Saturday, May 15, 2010

because i love modern/contemporary literature best.

Modern/contemporary literature has been and always will be my favorite cup of tea. Victorian literature can kiss my butt.

In English class today/yesterday, I read two short stories. Here are some translated excerpts/quotes along with the original text--the vernacular they were written in (Spanish).

From The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World by Gabriel Garcia Marquez:

"They let him go without an anchor so that he could come back if he wished and whenever he wished, and they all held their breath for the fraction of centuries the body took to fall into the abyss. They did not need to look at one another to realize that they were no longer all present, that they would never be. But they also knew that everything would be different from then on, that their houses would have wider doors, higher ceilings, and stronger floors so that Esteban's memory could go everywhere without bumping into beams and so that no one in the future would dare whisper the big boob finally died, too bad, the handsome fool has finally died, because they were going to paint their house fronts gay colors to make Esteban's memory eternal and they were going to break their backs digging for springs among the stones and planting flowers on the cliffs so that in future years at dawn the passengers on great liners would awaken, suffocated by the smell of gardens on the high seas, and the captain would have to come down from the bridge in his dress uniform, with his astrolabe, his pole star, and his row of war medals and, pointing to the promontory of roses on the horizon, he would say in fourteen languages, look there, where the wind is so peaceful now that it's gone to sleep beneath the beds, over there, where the sun's so bright that the sunflowers don't know which way to turn, yes, over there, that's Esteban's village."

"Lo soltaron sin ancla, para que volviera si quería, y cuando lo quisiera, y todos retuvieron el aliento durante la fracción de siglos que demoró la caída del cuerpo hasta el abismo. No tuvieron necesidad de mirarse los unos a los otros para darse cuenta de que ya no estaban completos, ni volverían a estarlo jamás. Pero también sabían que todo sería diferente desde entonces, que sus casas iban a tener las puertas más anchas, los techos más altos, los pisos más firmes, para que el recuerdo de Esteban pudiera andar por todas partes sin tropezar con los travesaños, y que nadie se atreviera a susurrar en el futuro ya murió el bobo grande, qué lástima, ya murió el tonto hermoso, porque ellos iban a pintar las fachadas de colores alegres para eternizar la memoria de Esteban, y se iban a romper el espinazo excavando manantiales en las piedras y sembrando flores en los acantilados, para que los amaneceres de los años venturos los pasajeros de los grandes barcos despertaran sofocados por un olor de jardines en altamar, y el capitán tuviera que bajar de su alcázar con su uniforme de gala, con su astrolabio, su estrella polar y su ristra de medallas de guerra, y señalando el promontorio de rosas en el horizonte del Caribe dijera en catorce idiomas: miren allá, donde el viento es ahora tan manso que se queda a dormir debajo de las camas, allá, donde el sol brilla tanto que no saben hacia dónde girar los girasoles, sí, allá, es el pueblo de Esteban."

From El Jardín de Senderos que se Bifurcan (“The Garden of Forking Paths”) by Jorge Luis Borges:

"Time forks perpetually toward innumerable futures. In one of them I am your enemy."
"El tiempo se bifurca perpetuamente hacia innumerables futuros. En uno de ellos soy su enemigo."

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