HE SAID, MARIE, MARIE, HOLD ON TIGHT
~ The Waste Land, "The Burial of The Dead", Eliot
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Comus, 1787
I sat in the basement of Kroch reading a 1787 script of Comus by Milton. this manuscript contains all the stage directions and added on epilogues and prologues as well as the cast members for the coventry garden production of Comus, a Maske performed at Ludlow. i kept searching for fingerprints. like dimples, beautiful blemishes. they didn't allow me to bring anything that would contaminate the moisture of the room. they didnt even allow me to use my own note pad! instead they provided me with acid free green paper. then they put me in some room with walls of glass just to make sure i wouldnt tear up the pages. and made me read the text over a spongey desk which wouldnt damage the pages. holding a manuscript worth thousands of dollars makes you realise the value of reading, and makes you treat a text with lots of respect.
which makes me think about times when i have gotten mad when texts i check out are vandalised. not that i mind the scribbling (i do it too), i enjoy the chatter sometimes. reading as solitary and yet a dialogue with some unnamed person. but i take offense to stupid comments, racist comments, anti-psychoanalysis comments. why check out a freud text if you are going to spend the rest of your time scribbling "asshole! pervert! fuck you!" which makes me realise, what if all the books we had became expensive relics by 3000? did you know that elephants are projected to go extinct by 2020? (according to my flaming greenpeace expert boss anyway) and that kindle prices are going to go down by the next 3 years. (i'm waiting for that). what shall i tell my kids then, about elephants? ("they had trunks, like dicks, like gardening hoses. it was awesome.") will someone be reading my texts, and feeling my handwriting, like beautiful blemishes? on another note, I have a weird, rushedly written article published in the language pairing / translator-interpreter newsletter. OBAMA IS BEAUTIFUL WORLD hello love, i want to come visit you next easter, which does seem quite a bit away, but anyway, maybe~ i hope youre warm and not wet. saw 19th century leather bound copies of shakespeare, rousseau and thoreau in second hand cairene street bookstores, with dust on the tables from the trains running overhead and thought of you. be well!
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[publishing] Publishers Weekly . Dystel & Goderich . New York Center for Independent Publishing . Association of American University Presses . Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators [people] clarisse . nurul . aunty zarina (ummi's bakery) . jeremy . pak . cyril . softblow . karen & kenny (booksactually) . eric . joel . [other loves] digitaljournalist . ballet dictionary . poetshouse . urbanwordnyc [me] dawn, singapore, new york city, ithaca. [yesterday]
on the verge of a trembling
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