“Fortified by its knowledge of the Book of the Dead, then, the Wake here answers the haunting eschatological question of how the decaying corpse, buried in loamy inertia and scattering throughout the material universe, initiates the process by which it resurrects itself bodily into life: it opens its mouth in the hour when the sun moves through the gates of dawn, and it lets language, consciousness, and sunlight flood back in to replace darkness.”
Quotes from “Joyce’s book of the dark: Finnegan’s wake”, by John Bishop
Forever do we try to gather then at dawn
force open the lid to the loamy inertia
so as to return to scattered play
primordial dance
no mating in view,
lusco fusco,
twilight,
chiaro scuro
sunlight so bright
the words of language curse
our morning breath so foul
Unable to retreat
the light a beacon
we flock to Sunday Sermon
we build inside these walls
we dress
we mate the tonic of our loss
we lose our visions
we chat in language
forget the magic
Unable to sustain
in holding hands
we marry
the rituals of these words.
Bookkeeping
"Presuming to speak directly from the point of view of the corpse, the Book of the Dead may be one of the few books on earth ideally written for an audience consisting entirely of the dead.”
If you write of things from the night
of the dark perspectives,
yet continue to expect living creatures
to give you understanding…
Well then apply the great concept,
call yourself the reluctant writer
from the depths,
start to keep two sets of books,
two sets of diaries,
two sets of memories,
two sets of loves:
one for the accounting of the living
one for the accounting of the dead.
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