“There is a river of girls and women in our streets” (Donald Barthelme)

THERE is a river of girls and women in our streets. There are so many that the cars are forced to use the sidewalks. The women walk in the street proper, the part where, in other cities, trucks and bicycles are found. They stand in windows too unbuckling their shirts, so that we will not be displeased. I admire them for that. We have voted again and again, and I think they like that, that we vote so much. We voted to try the river in the next town. They have a girl-river there they don’t use much. We slipped into the felucca carrying our baggage in long canvas tubes tied, in the middle, with straps. The girls groaned under the additional weight. Then Hubert pushed off and Bill began to beat time for the rowers. We wondered if Snow White would be happy, alone there. But if she wasn’t, we couldn’t do anything about it. Men try to please their mistresses when they, men, are not busy in the countinghouse, or drinking healths, or having the blade of a new dagger chased with gold. In the village we walked around the well where the girls were dipping their trousers. The zippers were rusting. “Ha ha,” the girls said, “we could tear this down in a minute, this well.” It is difficult to defeat that notion, the one the village girls hold, that the boy who trembles by the wall, against the stones, will be Pope someday. He is not even hungry; his family is not even poor.

From Donald Barthelme’s novel Snow White.

 

Hercules Killing the Molionides — Albrecht Durer

A Quarry — Albrecht Durer

“Alone” — Edgar Allan Poe

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Ornamental Alphabets

8th Century. Vatican

8th Century. British Museum.

8th and 9th Centuries. Anglo-Saxon.

9th Century. From an Anglo-Saxon MS. Battel Abbey.

Continue reading “Ornamental Alphabets”

The Fall of Phaeton — Michelangelo

Young Woman Reading from a Sheet of Paper — Hendrick Terbrugghen

Nightmare — Nicolai Abildgaard

This Coming Fall (Book Acquired, Some Time at the End of October, 2013)

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Matthew Winston’s This Coming Fall. 

Another beautiful little book from Pilotless Press.

Their blurb:

These days it feels like we are living inside a failing machine. Enter the two-room apartment of This Coming Fall, though, and you begin to see just how far things could spin out of control. Walk from one room to the next and back again. Hear each room’s voice. You will soon realize these are the voices not of some dismal future, but of a present still obscured under the noise of our daily lives. But listen closely to the dialogue between them and one starts to resemble the voice of god, the other the voice of the faithful. Listen for long enough, and you will see that it could be the same voice after all, echoing from room to room and back again.

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Read my review of the first Pilotless Press project, The Mundane History of Lockwood Heights.

Watch Wes Anderson’s New Short Film, Castello Cavalcanti

The Art Critics — Gabriel von Max

“The Untidy Man” — Robert Graves

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Loose Company — Dirck van Baburen

Allegory of a Dream — Giorgio Vasari

“My Books” — Jorge Luis Borges

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When the Children Have Gone to Bed — Carl Larsson

“Doing, a filthy pleasure is, and short” — Petronius

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