'English novelist Ronald Firbank, was born in 1886. Had he been younger, his wit and thirst would probably have swept him into the frantic frippery of the Bright Young Things and we may have been denied the subversive brilliance of the dozen or so books that he left. Howard himself called Firbank’s
Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli“the wittiest book ever written”.
'Firbank, it seems, was born blushing; his associates never fail to mention his social awkwardness, particularly the incessant fluttering of hands (or compulsive washing of same) and the hysterical laughter which would periodically erupt, leaving him incapable of completing an anecdote. Attempting to embolden himself with drink merely exacerbated the problem.
'The key to Firbank’s life as well as his art is a sense of never quite belonging. He was born into wealth but it was only two generations old and thus socially suspect. His delicate health led him to constantly seek out more sympathetic climes, and his friends knew of his comings and goings largely from notices in The Times. He was also a Catholic convert, like Waugh in the following generation and Frederick Rolfe in the previous. In fact he was accepted into the Church by Monsignor Robert Hugh Benson, who enjoyed a short-lived friendship with Rolfe and Firbank was, like Rolfe, rejected from the priesthood and ever after maintained a strange, Oedipal love-hate relationship with Catholicism.
'All of these things, as well as his homosexuality, gave Firbank a privileged vantage point to observe the rituals of his circle as well as its hostility to outsiders, but the barbs in his writing are sometimes so subtle that they only become visible on a second reading. While his plots and dialogue can occasionally seem as precious and overstuffed as a Victorian salon, Firbank was also remarkably forward-looking, such as in the impressionistic passages in Valmouth which record fragments of conversation, out of context, or his regular deployment of characters who were gay or lesbian or otherwise alienated.
'There are numerous accounts of Firbank’s personal eccentricity, such as presenting the Marchesa Casati with a bunch of lilies and suggesting that they embark immediately for America, sending his cab driver to smooth the way before his first meeting with Augustus John, or his unlikely participation in sports. While at Cambridge, Oscar Wilde’s son Vyvyan Holland recalls seeing the effete Firbank incongruously dressed “in the costume of sport”. Confounded, Holland enquired what he had been doing, and learning that he had apparently been playing football, further enquired whether it was rugby or soccer. “Oh,” replied Firbank, “I don’t remember”.
'Firbank’s persistent ill-health and self-destructive drinking finally caught up with him in Rome where, in 1926, he died alone in a hotel room. The only person who knew him there was Lord Berners, who hastily arranged a funeral ceremony with a Reverend Ragg (who, to complete this chain of coincidence, had been an associate of Frederick Rolfe’s in Venice). Firbank was an outsider to the last; Berners, having no inkling of his conversion, had him buried in the Protestant Cemetery (he was later reinterred).'
-- James J. Conway'
Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli (1926) has something of the solidity of texture which characterized Firbank's earlier novel
Valmouth, and it contains some of his best writing. It is set in Spain, and the Cardinal's 'eccentricities' include the baptism of pet dogs in his cathedral and an unsuitable passion for choir-boys. Plot is reduced to a minimum, once again the book consists of a series of conversation-pieces.
'
Cardinal Pirelli is, incidentally, the bawdiest of Firbank's novels: what elsewhere has been suggested by a mere lift of the eyebrow is here presented without the least equivocation. On the whole, the change is not for the better; Firbank's mingling of sanctity and smut is not the most attractive aspect of his work, and to a modern reader seems curiously dated. The Cardinal's pursuit of the choir-boy, in the last chapter, is plainly intended to produce the half funny, half moving effect of the final passages in
Prancing Nigger; the intention fails, however, for in these concluding pages of his last books ( Since this was written, a fragment of 'The New Rhythum', a novel about New York which Firbank was at work on when he died, has been published, together with several pieces of juvenilia. The latter are of some interest, written as they were in the transitional phase between
Odette and
The Artificial Princess; the novel-fragment, though amusing enough, seems hardly up to the standard of its predecessors.). Firbank relapses once again into the sentimental and too consciously 'literary' style of Odette and Santal. It is as though the two contrasted elements in his personality, so happily blended in his best work, had here refused to mingle, and the effect is of an uneasy collaboration between two quite disparate writers.
'Firbank is not an author who lends himself to facile literary judgments: he cannot be fitted into any of the normal categories, and to dissect his novels as one might, say, those of George Eliot, is, as E. M. Forster has wisely said, equivalent to breaking a butterfly upon a wheel (Essay on Firbank in 'Abinger Harvest'). In any case, one must first catch one's butterfly, and Firbank, more than most writers, eludes pursuit, and refuses to be pinned down. Any judgement upon him is bound to be highly personal: either one enjoys his work or one does not, and it is all but impossible to explain its merits to those who dislike it.
'Firbank has been compared, in an earlier passage of this essay, with James Joyce, and though no two writers seem, on the face of it, more dissimilar, the comparison could be extended. Neither Joyce nor Firbank, in their earliest work, appeared to possess more than the slenderest of talents: Odette can be paralleled by the vapid and derivative poems in Chamber Music. Both, however, were gifted with great literary virtuosity and a talent for pastiche, and were thus enabled to produce works totally different in quality and scope from anything which could have been predicted from their juvenilia. But whereas Joyce was tempted to work on a vast scale (and thereby, as some may think, to dissipate much of his natural talent), Firbank was content to recognise his own limitations, and to write in the manner which he found easiest and most pleasing to himself.
'Firbank is without doubt a minor writer (whether Joyce, for all his present 'reclame', is a major one, is a question which can only be settled by posterity), but one who, for the most part, achieved precisely what he set out to do. Sometimes his inspiration flags, he can be irritating and downright silly; yet he is one of those artists who, as Cyril Connolly has said, 'attempt, with a purity and a kind of dewy elegance, to portray the beauty of the moment, the gaiety and sadness, the fugitive distress of hedonism (
The Condemned Playground.). Such artists are not, perhaps, very fashionable today; yet among them can be numbered (as Mr. Connolly goes on to say) such names as Horace, Watteau and Mozart. Firbank, of course, is not their peer, but he is a citizen, so to speak, of the same country; though not a great artist, he is that rare phenomenon in English literature, a pure artist, and as such he deserves our respect.'
-- Jocelyn Brooke____
FurtherRonald Firbank @ WikipediaRonald Firbank: An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Center'The Novels of Ronald Firbank', by Jocelyn BrookeRF @ goodreads'Vainglory: with Inclinations and Caprice by Ronald Firbank'Ronald Firbank @ New DirectionsThe Lectern: 'Five Novels by Ronald Firbank''Method in Madness: Ronald Firbank's The Flower Beneath the Foot''Prancing Back into Print''I Often Laugh When I'm Alone: The Novels of Ronald Firbank''Criticism of Society in the English Novel Between the Wars: Ronald Firbank'Ronald Firbank Fansite'From "Odette, A Fairy Tale for Weary People" by Ronald Firbank''Ronald Firbank and the Powers of Frivolity''The Parrotic Voice of the Frivolous''Ronald Firbank's Radical Pastorals''Pilgrimage to Ronald Firbank''Firbank as poet', by Douglas Messerli'ROBUST BODY AND SOCIAL SOULS: REASSESSING RONALD FIRBANK'S EFFEMINATE QUEER MEN'Video: 'Gleefully Shameful. The Camp Fictions of Ronald Firbank'___
ExtrasRonald FirbankSir Monkey channels Ronald FirbankRonald Firbank QuotesJerzy CHODOR - Księżniczka Słoneczników (Ronald Firbank)____________
10 uses of the term Firbankian1.Guide to the Richard Blake Brown Letters, 1933-1962
COLLECTION DESCRIPTION: Correspondence by Richard Blake Brown, Anglican priest and
sub-Firbankian gay novelist to Marcus Oliver. Written from various places on a variety of letterheads and on a variety of subjects, including fashion and costume designer Norman Hartnell; novelist Denton Welch; Brown's meeting with Queen Mary; gay life in and out of the British Navy; and World War II in England. In addition to the letters are a photograph of Brown, a 4-page publicity leaflet regarding Brown's novels, an item regarding an Anglo Latin-American costume exhibit, a magazine clipping of two nude boys wrestling, and a card from a hairdresser.
2.nudism or firbankian moments on the beachsummer holiday 1999, a boy perhaps a fiend: for a few years I have been going to the nudist beach whenever the Dutch climate would allow a day in the sun, at first I thought it strange but it didn't took long for me to realise that it was absolutely normal, I did not miss anything I mean.
But only last year on another nudist day at Hook of Holland I went for a walk with some friends along the coast line; I think they put something on because we did not know how far we would walk, but I was rather ignorant at the moment that something could be wrong, when suddenly out of the blue there was this little boy, almost seven or eight years old in a shiny striped speedo with the emblem of a crying octopussy loosely stitched on the front (was it still...wet?) waving with a large butterfly-net at me, while he raved violently: "All willies must go away...dirty willies go away!"
I was horrified, did i already walk too far? I could have only just crossed the border where nudist recreation was no longer alowed and I did not yet see the signboard. And then already this angry young lad attacking me with his hard wooden stick!
-- erik, Tuesday, June 4, 2002, ilx.wh3rd.net3.From the lavender rust, to
the Firbankian frisson, to the poofing incense, and baron Corvo incognito, this litany of homophobic codes has been marshaled to bear witness to what Kroll later characterizes as Rauschenberg's "Capotean" indulgence. From Kroll's perspective, we have indeed gotten "too close to the artist in the wrong sense," having uncovered his secrets: the expression of his ostensibly hidden homosexual life. What Kroll sneeringly refers to as the space "between the sanctum of private reference and the littered tundra of commemorative decay" is precisely the territory I want to navigate in my attempt to get "close to the artist." It is in this space between authoritative usage and "private reference" that the emergence of "other" meanings - seductive implications both "public" and "private" - emerge into discursive promise.
-- from LOVERS AND DIVERS: INTERPICTORIAL DIALOG IN THE WORK OF JASPER JOHNS AND JASPER JOHNS by Jonathan Katz4.I love those European Scientology celebrities, who are unique among celebrities in that nobody has ever heard of them. For some reason most of their names also sound like they've been made up. At one point, Scientology in the Netherlands trotted out a 'celebrity' spokesperson called Kiki Oostindiën, a self-described singer and model. One wouldn't dare to make it up. "Polish cellist Baroness Soujata de Varis" is a wonderful find, it sounds
so splendidly Firbankian -- are they sure she exists for real and isn't just a character from a Firbank novel?
-- Piltdown Man, from a discussion on Scientology at alt.religion.scientology5.Authorial Adjectives: If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, then to have been imitated enough to warrant having your name turned into an adjective must be an embarrassment of riches. I came across an article this evening, "Adjectives and the Work of Modernism in an Age of Celebrity" (Project Muse) by Aaron Jaffe, which contains a partial list of authors whose names have been adjectivified, and entered popular use. Goodness, Ibsenite could be some dim, carbon-like mineral, I imagine.
A Firbankian is obviously a resident of Firbanks, AK. Brontëan reminds me of some extinct race of malformed giants. Lawrentian: the name of some unplumbed undersea abyss.
-- from the blog Reeding Lessons6.... my highly evolved if not
Firbankian sense of camp. Thus I eschew the ubiquitous Frida K; ditto anything with Day of the Dead skeletons on it. I avert my eyes from a stamp showing Georgia O'Keeffe in her jaunty gaucho hat. But somehow I end up with ...
-- from James Wolcott's blog7.Jean Rouch at 86 had lost some of his youthful energy but none of his wit and enthusiasm. With another great film-maker still not subdued by the constraints of old age, the veteran Portuguese master Manoel de Oliveira (
a Firbankian nonagenarian), he made a film in Oporto centred on that city's Pont Eiffel, based on a poem d'Oliveira had written as a script.
-- from an obituary of director Jean Rouch by James Kirkup8.James Broughton's
Mother's Day is a comic anti-tribute to Mother that envisions Father as mostly a face in a frame, staring dourly, and the children as childlike adults, mindlessly engaging in such rituals as playing hopscotch and shooting squirt guns. Broughton's attack on the family is wrapped in
Firbankian whimsy: "Mother was the loveliest woman in the world," reads a title in the film, "And Mother wanted everything to be lovely."
-- from an appreciation o James Broughton at qlbtq.com9.The novelty of the plays, which feature ordinary suburban couples speaking gibberish with absolute complacency, is gone, of course, and they seem more mildly charming than explosive. But they do have their moments, with
epigrammatic non sequiturs of Firbankian flair and a delightfully inane religious service broadcast on the radio.
-- from Ben Brantley's review of a production of N.F. Simpson's short plays in the NY Times10.The obituaries recently published for Anthony Powell are infused with elegy, as though marking the end of a tradition. Here was the last man left with the confidence to write as he pleased. The room he occupied in the house of English literature was distinct, somewhere on a staircase nobody else climbed. Before the last war, he had published
several Firbankian novels so light and comic that they are almost disembodied.
-- from a remembrance of Anthony Powell by David Pryce-Jones from The Paris Review___
BookRonald Firbank
Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal PirelliNew Directions'Ronald Firbank’s novels describe a world which is only adjacent to this one, having many of the features of reality, but a reality which is altogether ‘too much’. In
Concerning the Eccentricities of Cardinal Pirelli, there is a class structure, a Cardinal harassed by an overwheening aristocrat, presumptious servants, lavish banquets, and so on. But the overwheening aristocrat has recently had her latest adopted dog baptized in full ceremony in the Basilica, the Cardinal has a crush on an altogether too knowing acolyte, and Madame Poco the wardrobe mistress is a Vatican spy. A world of gossip, barely suppressed scandal, Catholicism of the Scarlet-Whore-of-Babylon variety, and a limpid prose style with roots in the Decadent movement, have ensured for Firbank a place in the pantheon of gay classics. But Firbank is not just a gay writer. He is also one of the great unsung 20th century masters of English prose, a magnificent stylist of the very first rank.'
-- The Lectern____
ExcerptI
Huddled up in a cope of gold wrought silk he peered around. Society had rallied in force. A christening—and not a child's.
Rarely had he witnessed, before the font, so many brilliant people. Were it an heir to the DunEden acres (instead of what it
was) the ceremony could have hardly drawn together a more distinguished throng.
Monsignor Silex moved a finger from forehead to chin, and from ear to ear. The Duquesa DunEden's escapades, if continued, would certainly cost the Cardinal his hat.
"And ease my heart by splashing fountains."
From the choir-loft a boy's young voice was evoking Heaven.
"His hat!" Monsignor Silex exclaimed aloud, blinking a little at the immemorial font of black Macæl marble that had provoked the screams of pale numberless babies.
Here Saints and Kings had been baptized, and royal Infantas, and sweet Poets, whose high names thrilled the heart.
Monsignor Silex crossed his breast. He must gather force to look about him. Frame a close report. The Pontiff, in far-off Italy, would expect precision.
Beneath the state baldequin, or Grand Xaymaca, his Eminence sat enthroned ogled by the wives of a dozen grandees. The Altamissals, the Villarasas (their grandee-ships' approving glances, indeed, almost eclipsed their wives'), and Catherine, Countess of Constantine, the most talked-of beauty in the realm, looking like some wild limb of Astaroth in a little crushed "toreador" hat round as an athlete's coif with hanging silken balls, while beside her a stout, dumpish dame, of enormous persuasion, was joggling, solicitously, an object that was of the liveliest interest to all.
Head archly bent, her fine arms divined through darkling laces, the Duquesa stood, clasping closely a week-old police-dog in the ripple of her gown.
"Mother's pet!" she cooed, as the imperious creature passed his tongue across the splendid uncertainty of her chin.
Monsignor Silex's large, livid face grew grim.
What,—disquieting doubt,—if it were her Grace's offspring after all? Praise heaven, he was ignorant enough regarding the schemes of nature, but in an old lutrin once he had read of a young woman engendering a missel-thrush through the channel of her nose. It had created a good deal of scandal to be sure at the time: the Holy Inquisition, indeed, had condemned the impudent baggage, in consequence, to the stake.
"That was the style to treat them," he murmured, appraising the assembly with no kindly eye. The presence of Madame San Seymour surprised him; one habitually so set apart and devout! And Madame La Urench, too, gurgling away freely to the four-legged Father: "No, my naughty Blessing; no, not now!... By and by, a
bone."
Words which brought the warm saliva to the expectant parent's mouth.
Tail awag, sex apparent (to the affected slight confusion of the Infanta Eulalia-Irene), he crouched, his eyes fixed wistfully upon the nozzle of his son.
Ah, happy delirium of first parenthood! Adoring pride! Since times primæval by what masonry does it knit together those that have succeeded in establishing here, on earth, the vital bonds of a family's claim? Even the modest sacristan, at attention by the font, felt himself to be superior of parts to a certain unproductive chieftain of a princely House, who had lately undergone a course of asses' milk in the surrounding mountains—all in vain!
But, supported by the Prior of the Cartuja, the Cardinal had arisen for the act of Immersion.
Of unusual elegance, and with the remains, moreover, of perfect looks, he was as wooed and run after by the ladies as any
matador.
"And thus being cleansed and purified, I do call thee 'Crack'!" he addressed the Duquesa's captive burden.
Tail sheathed with legs "in master's drawers," ears cocked, tongue pendent....
"Mother's mascot!"
"Oh, take care, dear; he's removing all your rouge!"
"
What?"
"He's spoilt, I fear, your roses." The Countess of Constantine tittered.
The Duquesa's grasp relaxed. To be seen by all the world at this disadvantage.
"Both?" she asked, distressed, disregarding the culprit, who sprang from her breast with a sharp, sportive bark.
What rapture, what freedom!
"Misericordia!" Monsignor Silex exclaimed, staring aghast at a leg poised, inconsequently, against the mural-tablet of the widowed duchess of Charona—a woman who, in her lifetime, had given over thirty million pezos to the poor!
Ave Maria purissima! What challenging snarls and measured mystery marked the elaborate recognition of father and son, and would no one then forbid their incestuous frolics?
In agitation Monsignor Silex sought fortitude from the storied windows overhead, aglow in the ambered light as some radiant missal.
It was Saint Eufraxia's Eve, she of Egypt, a frail unit numbered above among the train of the Eleven Thousand Virgins: an immaturish schoolgirl of a saint, unskilled, inexperienced in handling a prayer, lacking, the vim and native astuteness of the incomparable Theresa.
Yes; divine interference, 'twixt father and son, was hardly to be looked for, and Eufraxia (she of Egypt) had failed too often before....
Monsignor Silex started slightly, as, from the estrade beneath the dome, a choir-boy let fall a little white spit.
Dear child, as though
that would part them!
"Things must be allowed to take their 'natural' course," he concluded, following the esoteric antics of the reunited pair.
Out into the open, over the Lapis Lazuli of the floor, they flashed, with stifled yelps, like things possessed.
"He'll tear my husband's drawers!" the duquesa lamented.
"The duque's legs. Poor Decima." The Infanta fell quietly to her knees.
"Fortify ... asses ..." the royal lips moved.
"Brave darling," she murmured, gently rising.
But the duquesa had withdrawn, it seemed, to repair her ravaged roses, and from the obscurity of an adjacent confessional-box was calling to order Crack.
"Come, Crack!"
And to the Mauro-Hispanic rafters the echo rose.
"Crack, Crack, Crack, Crack...."
II
From the Calle de la Pasiôn, beneath the blue-tiled mirador of the garden wall, came the soft brooding sound of a seguidilla. It was a twilight planned for wooing, unbending, consent; many, before now, had come to grief on an evening such. "It was the moon."
Pacing a cloistered walk, laden with the odour of sun-tired flowers, the Cardinal could not but feel the insidious influences astir. The bells of the institutions of the
Encarnacion and the Immaculate Conception, joined in confirming Angelus, had put on tones half-bridal, enough to create vague longings, of sudden tears, among the young patrician boarders.
"Their parents' daughters—convent-bred," the Cardinal sighed.
At the Immaculate Conception, dubbed by the Queen, in irony, once "The school for harlots," the little Infanta Maria-Paz must be lusting for her Mamma and the Court, and the lilac carnage of the ring, while chafing also in the same loose captivity would be the roguish
niñas of the pleasure-loving duchess of Sarmento, girls whose Hellenic ethics had given the good Abbess more than one attack of fullness.
Morality. Poise! For without temperance and equilibrium—— The Cardinal halted.
But in the shifting underlight about him the flushed camellias and the sweet night-jasmines suggested none; neither did the shape of a garden-Eros pointing radiantly the dusk.
"For unless we have balance——" the Cardinal murmured, distraught, admiring against the elusive nuances of the afterglow the cupid's voluptuous hams.
It was against these, once, in a tempestuous mood that his mistress had smashed her fan-sticks.
"Would that all liaisons would break as easily!" his Eminence framed the prayer: and musing on the appalling constancy of a certain type, he sauntered leisurely on. Yes, enveloping women like Luna Sainz, with their lachrymose, tactless "mys," how shake them off? "My" Saviour, "my" lover, "my" parasol—and, even, "my" virtue....
"Poor dearie."
The Cardinal smiled.
Yet once in a way, perhaps, he was not averse to being favoured by a glimpse of her: "A little visit on a night like this." Don Alvaro Narciso Hernando Pirelli, Cardinal-Archbishop of Clemenza, smiled again.
In the gloom there, among the high thickets of bay and flowering myrtle.... For, after all, bless her, one could not well deny she possessed the chief essentials: "such, poor soul, as they are!" he reflected, turning about at the sound as of the neigh of a horse.
"Monseigneur...."
Bearing a biretta and a silver shawl, Madame Poco, the venerable Superintendent-of-the-palace, looking, in the blue moonlight, like some whiskered skull, emerged, after inconceivable peepings, from among the leafy limbo of the trees.
"Ah, Don Alvaro, sir! Come here."
"Pest!" His Eminence evinced a touch of asperity.
"Ah, Don, Don,..." and slamming forward with the grace of a Torero lassooing a bull, she slipped the scintillating fabric about the prelate's neck.
"Such nights breed fever, Don Alvaro, and there is mischief in the air."
"Mischief?"
"In certain quarters of the city you would take it almost for some sortilege."
"What next?"
"At the
Encarnacion there's nothing, of late, but seediness. Sister Engracia with the chicken-pox, and Mother Claridad with the itch, while at the College of Noble Damosels, in the Calle Santa Fé, I hear a daughter of Don José Illescas, in a fit of caprice, has set a match to her coronet."
"A match to her what?"
"And how explain, Don Alvaro of my heart, these constant shots in the Cortès? Ah, sangre mio, in what times we live!"
Ambling a few steps pensively side by side, they moved through the brilliant moonlight. It was the hour when the awakening fireflies are first seen like atoms of rosy flame floating from flower to flower.
"Singular times, sure enough," the Cardinal answered, pausing to enjoy the transparent beauty of the white dripping water of a flowing fountain.
"And ease my heart by splashing—tum-tiddly-um-tum," he hummed. "I trust the choir-boys, Dame, are all in health?"
"Ah, Don Alvaro, no, sir!"
"Eh?"
"No, sir," Madame Poco murmured, taking up a thousand golden poses.
"Why, how's that?"
"But few now seem keen on Leapfrog, or Bossage, and when a boy shows no wish for a game of Leap, sir, or Bossage——"
"Exactly," his Eminence nodded.
"I'm told it's some time, young cubs, since they've played pranks on Tourists! Though only this afternoon little Ramón Ragatta came over queazy while demonstrating before foreigners the Dance of the Arc, which should teach him in future not to be so profane: and as to the acolytes, Don Alvaro, at least half of them are absent, confined to their cots, in the wards of the pistache Fathers!"
"To-morrow, all well, I'll take them some melons."
"Ah, Don, Don!!"
"And, perhaps, a cucumber," the Cardinal added, turning valedictionally away.
The tones of the seguidilla had deepened and from the remote recesses of the garden arose a bedlam of nightingales and frogs.
It was certainly incredible how he felt immured.
Yet to forsake the Palace for the Plaza he was obliged to stoop to creep.
With the Pirelli pride, with resourceful intimacy he communed with his heart: deception is a humiliation; but humiliation is a Virtue—a Cardinal, like myself, and one of the delicate violets of our Lady's crown.... Incontestably, too,—he had a flash of inconsequent insight, many a prod to a discourse, many a sapient thrust, delivered ex cathedrâ, amid the broken sobs of either sex, had been inspired, before now, by what prurient persons might term, perhaps, a "frolic." But away with all scruples! Once in the street in mufti, how foolish they became.
The dear street. The adorable Avenidas. The quickening stimulus of the crowd: truly it was exhilarating to mingle freely with the throng!
Disguised as a cabellero from the provinces or as a matron (disliking to forgo altogether the militant bravoura of a skirt), it became possible to combine philosophy, equally, with pleasure.
The promenade at the Trinidades seldom failed to be diverting, especially when the brown Bettita or the Ortiz danced!
Olé, he swayed his shawl. The Argentina with Blanca Sanchez was amusing too; her ear-tickling little song "Madrid is on the Manzanares," trailing the "'ares" indefinitely, was sure, in due course, to reach the Cloisters.
Deliberating critically on the numerous actresses of his diocese, he traversed lightly a path all enclosed by pots of bergamot.
And how entrancing to perch on a bar-stool, over a glass of old golden sherry!
"Ah Jesus-Maria," he addressed the dancing lightning in the sky.
Purring to himself, and frequently pausing, he made his way, by ecstatic degrees, towards the mirador on the garden wall.
Although a mortification, it was imperative to bear in mind the consequences of cutting a too dashing figure. Beware display. Vanity once had proved all but fatal: "I remember it was the night I wore ringlets and was called 'my queen.'"
And with a fleeting smile, Don Alvaro Pirelli recalled the persistent officer who had had the effrontery to attempt to molest him: "Stalked me the whole length of the Avenue Isadora!" It had been a lesson. "Better to be on the drab side," he reflected, turning the key of the garden tower.
Dating from the period of the Reformation of the Nunneries, it commanded the privacy of many a drowsy patio.
"I see the Infanta has begun her Tuesdays!" he serenely noted, sweeping the panorama with a glance.
It was a delightful prospect.
Like some great guitar the city lay engirdled ethereally by the snowy Sierras.
"Foolish featherhead," he murmured, his glance falling upon a sunshade of sapphire chiffon, left by Luna: "'my' parasol!" he twirled the crystal hilt.
"Everything she forgets, bless her," he breathed, lifting his gaze towards the magnolia blossom cups that overtopped the tower, stained by the eternal treachery of the night to the azure of the Saint Virgin. Suspended in the miracle of the moonlight their elfin globes were at their zenith.
"Madrid is on the Manzan-ares," he intoned.
But "Clemenza," of course, is in white Andalusia.
(cont.)*
p.s. Hey. Oh, there's a new interview with me just up on the pixarthinking site where I talk about 'Like Cattle Towards Glow', 'Zac's Haunted House', 'Zac's Control Panel', writing, and other stuff, if you're
interested. ** Armando, Hi. I wish I was more versed with the details of the various possibilities for self-publishing. There are quite a number of sites. Chris Dankland used
Gumroad. In that case, as far as I can tell, you would make the pdf/book and then put it on Gumroad?
Chris Dankland, if you're reading this and don't mind giving Armando tips on how you self-published 'Weed Monks', he would appreciate it. But there are a number of sites/ways people are self-publishing. Online, yeah. You being Mexican and based in Mexico doesn't matter, as it's an online thing -- pdf/eBook, etc. I'll try to look further for info today if I have time, and maybe others here who know more about self-publishing will chime in. ** Dóra Grőber, Hi! Ha ha, it sounds like paleontology is another one of those professions that seem really cool from afar but is more like working on an assembly line in an outdoor factory or something. You had a great weekend, yay! Awesome! Mine was good rather than great, which I'll happily take. Today will be intense. Zac and I are very shortly meeting with a producer whom we really hope will want to produce our new film. He read the script and is interested enough to meet with us, but it's possibly a long shot. It would make things so much easier and even amazing if he's willing, because the producer-search is no fun, so keep your fingers crossed for us if it's no trouble. We need all the luck we can get. I hope to see Marching Church tomorrow. It's sold out (ugh), but I sent Elias a text asking if he can get me in, so we'll see. Have a fine Tuesday! ** Thom, Hi. Non-fragile is okay, at least in some circumstances, ha ha. Oh, gosh, ... looks-wise ... I'm going to have to dwell on that for a bit. No one immediately sprang to mind, which is kind of strange actually, or maybe not since I'm doing this p.s. earlier than usual because I have an appointment, and I am definitely without sufficient waking-up caffeine. Hm. I'll think. Who are some of your others while I'm thinking? ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. Oh, an email, yes. I'm extremely behind. I'll go find it and read it and write to you about whatever it involves asap. ** Damien Ark, Hi! Geez, 200 pages is really good! Granted, my whole novels don't tend to be much longer than that if they even reach that mark. So I'm glad you're getting to be creative to that degree at least. Writing can be brutal, yep, that's for sure. I just glanced that blog you linked to, and, yes, you bet, I'm very interested in it. So I'll obsess over it as soon as I can. Thanks a lot, man. Things are good here. Make today pay you back for the time you devote to it in the six-figures! ** Sypha, Hi. How convenient that you're happy to take break on the blog's behalf. I'm happy to provide you with that happiness, ha ha. That's interesting about Huysmans's antipathy towards Gide. From what I know and have read, I think Gide was supposed to have been quite the careerist. ** Bill, Dude, I intend to book my ticket to Romania asap just to descend into that park. Oh, yeah, I can see how those gigs you moshed at would have had lovely pits. Moshing to Psychic TV, wow. That's a nice mental picture. I hope your week somehow manages to be not brutal or at a less less brutal than the dictionary definition of that word implies. ** Steevee, Hi. Oh, thanks. Not everybody seems to have this on mushrooms, but I always have, like, an hour or even a bit of more, of total paranoia when I take mushrooms before the effect settles into beauty. I haven't heard the new Kanye West, and I doubt I will, frankly, but one of my big problems with his stuff is that I don't think he uses language at all interestingly, and I never think he has anything interesting or original to say. So, based on past experiences, I think I can agree with you peremptorily. Great new about you interviewing Terrence Davis! And for the L.A. Review of Books! I really like that site a lot! Awesome! And very good news that it seems you will review the Malick, and, selfishly, I just hope that you like it. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi, Ben. I'd never heard of Derren Brown before, but that ride sounds like it's going to be pretty cool. ** Misanthrope, Yep. I haven't done a VR coaster yet. They're kind of the new thing. I'm very curious. And a little suspicious for some reason. But definitely curious. I can see how, if done right, that could be a seriously trippy rush. Could have knocked me over with a feather when SpellCheck didn't recognize wowzer. But Spellcheck seems like it's getting worse and more anal and fascist all the time. It's like Hitler! Ha ha. ** Liquoredgoat, Hi, D. You think it's unhealthy? Riding roller coasters is as close as I get to going to the gym. There's not enough money in the world to get me to ride Turbillon. Dude, very sweet about Notre Dame! There are some very awesome writers teaching there, as you probably know. So, very cool, and big congrats to them! ** Okay. I've focussed on the divine and one-of-kind scribe Mr. Ronald Firbank today. Have at it, if you like. See you tomorrow.