Monday, March 4, 2013

Frans de Geetere & Arthur Rimbaud... The Stupra... 1925




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Frans de Geetere ~ illustration for The Stupra 1925


The ancient beasts...


The ancient beasts bred even on the run,
Theirs glans encrusted with blood and excrement. 
Our forfathers displayed theirs members proudly
By the fold of the sheath and the grain of the scrotum.

In the middle ages, for a female, angel or sow,
A fellow whose gear was substantial was needed;
Even a Kléber, judging by his breeches which exagerate
Perhaps a little, can't have lacked resources.

Besides, man is equal to the proudest mammal;
We are wrong to be surprised at the hugeness of their members;
But a sterile hour has struck: the gelding

And the ox have bridled their ardours, and no one
Will dare again to raise his genital pride
In the copses teeming with comical children.

Arthur Rimbaud ~ The Stupra 1925



Wednesday, February 27, 2013

William Butler Yeats... notebook page ...1920




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sketch from 19 August 1920



  One sketch from 19 August 1920 brings together a tower with water, 
apple trees and flowering trees as well as birds and a unicorn 
(labelled, on the right-hand side), said to be carrying a mask from a tree with its horn and “Rushing”. 
The two sets of trees are labelled apple trees and flowering trees, which may represent 
the same contrast of flower and fruit that Dulac used in his woodcut of the Great Wheel. 
But elsewhere in the Automatic Script, the tree is the symbol of the primary and the mask of the antithetical, so that the unicorn's carrying away may represent a temporary triumph 
of the antithetical or rescue for the antithetical Yeatses, as they build the tower of their
 antithetical system.... more