Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Fields


This is just a note: if you've seen HBO's True Detective and loved it, try E.A. Poe and Chambers of course, and then read Jean Lorrain's [1855-1906] novel Monsieur de Phocas. Read the 1901 text here in French or get the book in English. It's eerie and transcends other period books, read more here if you're looking for a strange, wild ride.

Here's an excerpt:

“There is nothing to be found in human eyes, and that is their terrifying and dolorous enigma, their abominable and delusive charm. There is nothing but that which we put there ourselves. That is why honest gazes are only to be found in portraits.

The faded and weary eyes of martyrs, expressions tortured by ecstasy, imploring and suffering eyes, some resigned, others desperate... the gazes of saints, mendicants and princesses in exile, with pardoning smiles... the gazes of the possessed, the chosen and the hysterical... and sometimes of little girls, the eyes of Ophelia and Canidia, the eyes of virgins and witches... as you live in the museums, what eternal life, dolorous and intense, shines out of you! Like precious stones enshrined between the painted eyelids of masterpieces, you disturb us across time and across space, receivers of the dream which created you!

You have souls, but they are those of the artists who wished you into being, and I am delivered to despair and mortification because I have drunk the draught of poison congealed in the irises of your eyes.

The eyes of portraits ought to be plucked out.” 

No comments:

Post a Comment