I can't quite get a handle on your question
here, Anny.
Hal
"I'm not afraid of dying. I just don't want
to be there when it happens."
--Woody Allen
Halvard Johnson
================
[log in to unmask]
[log in to unmask]
http://home.earthlink.net/~halvard
http://entropyandme.blogspot.com
http://imageswithoutwords.blogspot.com
http://www.hamiltonstone.org
On Jan 28, 2007, at 11:44 AM, Anny Ballardini wrote:
> a good sonnet depicting varied realities
> the end of the imaginary fable is tragic
> but it seems that all around it is not better
>
> or am I adding/skipping to conclusions/missing
> something?
>
>
> On 1/28/07, Halvard Johnson <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>
>> Revolutionary Sonnet
>>
>> To horse between the news article and the fiction
>> of the nearby Vázquez Mountains, by order of no one
>> in particular. The later murder creates an imaginary
>>
>> fable, as told by American college students who will
>> conclude tragically. Small revolutionary episodes,
>> profesores unwilling to return to class after their long
>>
>> lunches. Truncated ethics of resistance. Of the corpse,
>> no sign. Purity aureoles of central personages, less stable
>> than imagined. His doctoral thesis shows impostures
>>
>> of the ruling junta, mysteries solved with doubtless
>> technical skill, manifesting ideological functions of text,
>> very much like creatures equipped with their own lives.
>>
>> Lacking both doctrinal force and novelistic substance,
>> his story (of inverse sign) does him no palpable honor.
>>
>>
>>
>> Hal
>>
>> Halvard Johnson
>> ================
>> [log in to unmask]
>> [log in to unmask]
>> http://home.earthlink.net/~halvard
>> http://entropyandme.blogspot.com
>> http://imageswithoutwords.blogspot.com
>> http://www.hamiltonstone.org
>>
|