Classic Post--December 3, 2007
I was reading a portion of the manifesto of Zero Hedge earlier today dealing with anonymous commentary. The section I refer to is excerpted here:
I'm also thinking I could use a manifesto, now that The Year of Magical Painting is entering it's fourth year. Certainly something about "boldly going where no man has gone before" belongs in there. Likewise something about thinking positive thoughts, leaping into the abyss and the poacher's daughter waiting on the sandbar with a straw in her teeth belong as well.
Plus some angels. Discuss amongst yourselves.
... though often maligned (typically by those frustrated by an inability to engage in ad hominem attacks) anonymous speech has a long and storied history in the united states. used by the likes of mark twain (aka samuel langhorne clemens) to criticize common ignorance, and perhaps most famously by alexander hamilton, james madison and john jay (aka publius) to write the federalist papers, we think ourselves in good company in using one or another nom de plume.The mention of Mark Twain made me think of this classic post from just under a year after I spoke to Lloyd Blankfein's secretary.
__________
That's a great last line.The Majestic Hotel
Lets just say it's a certain point in time. If you poke your head out the front door of the Majestic Hotel, you can look one way up what the old-timers still call Rue Catinat and see the Notre Dame cathedral. Look the other way and you can see the west bank of the Saigon River.
If you go back inside, turn left at the main bar, right just before the kitchen, enter the men's room, take a seat in the second stall from the left wall, then swivel your head to the right, you can see, scrawled in the mahogany divider:The abyss is fullKurtz saw that. I know he did. That's what sent him upriver. The lure of the abyss. Not to get away from reality, but to find it. Anybody who thought Vietnam had anything to do with reality just didn't understand the situation. No. You had to go so far up the river that the trees connected overhead. That's where the reality was. Back in Saigon--that was something else entirely.
of reality, the abyss experiences itself, the
abyss
is alive
Later they sent my boy Johnny upriver to find Kurtz. That's where Coppola got it wrong, by the way. He didn't understand Johnny. He thought the whole thing was a metaphor. Kurtz ... The river ... Johnny. Man, that boy could sure eat some beets. And that's what Frankie never got--the whole vegetable thing. You'd eat some beets, then smear the rest on your face. If you happened also to have some blueberries, you were golden. Actually you weren't golden. You were red and blue.
Anyway, do you remember that song by John Prine--Lake Marie? I'll spare you the full details, but one verse goes like this:You know what blood looks like in a black and white video?Anyway, the abyss isn't a metaphor. It's the abyss.
Shadows!Do you know what beet juice smeared on your face looks like in the middle of the jungle, in the middle of the night?I mean, really. Is all I'm saying. Do I have to spell it out for you? Man, the abyss is alive. Everybody thinks that when you fall into the abyss it's empty. Cold. Dark. Dead.
Heliotrope!
Naaah. Couldn't be nicer. Me? I've taken the fall. Leap--make that taken the leap. Gathered both feet beneath me, made sure I could feel the mud scrunched up between my toes for maximum traction, and leaped. Lept. Leopt. I'm either a leper or a leopard--whichever one still has his nose attached. And the water's not cold; it's warm. And the river's not dark; you'd be surprised how much you can see. And dead? Naaah. Teeming with life. You want to soar beneath the surface, open your mouth, ingest it. Ingest all of it.
Of course, if you did that you'd drown. Which is not the object of the exercise.
Johnny's mistake was taking a boat. A fucking plastic boat. Me? I'm just swimming. Upriver. Huck fucking Finn in reverse. Some days the current is so strong you're swimming at what seems to be a great rate when, in fact, the river bank is slowly going by... the wrong way. These days, though, I'm pleased to announce, headway is being made. I see less of the sun. I'm seeing lots of green. I'm at one with the river. Which is good, 'cause if you're not, there's more damned things swimming around next to you that would like to bite or otherwise fuck with you than you can shake a stick at.
The snakes make the best eating. Once you get good at it; once you've mastered your gag reflex, you just grab 'em, bite their heads off, and then slide 'em down your throat. Don't even have to stop swimming. Shit 'em out about a day and a half later, bones and all, usually (for me at least) around what I assume to be ten thirty in the morning.
I think the Floating Men have it figured out just right.I don't ever get lost anymoreI love how he says it feels like a Sunday morning and he's guessing it's June. The only difference between that boy and me is that I can't think of anything but the poacher's daughter.
I'm never falling behind
‘Cause I don't care where I wind up sleeping
And nobody notices what time I arrive
It feels like a Sunday morning out
I'm guessing it's June
Maybe that highway leads to paradise
Maybe it leads to the fountain of youth
I'm going to hire me a spotlight
And the finest crowd that money can buy
I'm going to build me a grandstand
And stand around staring down at the barren ground
Of this invisible life
I don't dream about wealth anymore
And I don't let myself dream about fame
And I refuse to dream about the poacher's daughter
Or the laughter at midnight in the mud and the rain
I've given up on ever joining the rodeo
But I'd still make one hell of a spy
I know I'll never be a Hollywood Romeo
I'm too easy to see through and so hard to find
It's a glorious world out here
And I'm a glorious man
And it's a glorious day to wait around for a tow truck
With both axles stuck in the sugar-white sand
It feels like a Sunday morning out
Hell, maybe it's noon
Maybe that highway leads to the ocean
And maybe it leads to the moon
To see her in sunlight... Manomanoman.
Same band, different song:I'm nodding offI swear to God, these guys have got my number. Except the downriver part.
I'm getting full and lazy
Floating down the river in a second-hand canoe
I've got grapes and apples
I've got cheese and lemonade
Floating down the river staring off into the blue
I bet she wonders what I think of her now
I don't care what she thinks about me
Floating down the river half asleep
I've got my hat pulled down
I've got my toes in the water
Floating down the river getting drowsy from the heat
And I can close my eyes and see the poacher's daughter
Barefoot on a sandbar with a straw in her teeth
I bet she wonders what I think of her now
I don't care what she thinks about me
Floating down the river half asleep
I've got my hat pulled down
I've got my toes in the water
Floating down the river with a straw in my teeth
And I can close my eyes and see the poacher's daughter
Barefoot on a sandbar like she's waiting for me
I'm going up. Huck fucking Finn in reverse.
__________
I'm also thinking I could use a manifesto, now that The Year of Magical Painting is entering it's fourth year. Certainly something about "boldly going where no man has gone before" belongs in there. Likewise something about thinking positive thoughts, leaping into the abyss and the poacher's daughter waiting on the sandbar with a straw in her teeth belong as well.
I bet she wonders what I think of her now.And, having said all that, one certainly doesn't want to go on too long with these things. Perhaps a nanomanifesto--by definition being a billionth of a manifesto. Shortened to the just-coined-this-very-instant-by-me term nanofesto, I've contained it, plus some other nanostuff, in the period at the end of this sentence.
I don't care what she thinks about me.
I'm Huck fucking Finn in reverse.
Swimming up the river half asleep.
Plus some angels. Discuss amongst yourselves.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home