp, But meekly, bearing the simple gift our person Modestly cloaked in the simple black gown of humility.
The Marquesa was one of the unlucky individuals whom were cast into the abyss by Thornton Wilder in the novel The Bridge Of San Luis Rey, which is as **** fine a novel as has ever been unjustly more-or-less forgotten.
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Mar 20, 2017
Mar 20, 2017 at 9:48 AM UTC
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