de John Barth:
"It always seemed a fine idea to me to build a showboat with just one big flat open deck on it, and to keep a play going continuously. The boat wouldn't be moored, but would drift up and down the river on the tide, and the audience would sit along both banks. They could catch whatever part of the plot happened to unfold as the boat floated past, and then they'd have to wait until the tide ran back again to catch another snatch of it, if they still happened to be sitting there. To fill in the gaps they'd have to use their imaginations, or ask more attentive neighbors, or hear the word passed along from upriver or downriver. Most times they wouldn't understand what was going on at all, or they'd think they knew, when actually they didn't... I needn't explain that that's how much of life works."
light gazing, ışığa bakmak
Saturday, December 18, 2010
the floating opera
Publicado por Ana V. às 9:27 PM
TAGS AmLit, Biblioteca de Babel, John Barth
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment