ABRUPTO

20.11.04


ANTOLOGIA DA PEDRA (2ª série)

1. ROCHAS



da ilha de Achill, na Irlanda. Aqui Graham Greene esteve por várias vezes, uma das quais com Catherine Walston, e na ilha trabalhou no The Heart of the Matter. Greene chegou a pensar casar com Catherine, deixar de escrever e dedicar-se a gerir um pequeno hotel. Aqui está uma ilha poderosa.

2.PIEDRITAS

Piedritas en la Ventana

De vez en cuando la alegria
tira piedritas contra mi ventana
quiere avisarme que esta ahi
esperando pero me siento calmo
casi diría ecuanime voy a guardar
la angustia en un escondite
y luego a tenderme la cara al techo
que es una posicion gallarda y comoda
para filtrar noticias y creerlas quien
sabe donde quedan mis proximas huellas
ni cuando mi historia va a ser computada
quien sabe que consejos voy a inventar
aun y que atajo hallare para no seguirlos
esta bien no jugare al desahucio no
tatuare el recuerdo con olvidos mucho
queda por decir y callar y tambien
quedan uvas para llenar la boca esta
bien me doy por persuadido que la alegria
no tire mas piedras abrire la ventana.


(Mario Benedetti)

3. SAL



4.FUCKING A ROCK

Unnatural Selections: A Meditation upon Witnessing a Bullfrog Fucking a Rock


Amalgam of electric jelly,
constellated neural knots
in the briny binary soup,
as surely as stimulus prods response
brains are made to choose.
And through a major error in pattern recognition
or a significant cognitive fault,
the bullfrogs brain has selected
a two-pound rock
as the object of his rampant affection,
a rock (to my admittedly mammalian eye)
that neither resembles
nor even vaguely suggests
the female of his species.

He does seem to be enjoying himself
in a blunted sort of way,
but since the rock so obviously remains unmoved
one suspects it's not the blending of sweet oblivions
that fuels his persistence,
but a serious kink in a feedback loop--
or perhaps just kinkiness in general.
The less compassionate might even call him
the quintessentially insensitive male.

Assuming a pan-species gender bond
and a common fret,
I advise my amphibious pal,
"Hey, I don't think she's playing hard to get.
That's the literal case you're up against, Jack--
true story, buddy; stone fact.
And I'd be fraternally remiss if I didn't share
my deep and eminently reasonable doubt
that she'll be worn down
however long and spectacular the ardor."

Ignoring my counsel
as completely as he has my presence,
the bullfrog continues his fruitless assault
with that brain-locked commitment to folly
which invariably accompanies
dumb, bug-eyed lust.

But, in fairness,
whose brain hasn't shorted out in a slosh of hormones
or, igniting like a shattered jug of gas,
fireballed into a howling maelstrom
where a rock indeed might seem a port?
One can only conclude
that such impelling concupiscence
serves as a species' life-insurance,
sort of a procreative override
of any decision requiring thought,
thought being notoriously prey to thinking,
and the more one thinks about thinking
the thinkier it gets.
Therefore, though the brain is made to choose,
its very existence ultimately depends
on the generative supremacy of brainless desire--
for with all respect to Monsieur Descartes
you am before you can think you are.
Dirt-drive compulsions riding powerful desires
render any choice moot, along with
reason, morality, taste, manners,
and all those other jars of glitter
we pour on the sticky and raw.

The hard truth is we never chose to choose:
not the brains we use to pick
between competing explanations for our sexual mess
nor these hearts we've burdened with our blunders
in the name of love.
Do whatever we decide we will,
the choice isn't free;
we live at the mercy of more pressing needs.

Thus, urges urgently surging,
we mount a few rocks by mistake.
A bit more embarrassing than most of our foolishness, true--
but so what?
The power of the imperative
coupled with the law of averages
virtually guarantees enough will get it right
to make more brains to be made up
about exactly what steps to take
toward what we think we need to do
on this stony journey between delusion and mirage--
when to move, where to hide our dreams--
a journey where we finally learn
freedom is not a choice
a brain is free to choose.

Fortunately, my warty friend,
the soul is built to cruise.


(Jim Dodge)

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© José Pacheco Pereira
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