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Rising From The Ashes Of An Umpire. Inglaterra Batea De Nuevo A Los Murciélagos del Mundo


CRICKET LOVELY CRICKET


"The sun shone, having no alternative, on the nothing new." (Samuel Beckett, Murphy)



No todo fueron derrotas para los ingleses en 2019. Cierto es que perdieron la final del mundial de rugby contra los bóeres. Y lo que más les duele. Fueron vencidos en casa cuando la XVI Anglogalician.

Pero por primera vez en su historia ganaron the ICC Cricket World Cup, que como habrán deducido, es el mundial de ese peculiar deporte llamado cricket.

Admiremos como Algernon Mouse defiende los wickets con su sapiencia habitual.

There's Murphy moving in the shadows as though free; what a fine short leg he makes -an Irishman on an English stage. At a very silly point, Belacqua, entertaining the dual throng of hard-bitten, twice shy members in front of the old pavilion, where the important ins and outs happen.

Then there's Brian O’Nolan’s nameless policeman at third man talking to his bicycle about Sergeant Pluck and Policeman MacCruiskeen and the lack of action.

And, at a very deep mid-wicket there’s Myles na gCopaleen mirroring my mood before a cricket match, where “all my senses were bewildered all at once and could give me no explanation.” (The Third Policeman, Flann O’Brien)
We  all know Godot won't, can't turn up but we, like Didi and Gogo, cannot resist staying until the bitter end, putting any doubt beyond hope that every doggerel has its day.

Cricket becomes a habit -a great deadener of conversation unless happenstance should ever throw your way a fellow naked-in-the-chair absurdist that welcomes the arrival of two very qualified people in white coats.

Then there are the two men in white coats sucking Malloy's stones, measuring the sun's slap-dash, indifferent progress across the velveteen earth with white markings making creases in the fabric of absurdity, waiting for Nile-ist deliveries infinitely slower than the current tide.

Malone dives under the covers, like a flash rain shower, cutting off a petty four and looking at the sky for half a dozen of one and six of l’autre, unable to prevent crafted singles so that the electronic counter continues to sparkle in recording history of Krapp's annual innings, when draws were honourable after three, four or five theatrical acts.

The tools of these gentle comi-tragic tirades are: six sticks of ash (with four little stubs of the same wood rest atop); a box of carefully stitched leather covered aniseed balls; two lumps (at a time) of lovingly carved willow; a large expanse of greenery; and a length of rope to hang the hopes of a few thousand folks who assemble to witness the spectacle that is cricket.

The produce is of overs and outs -called in the parlance dismissals- constituting multiple innings to achieve one of at least five outcomes: win/loss/draw*/tie/abandoned*.

However, the most important outcome all these results aim to produce is cricketing happiness. This is a complexity of Beckettian dramas recalled by cricket lovers as Krapp's Last Tape. Cricket is found between dust sheets and buzzing ears; memories played over in the brain; Box 3, Spool 2, and where's the banana? Cricket grounds are places of worship where subjectivity playfully tussles with fact; where fiction too real to be dismissed entirely, has a friendly arm wrestle with the cold, isolated numerical non-fiction.

Like those mathematical devotees who find beauty in numbers, cricket lovers find narratives in averages and numbers which are attributed to names to produce iconography and iconoclasts alike. Where scorers fastidiously etch little stories with the title, 'I was there, were you?' The officionados who recall passages of play that might, on the surface, appear deeply mundane, or, as some cruel critics have described as watching the matt white lose its moisture before you hide it behind an underused bookcase or merely hopeful, flat-pack trophy cabinet. Recollection of a discriminating number three, at the fall of the first wicket, intent on smothering even the juiciest half-volley outside off-stump so as to avoid a game of dominoes. Instead he or she shuffles cautiously forward like the second draught in a contest with a chess master.

A word to the wise for those who find themselves attending a cricket match instead of imbibing the sweet smoothie of daytime TV entertainment shows that vaguely resemble cricket: check the scoreboard before you fall asleep, and never sleep with your mouth open.

Apart from the impromptu fly lunch you might involuntary intake, you could also be suddenly woken with a sensation of being a stuck pig as a boundary four hops off the rope like a frightened rabbit on heat, or a boundary six might lodge itself in the gaping cake hole and dislodge your natural smile.

You will also need to be aware of the duration of the match before contemplating entering the land of nod during playing hours. A four day, five day encounter should render places at fine leg, cow corner and, every other over, behind the wicketkeeper and the five run helmet, safe havens.

However, if it's a one-day game of obscene brevity, there's nowhere technically safe as they've invented a few weird shots that can propel the ball anywhere in the 360 degree gamut. If you get an obsessive 'ramper' then anywhere in the cover region should be a good bedding area.

If you do manage to get some shuteye, then you may not miss out on the action as it has been scientifically proved that subliminal cricket 'watching' is possible, now that the public address systems disperse so much information regarding the action of a game.

I would recommend watching the game with eyes and mind wide open to fully appreciate the repeated spectacle of the white-clad players resembling LS Lowry figures lurch, bend, walk slowly in as the bowler runs in with shoulders slumped as if fighting a force-ten gale.

Then there are captains who scatter their field like seed in the belief that victory will grow, unlike the captains who use sextants, theodolites, spirit levels and spread betting in order to change fate. This cosmic range of approach is a wonder to behold when watching, following or contemplating the essence of cricket.

Before the curtain goes up on a game, the covers are removed and the officials and players come on to the field. Then the batters mark their territory hoping it's not a cat on a hot tin roof wicket, and the bowlers plot their stepped approach as precisely as an air traffic controller, hoping to land in the right area at the crease to deliver their Barnes-Wallis bombs at their damned foe for the day.

A strident burp from the well-breakfasted crowd signals the bowler's run in, before the sacred first ball in a projected, contractual (a modern addition) 576 balls for the day's work, rest and play. The fielders are scattered like dice, reflecting the team's hopes and fears for the immediate future.

A full slip cordon,  gully and square point with possibly a short square leg in catching position would signal attack; whether hopeful folly or wilful expectation would be determined in due time: would it be willow-cracking, ash-cracking or palm warming as a thermometer of the contest's temperature. Will the day's narrative be prose, poetry, doggerel or mime, or indeed, as is more often the same, a potent cocktail of all four?

Once enticed, you might find yourself as Vladimir and Estragon, puzzling over a great existential dilemma: should we wait? Should we go? Let's go! We can't, we're waiting for cricket!

Cricket isn't the easy viewing of last-ball frenzy performance days, it's the sixty delivery spring watch of a batter who is going through cricket hell: who sees the wicket as a vast arid desert, the extent of which his strokes cannot traverse. Alternately, the hell of a bowler, steaming in over after over, who cannot for the life of him make the batsman play a delivery: it's as though the wicket and the ball are of the same polarity in rejecting all the efforts of the non-for worker.

Cricket is one of the biggest, deepest, most profound questions we ask ourselves in life: why are we here? Anything else is merely misguided entertainment. Cricket isn't HD, HDMI or 5G, it's lantern slides and 2D, hand-drawn single-cell animation. Cricket isn't easy listening of the everyday dross of commercial radio and TV, it's Hendrix played at 0.5 rpm. Why else watch a purist top-order batter endure a nerve-jangling half hour without hope of a run then see a farmyard machinery yahoo merchant carve a six first-ball, and accept the sense of it?

Beckett dramatised cricket without trying. The drama is so context-specific. Its narratives are deeply affecting, especially when appearing most boring. It's the train number you haven't seen yet, even though consisting of twelve alphanumerical digits, it differs by one from the ones already seen. Every dot ball is different. If you think two consecutive nudges by the same batter to the same fine leg are repetitively the same, then you are not watching fully. Even at the bald number-crunching level, cricket doesn't produce absolute repetition in its essence. Yes, formulaic structural changes to accommodate the modern professional dutiful day at the office player have brought apparent repetition but it's incomplete as the mandatory 96 overs can take anything from six and a half hours to the eleventh hour.

Cricket gives uneasy birth to tales taller than Goliath. Tales of ripping stickies taking Medusa-like turn, enough to make the mightiest of willows weep; and Boy's Own stories of strident sun-kissed strips where the leather was tanned and dried and stitched like a kipper; yarns of toe-nail extracting Yorkers, Y-front endangering beamers, ball-bursting bouncers and deviously deceiving seamers, all countered with desperately beautiful drives and embarrassing knicks, carving cuts and hopping hooks, petulant pulls and quick glances, all part of the livery of cricket's anvil-forged equipment, displayed in nostalgic meadows, racecourses, amphitheatres and educationally sound grounds in the shadows of academia.



A quick manifest of equipment:

  • Pads like a mother's protection from the bruises and knocks picked up in the rough and tumble of play.
  • Box to protect lineage and eye-watering ball contact, whether direct or the result of an edge.
  • Helmet (a modern addition) as a safety standard to keep the players conscious.
  • Bat to preserve dignity and yet...it can be a paint brush, a wand, a cross to bear, a cudgel, a knife, a rapier, a stonewall, a brickbat, a small tree (a modern phenomenon) waving on a wind, windmill tilting at immortality. And, at the worst of times, a bat can be a cocktail stick poking at the cherries as if drunk before being bounced out in an act of mercy.
  • Sunglasses (a modern addition) to deflect the gloom of an English summer from sleepy eyes still in pyjamas (a modern addition) advertising the commercial influencers of cricket's future.
  • As a fielder, you only need to wear the basic shirt, pants, socks and shoes, over the fundamentals of underwear, probably logoed and sponsored.

An underlying premise of fielding is the ability to dream. Imagining you might cradle a catch in the slips to delight your bowler; or pouching a square cut in the gully or on point duty; bagging a dolly off a skier after stretching a long leg to wait under a mistimed hook or pull. Or to swoop like swallow and shy at the castle to enact a glorious run out, or flip like a dying fish and make the catch of the day at silly point, silly mid-on or very silly short-leg. Or, on those cosmically cruel days a fielder might graze on lush grass, not feeding on any cherries from life's bowl, merely watching the Rosebud bloom from a distance, unsullied by the fielder's hand, completing a day's ruminating without registering in any scorebook or being remembered by one man and his dog, realising that even the dog's barking had nothing to do with you. At least days like this give a cricketer time to read and cogitate over an Albert Camus novel or two depending on their thickness. Where someone of a certain character can savour their role in folding the space time continuum by spending an hour at the crease scoring fiver runs in five tortured scoring strokes only to see another player of a dissimilar character score one more run in the blink of an eye with one weft of their hefty loom. The term 'different strokes for different folks' could not be better illustrated. Just as a clinician often wears white, a rude mechanical often wears (a modern addition) coloured overalls.

And so, the noiseless tenor of cricket's way ploughed over and the combined harvest of money boils the colours and turns the ball into a pigeon pellet, shrinking the eloquent attire of the funny old game.

Today, stumps light up and the old heart dims, and faulty jacuzzis can stop play. The numbers spin like a one armed bandit, spinning and crunching whilst the narrative of cricket is gradually silenced, outspoken, drowned out by brash loudmouthed chattering big cash.

Some say, quietly, out of earshot of any listening device, and with a real tinge of sadness, that might lead to lachrymose sepiage, that modern scorebooks have a double-entry system and that coins tossed are too clean with their fixed win-loss monologue mindset.

Cricket is a myriad narratives reliving the escapades of colourful characters - even those recalled in B&W -who made pigments of themselves feasting on occasion, setting a banquet before audiences hungry for heroes. Audiences, aka crowds, that hang around like puddles under a seeping frieze-grey sky wishing for even an hour of Beckettian play, eager to see a rocket pinging off a helmet, with tingling hands remembering the very first sting of swallowing the little red pills that turned out to be anything other than they seamed.

Whether it was a missile hissing not so sweet nothings in an ear, or a whispering, beguiling siren song of a high looping googly, and grandiose poesy of a destructive Bosie bringing down a wild giant, or long, lonely sojourns in the longer grass waiting for a late cut, an edge or a leg glance so you could show off your prowess at throwing, knowing there's nowhere else in the wide world you would rather be.

These exhibitions of glorious absurdity might be to temporarily possess ashes, or indelibly establish a great name in the game, it may be merely to establish the title of cock-o-the-north, or to be the true champion county, but only when the attire and not the ball is white, you'll find an existential tussle you can scoop like ice-cream, number-crunch like wafer, causing your brain to freeze in wondrous absurdity.

At the home of the cobblers, where Samuel Barclay Beckett shuffled briefly, a single breath, for two consecutive years, in a worldful of obscure statistics and fictions fused with fact.

His brief contribution is noted in the cricketing Bible (Wisden) where records are studiously kept of exploits of dons who were taught lessons by their pupils; illustrating like Boz, the detailed episodes of how their uppity charges outscored them in practical tests; where coal miners could tap into another seam with the wind behind them, chasing ducks by throwing hot coals at the surface-dwellers, doing simple, twenty-two yard mathematics in taking away one or two from three to avoid further addition to the score; and where legends are made of the like of fiery Fred destroying castles to become the first of the three-hundred club, and his pal Brian moving at anything but a snail's pace understatedly and modestly devastating all and sundry; then there's Jack Hobbs, the leviathan of runs, and the Don - an honest giant of the game, defying the averages and becoming the father of all batsmen, striking fear into others without any semblance of malice towards opponents; and the West Indian threesome of WWW, connecting the world to cricket long before the world wide web was conceived.

The Old Masters mostly have only two lines of statistical dialogue in the cacophony of numbers, yet their voices have so much resonance and tremendous timbre in speaking to us of the essence of cricket.

The modern phalanxes of experts analysing to a pixelated degree somehow sully the essence of cricket. This revisionist cynicism - fuelled by mammon and a misguided neophilism - puts me in mind of a wonderful Spike Milligan poem of love and trust destroyed by crass ignorance:

            “Painful though it was,
                        I cut my last winter rose for her.
            She turned it inside out
                        to see who the manufacturer was.”
                                    (from Open Heart University, Spike Milligan)

 So, on that melancholic note I'll leave the ground to darkness and to tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow with an abiding memory of a classic Black&White, pre-streaming TV cricket moment: Colin Croft, playing for Lancashire in a Roses match, bowling in such an idiosyncratic,  efficaciously fearsome manner, removed the off-stump of the great GB; the middle stump of a future England international, and the leg stump of one of Yorkshire's greatest stalwarts, causing the stumps as well as the modest, hardy crowd to dance, all in the space of a few twilight overs.

Now, you could look up the event to find out what exactly happened, on record in bald statistics, and possibly prove my memory faulty and/or fanciful, but you could also let such a vital, vibrant, voluminous vision enter your mind, move across your synapses like sunshine shadows scudding over verdant fields: it's your choice but either way it will always be cricket. As the lad himself said:

"You must go on. I can't go on. I'll go on." (watching cricket) Samuel Beckett The Unnamable.

236 comentarios:

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  1. Amapola Hanoi dixo...
  2. Cada ebrio es un indicio de cólera cuando dices soy canon, y yo enciendo un neón, una amapola seca.
    Yo comienzo a romper una placenta de madre. Qué es la rajadura sino un parto. Yo te digo: vengo —todo tú coordenadas, todo referencias— cada partido de cricket aburrido te dice: cada tajo te ama.

  3. Odio los números capicúas dixo...
  4. Grillo: yo te prometo atender tu ortopedia.
    Un rombo de cricket me solicitó pedirte que no dijeras nada: que no me dejaras salir de ese patio de dudas donde duerme el odio sobre calendarios de seda. Un rombo me solicitó pedirte que me sedaras y cerramos los ojos y dos lenguas de higo programaron esa manera de recordar tu rostro en panales dorados.

  5. IT´S NOT THE SECRET OF THE BLACK RAVEN dixo...
  6. N THE KINGDOM OF THE HOLLOW-AT-HEART, THE INSECT IS KING. / IN THE KINGDOM OF THE BEYOND, / ALL LIE WHERE THE GROUND IS SMOOTH. / EVERYTHING’S WHAT IT SEEMS TO BE, AND A LITTLE LESS. // IN THE LAND OF THE UNUTTERABLE, / WORDS FLOAT LIKE REFLECTIONS ACROSS THE WATER. / NOBODY VISITS US HERE. / LIKE SHADOWS, WE SPREAD OURSELVES UNTIL OUR HANDS TOUCH, / THEN DISAPPEAR IN THE DARK.

  7. tocar la cítara mientras arde Nerón dixo...
  8. A que no te atreves a escribir MURCIÉLAGO en el escaparate mientras el segurata mira hacia el miércoles, a que no te aprendes conmigo todos los estados de México, a que no te subes al tobogán del leopardo continuo, a que no.

    Te diría una palabra sucia. Pero una palabra sucia que se engarza a otra sucia hace una frase limpia: de fuentes sucias nacieron Lady Godiva y los caballos de carreras, de ahí las peonzas y el número nueve, los partidos de cricket, las escarolas y tú.

  9. A Samuel Beckett lo llamaban pajarraco, alguien lo ha comparado con un pájaro solitario. dixo...
  10. él estaba sorprendido de que alguien en posesión de una bayoneta no hiciera un uso ilimitado de ella

  11. murciélagos flix, con los labios apenas untados de vainilla- y unos címbalos amenazantes -¿para qué?- de fondo, como si una tormenta pugnase por brotar de todas las mompas de la ciudad. dixo...
  12. hoy, retrospectivamente, yo tendería a verlo como una insinuación épica que se resolvió en una epifanía

  13. “danseuse de charme” profesional y filósofo hamketopascaliano amateur: DOUKIPUDONKTAN, que significa sencillamente “¿De dónde quién pues apesta tanto?”, ábrete sésamo a una visión sombría y celiniana de la humanidad común, y no corriente, sino estancada en las ciudades atarjeas dixo...
  14. un paraíso, gris pero paraíso (los taxis ovalados, los buses rojos, el timón a la derecha, el “God save the Queen”, la arquitectura, el cricket, el té, los pubs y la actitud corporal estirada y arisca de los ingleses, que no da lugar a jorobados ni cabizbajos

  15. Blog Sponja dixo...
  16. El punto de vista de la esponja –de la esponja hundida en lo subconsciente y avizora desde su submarinidad– trastorna todas las secuencias y consecuencias, desvaría la realidad, se distrae en lo despreocupado, crea la fijeza en lo arbitrario, deja suponer lo indesmentible.

  17. Conde de Lérezmont y Dragón dixo...
  18. – El vicio inglés. La sodomía o la flagelación, escojan. La prostitución infantil en la era victoriana. Una serie de múltiples asesinatos sexuales. ¿No oímos el chirrido de los torniquetes? ¿Y qué me dicen de un Casanova inglés? Lord Byron, me imagino. Un dandy con un pie zopo y afición al incesto. Es un terreno peliagudo, ¿no? Oh, somos los inventores del condón, si eso sirve de ayuda. Supuestamente.

  19. Selecto y Desopilante Batidor de Conejos Muertos dixo...
  20. No, no era un tejón, a pesar de las pretensiones decorativas del herrero; era sólo un conejo.

  21. Sacó su habano de sobremesa e hizo chasquear sus tirantes del MCC [Marylebone Cricket Club] amarillos y rojos, salsa de tomate y yema de huevo. No era socio del MCC, y quien le confeccionaba los tirantes se cuidaba mucho de hacer preguntas al respecto. dixo...
  22. Estamos en el tercer milenio y tienes las tetas caídas, cariño. Los tiempos en que se enviaba a una cañonera, por no hablar de los casacas rojas, han pasado hace mucho. Tenemos el mejor ejército del mundo, huelga decirlo, pero hoy en día lo alquilamos para pequeñas guerras emprendidas por otros. Ya no somos mega. ¿Por qué a algunos les cuesta tanto admitirlo? El telar está en el museo, el petróleo se está agotando. Otros fabrican las cosas más baratas. Nuestros amigos de la City se siguen forrando, y cultivamos nuestro propios alimentos: somos capitalistas modestos en trigo. A veces vamos por delante, a veces retrasados. Pero lo que sí tenemos, lo que siempre tendremos, es lo que no tienen otros: una acumulación de tiempo. Tiempo. Mi palabra clave, ya ve. Cricket. Campeones del mundo.

  23. Cocodrilo Hogan dixo...
  24. – Por ejemplo, enseñamos al mundo el ingenioso juego del criquet, y ahora nuestro cometido, nuestro deber histórico, expresión de un residuo de culpa imperial, consiste en sentarnos a mirar cómo nos gana todo el mundo, ¿qué diría usted a eso?

    – Diría que han ganado el mundial de 2019 pero que están todavía a 4 mundiales de los putos australianos

  25. Empezamos bien el año dixo...
  26. Un estadio de cricket es un buen sitio para tener un padre. El resto del mundo es un buen sitio para tener un hijo y un ramito de murciélagos

  27. Buskerista Zanfogriento dixo...
  28. como si lo que prometían las ramas de pino y las velas y los bates de cricket y las canciones de borrachos y los villancicos al piano, fuera lo que fuese, no acabara de llegar nunca.

  29. Galician Patriot dixo...
  30. Un minuto de silencio por nuestros camaradas de los Patriots.
    Volverán.

  31. Saúl González Mendieta dixo...
  32. Vaya tarea, esa, la del algernon mouse, tan barroca que en su deambular alrededor del afuera trae frescuras de ciervo, aquel que sin meter por la cara cornamenta se adelantó dos pasos a explicar el cricket. Excelente, cualificar necesario: tal cual.

  33. O Vadío Da Brétema dixo...
  34. ¿Outra vez, outra vez o terror!
    Un día e outro día, sen compás, sen protesta
    Galicia ametrallada nas cunetas
    dos seus camiños.
    Chéganos outro berro.
    Señor ¿qué fixemos?
    -Non fales en voz alta-
    ¿Hasta cando durará iste gran enterro?
    -Non chores que poden escoitarte
    Hoxe non choran máis que os que aman a Galicia
    ¿Os milleiros de horas, de séculos,
    que fixeron falla
    para faguer un home!
    teñen que se encher aínda
    as cunetas
    con sangue de mestres e de obreiros.
    Lama, sangue e bágoas nos sulcos
    Son semente.

  35. El fantasma de Tractorville dixo...
  36. Y si la fantástica panoplia proporciona a la retórica o a la polémica imágenes o fantasmas, quizás eso hace pensar que la figura del fantasma no es ahí una figura más entre otras muchas. Es, tal vez, la figura oculta de todas las figuras. En calidad de tal, quizá no figurase ya como un arma trópica, como una más entre otras. No habría metarretórica del fantasma

  37. Cielos claros donde un mirlo es ordenado monseñor de las estrellas de los valles vacíos. dixo...
  38. Una casa llena de murciélagos donde un cerdo celeste recorre mis bates, donde el paisaje siembra su paisaje y el cricket es el deporte más popular del mundo.

  39. Armado con un palo dixo...
  40. Las vacas pastan como rocas menesterosas esperando que niegue mi ánima. Siempre quise negarme: agredirme en el campo de cricket de mi mente vacía con un bate rosa. La hierba crece y las nubes de algodón aquí no son motivo para muchas preguntas.

  41. Mike Bastardo dixo...
  42. Pensé en belfos de diablo cuando sobre un campo amarillo, el cielo dejaba fluir una leve parvada. Mi emoción, una ausencia de sal en la noche, contuvo sus labores de riego. ¿Qué espuma beber entonces, como semilla de cópula leal a las constelaciones de un bate de cricket?
    Habrá una aurora de frutos amargos y una resaca de culos rotos para saberlo.

  43. The Puto Pato Glücklich dixo...
  44. Acaso reniega de un pubis húmedo, si sus amigos, prenden candela a un cordero dormido que tiene pesadillas con el gayesco cricket.

  45. El traje que usa Malcolm McDowell como Alex es en gran parte su uniforme de cricket que llevó un día al set de filmación dixo...
  46. Si te drogas bien, el cricket es el deporte de los drugos.

  47. Los ojos del loco dixo...
  48. un software de grillos convertible. gestos de ortóptero. en cualquier caso cosas completas. Pretérito perfecto: nanomomentos. infancia en bolsitas de té. imágenes de extraña descendencia: ingeniería de lo sucio, que construye circuitos de murciélagos con bate integrado.

  49. Albion KillFoes dixo...
  50. One of the locals that helped him build the cottage was a Bulgarian-born farmer named Boris Rousimoff, who Beckett befriended and would sometimes play cards with. As you might’ve been able to guess, Rousimoff’s son was André the Giant, and when Beckett found out that Rousimoff was having trouble getting his son to school, Beckett offered to drive André to school in his truck — a vehicle that could fit André — to repay Rousimoff for helping to build Beckett’s cottage. Adorably, when André recounted the drives with Beckett, he revealed they rarely talked about anything other than cricket.

  51. Ockham dixo...

  52. *

    Como un arma para reformar en profundidad la sociedad cristiana, la amenaza del infierno y del diablo sirve como instrumento de contrato social y de vigilancia de consciencias, incitando a corregir las conductas individuales.
    Si se amplía la perspectiva, es posible hablar de un comienzo de modernización de los comportamientos occidentales. El mecanismo de culpabilización individual iniciado en ciertos estratos de las sociedades europeas a través de la modificación de la imagen del diablo y del infierno produjo una serie de consecuencias. Desarrolló el concepto monástico de la muerte y del cuerpo en sectores laicos cada vez más amplios, en detrimento de las interpretaciones populares basadas en una “continuidad más allá de la muerte” y en la percepción de un mundo sobrenatural masivo y farragoso, donde el Bien y el Mal no se distinguen perfectamente. La conmoción de este mundo encantado marca una reafirmación de la conquista cristiana más que una nueva proliferación de lo diabólico. La afirmación de una autonomía del infierno se puede interpretar como un esfuerzo inmenso para hacer más legible el dogma cristiano sacudiendo el enjambre de “supersticiones” que lo recubrían con demasiada frecuencia. La definición más precisa de la muerte y del otro mundo también permitió aclarar mejor lo que debía ser este mundo, es decir, las relaciones de los hombres con los poderes y el cricket

  53. Casacas Rojas dixo...
  54. El campo de batalla quedó sembrado de cadáveres desfigurados –a los oficiales Pope y Godwin-Austen se les identificó por los monóculos– y de algunas cosas que los zulúes no se llevaron porque no sabían qué hacer con ellas, como las palas de cricket.

  55. Asclepio Taburdio dixo...
  56. What cricket fan doesn't want to join the Barmy Army on a tour?

  57. Burnt Norton dixo...
  58. Till the wind shake a thousand whispers from the yew

    And after this our exile

  59. Elmer Gruñón Egghead Fuck dixo...
  60. Jillian had a urinary tract infection... again.

    That sentence appeared in my head a few days ago, just as you see it above. I have no idea what it means, other than the obvious, and I don't know anyone named Jillian. Regardless, I thought it'd be interesting to begin a vanity card with it and just see where it goes.

    Jillian had a urinary tract infection... again. Her doctor liked to abbreviate the condition to UTI. She liked to abbreviate it to TMH - Too Much Humping. Regardless, the road back to vaginal happiness was always the same: cranberry juice and abstinence. Thankfully, her boyfriend, Dudley, was always very understanding. He'd just smile, hold her in his arms and say, "Well, babe, when one door closes, another one opens up." She'd always giggle and blush when he'd say that, but deep down she wished she had the courage to cover his mouth and nose with a chloroform-soaked rag, and then, while he was unconscious, snip off his testicles with the little scissors she uses to groom her schnauzer.

    All of which explains why the next sentence popped into my head recently.

    Nobody sang Bee Gees songs on karaoke night like Dudley.

  61. Crisóstomo Sauerkraut dixo...
  62. Una felicidad indecible aparece en sus caras casi humanas. Estas criaturas que parecen pájaros pero que no lo son, completamente negros se funden con la oscuridad, como semillas que nunca florecerán

    Como demonios sin esperanza de redención ciegos y crueles, llevados por su voluntad, cuelgan a veces boca abajo de las ramas
    igual que hojas secas, excitando nuestra lástima

    En algunas historias se concentran en húmedas grutas;
    cuando el sol cae tras la montaña es su momento para salir de caza, parir, luego desaparecen

    Pueden obligar a un sonámbulo a unírseles,
    arrebatarle la antorcha de su mano y apagarla;
    pueden alcanzar a un lobo acechante
    y hacerlo caer mudo por un precipicio

    A la noche, si un niño no puede dormir
    es sin duda porque un murciélago
    sorteando los ojos hinchados del guardia
    llegó hasta él para hablarle del destino

    Uno, dos o tres murciélagos,
    no tiene riqueza ni patria, ¿cómo puede ser
    que traigan felicidad? La luna creciente y menguante
    gastó sus plumas. Son feos, sin nombre.

    Su corazón de piedra nunca pudo conmoverme
    hasta que un verano hacia el atardecer
    al pasar por mi vieja casa vi muchos chicos jugando
    y sobre sus cabezas aún más murciélagos

    El atardecer arrojaba sombras sobre la calle
    y doraba el cuerpo de los murciélagos
    Revoloteaban sobre las puertas descascaradas
    pero nada tenían para decir sobre el destino

    Entre las cosas antiguas un murciélago es de aquellas que generan una especie de nostalgia.
    Su actitud indolente hizo que me detuviera un largo tiempo
    en ese barrio, en la calle donde crecí.

  63. Oliver Cromwell dixo...
  64. Cromwell was in Ireland from 15 August 1649 to 26 May 1650. In that short time he accomplished a more complete control of Ireland than had been achieved under any English monarch; and it led on to the most ruthless process of ethnic cleansing that there has ever been in western European history, with the arguable exception of the Norman Conquest. In the next five years perhaps three-quarters of the land held by predominantly Catholic Irish people was confiscated and redistributed to Protestant Englishmen. At a stroke, the proportion of the land of Ireland held by the former fell from three-fifths to one sixth.

    Cromwell spent his time securing control of the east of Ireland, from Drogheda, 30 miles north of Dublin, to Cork in the south. When he left, only four major Irish towns remained to be taken: Waterford, Limerick, Athlone and Galway. His successors, first his son-in-law Henry Ireton, and then Charles Fleetwood, were left with a messy but inexorable mopping up operation.

    At the heart of Cromwell’s conquest was his storming of Drogheda and Wexford. They represent a grim legend. In Drogheda more than 3,000 were killed; in Wexford not less than 2,000. They died from artillery bombardment, from gunshots, from sword or dagger thrust, or by bludgeon – Sir Arthur Aston, commander of the Drogheda garrison, was beaten to death with his own wooden leg. Many, perhaps most, were killed in hot blood. But others were killed in cold blood after they had surrendered or been captured. Cromwell ordered none in military or religious orders to be spared.

  65. Algernon Mouse dixo...
  66. if you are willing to give yourself eyestrain you can barely make out on the dark-blue tag attached to the bat, the words "Clicky-Ba". The letters 'Cl-' on the first row and 'Ba' on the second row of the tag are the most legible, the other letters seem a scrawl. Thus, this apparent cricket bat, is none other than the 'club' of Chung, servant to the Wolf of Kabul, Bill Samson. To explain the pith helmet, Samson was often described thus: "He walked with his hands thrust deep into his pockets, and a battered sun-helmet stuck on the back of his head". A sun-helmet is a common synonym for pith helmet.
    For some reason, however, we all missed what Guy Lawley got, which is that both the pith hemet and cricket bat belong to William Samson of the 1940s League

  67. Beckett's Bucket dixo...
  68. En ciertos momentos en la literatura, un determinado escritor parece personificar la dignidad y la soledad de toda la profesión. Henry James fue «el Maestro» no sólo, o ni siquiera principalmente, en virtud de sus dotes sino porque su modo de vida, su estilo, incluso en ocasiones triviales, expresaba el compulsivo ministerio del gran arte. Hoy hay razones para suponer que Samuel Beckett es el escritor por excelencia, que otros dramaturgos y novelistas encuentran en él la sombra concentrada de sus esfuerzos y privaciones. Monsieur Beckett es —hasta la última fibra de su compacto y escurridizo ser— oficio. No hay ningún discernible movimiento de más, ninguna fanfarria pública, ninguna concesión —o ninguna que se anuncie— al ruido y a las imprecisiones de la vida. Los años tempranos de Beckett tienen un aire de deliberado aprendizaje (a la edad de veintiún años estaba haciendo de secretario de Joyce). Sus primeras publicaciones, su artículo sobre «Dante... Bruno... Vico... Joyce» de 1929, la monografía de 1931 sobre Proust, una colección de poemas publicada en 1935 por Europa Press —un nombre sintomático— son preliminares exactos. Beckett traza, con respecto a sus propias necesidades, las muy cercanas atracciones de Joyce y Proust; lo que más le influye es lo que descarta. En Belacqua en Dublín (More Pricks than Kicks, Londres 1934), hace sonar su propia y especial nota. La guerra vino como una interrupción banal. Rodeó a Beckett de un silencio, de una rutina de demencia y tristeza tan tangible como la ya sospechada en su arte. Con Molloy en 1951 y Esperando a Godot, un año después, Beckett logró esa que es la menos interesante pero más necesaria de las condiciones: la intemporalidad. El tiempo había llegado; el gran artista es, precisamente, el que «sueña hacia delante».

    Henry James fue representativo por la profusión de su obra, por la convicción, manifiesta en todo cuanto escribió, de que se podía hacer que el lenguaje, si se cultiva con la suficiente energía quisquillosa, hiciera realidad y transmitiera el total de la experiencia que vale la pena. La parquedad de Beckett, su genio para decir menos, es la antítesis. Beckett usa las palabras como si cada una hubiese de ser extraída de una caja fuerte y sacada a escondidas a la luz tomándolas de unas reservas peligrosamente escasas. Si hay bastante con la misma palabra, úsala muchas veces, hasta que se quede fina y anónima de tan restregada. El aliento es un legado que no hay que malgastar; los monosílabos bastan para los días laborables. Loados sean los santos por los puntos finales; nos protegen, a nosotros, pródigos charlatanes, de la penuria. La idea de que podamos expresar nuestros sordos yoes, mucho menos comunicar a ningún otro ser humano, por ciego, sordo o insensato que sea, una verdad, hecho o sensación completa —una quinta, décima, millonésima parte de la susodicha verdad, hecho o sensación— es una arrogante necedad. James claramente creía que esto era factible, al igual que Proust, y Joyce cuando, en una postrera y loca aventura, extendió una red de palabras brillantes y sonoras sobre toda la creación.


  69. Beckett's Bucket dixo...
  70. El paisaje de Beckett es un monocromo sombrío. El tema de su sonsonete es la inmundicia, la soledad y la fantasmal autosuficiencia que viene después de un largo ayuno. No obstante, es uno de nuestros documentadores indispensables, y además lo sabe: «Cucú, ya estoy aquí otra vez, justo cuando más falta hago, como la raíz cuadrada de menos uno, habiendo terminado mis estudios de humanidades». Una frase densa y brillantemente oportuna. La raíz cuadrada de menos uno es imaginaria, espectral, pero las matemáticas no pueden prescindir de ella. «Terminated» es un galicismo deliberado: significa que Beckett ha dominado el saber humano (estos textos están repletos de enigmáticas alusiones), que ha hecho un inventario académico de la civilización antes de cerrar la tapa y quedarse mondo hasta el hueso. Pero terminated significa también finis, Fin de partida, La última cinta de Krapp. Éste es un arte terminal, que convierte la mayoría de las críticas o los comentarios en superfluas vulgaridades.

    La visión que emerge de la totalidad de los escritos de Beckett es estrecha y repetitiva. Es también siniestramente hilarante. Puede que no sea mucho, pero, al ser tan sincera, muy bien podría resultar que fuera lo mejor y lo más duradero que tenemos. La flacura de Beckett, su negativa a ver en el lenguaje y en la forma literaria unas adecuadas realizaciones del sentimiento o la sociedad humanos, lo hace antitético a Henry James. Pero es tan representativo de nuestro disminuido ámbito actual como lo fue James de una vastedad perdida. Así se aplica el homenaje que le rindió W. H. Auden en el cementerio de Mount Auburn: «Maestro del matiz y del escrúpulo».


  71. Breaking nova dixo...
  72. Tim Paine ficha por los porcos bravos

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