Posts tagged "Neruda"

The Heights of Macchu Picchu

Grace painting the circle for the icon denoting the REFERENCE section of the library
resembles mu, emptiness, the goal of chán, zen, the school of nothing, of learning
from not being, from realizing there is no angst about what never was, what won’t ever be.
Grace painting circles in the dim light. Downstairs, three-milk cake and more Keynote slides.

The people all try to climb such great heights and reach another sky. Down below,
we wonder, if we abuse the gods enough, in plainer words, if we fuck up hard enough,
will they throw a banquet for us? Will the builders of the perpendicular city call us up to view
the impossible sunrise over the rainforest, over the steppes, the river valley, dead fortresses,

long plains, new roads twisting and falling suddenly, small families of confused German tourists
and taxi drivers, all driving up, all forcing higher the vision of the people, of the earth, even if
it is quick to flit, bored, to another site, to the pyramids, to Mars. Grace painting and painting…

The circles and circles coronate a new passions, I hope. Let go the failures of others.
Surmount the possibility that one day, yes, the rivers will run dry. For now, the foxes drink
whiskey and demand to know our names. We run up the cliffs like goats, sniffing for jasmine.

—Wythe Marschall, 5/2/2012

§

Inspired by:

  1. The Heights of Macchu Picchu, Pablo Neruda, trans. Nathaniel Tarn, 1971
The Story of the Living Library

For their residency at Elsewhere, the intrepid narrative scientists of the Hollow Earth Society are creating new stories (and poems and images) by blending elements of all 3,500 titles in Elsewhere's Living Library. If you like a story here, please share it!

Get involved! We're looking for more stories based on the books. Email gallery [at symbol] hollowearthsociety.com for more information.




view archive



Help us tell us more stories of/about/with the Living Library!

TITLES FOR POTENTIAL STORYTELLING

Some of the books used in the NARRATRON 9000, 5/4/2012, in no order:

  • Daddy, Danielle Steel
  • Guy Mannering, the Astrologer, Sir Walter Scott
  • Passing Strange, Richard Sale
  • Three Faces of Love, Faith Baldwin
  • The Unity of Prose, Stanley Stewart
  • The Boys' Second Book of Radio and Electronics
  • Women Who Date Too Much (And Those Who Should Be So Lucky), Linda Sunshine
  • Gone With the Wind, Margaret Mitchell
  • Moby Dick, Herman Melville
  • Romantic Poetry of the Early Nineteenth Century, Arthur Beatty, Ed.
  • Interview With the Vampire, Anne Rice
  • Mommie Dearest, Christina Crawford
  • The Last Temptation, Joseph Viertel
  • The Book of Popular Science 1, The Grolier Society Inc.
  • Paradise Lost, John Milton
  • Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte
  • The House of Seven Gables, Nathaniel Hawthorne
  • The Land That Time Forgot, Edgar Rice Burroughs
  • The Apple That Jack Ate, William R. Scott AND This is the Bread That Betsy Ate, Irma Simonton Black
  • Victorian and Late English Poets, Stephens, Beck, and Snow, Ed.s
  • Too Strong For Fantasy, Marcia Davenport



Elsewhen is a project of

Thanks to Elsewhere, home of Elsewhen and the Living Library

Check out The Living Library Catalogue on LibraryThing