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Ami's P3 term2
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Ami's P3 Term 1
Ami's review L4 ä»ć€©äžćșć»äș
MĂłricz Zsigmond A Nyugat cĂmƱ folyĂłirat egyik szerkesztĆje 1933- ig. UtĂĄna a Kelet NĂ©pe cĂmƱ folyĂłirat szerkesztĆje halĂĄlĂĄig. ElbeszĂ©lĆ technikĂĄjĂĄra jellemzĆ: - a drĂĄmai elemek, a drĂĄmaisĂĄg közĂ©ppontba ĂĄllĂtĂĄsa (jelenetezĂ©s) - szabad fĂŒggĆ beszĂ©d alkalmazĂĄsa - tĂĄrsadalmi, környezeti jellemzĆk megmutatĂĄsa - naturalista ĂĄbrĂĄzolĂĄsmĂłd: - az emberi ĂĄbrĂĄzolĂĄs hitelessĂ©ge( tĂĄjnyelvi) - az ember mint biolĂłgiai szĂŒksĂ©gleteknek alĂĄvetett lĂ©ny ĂĄbrĂĄzolĂĄsa ( Ă©jfĂ©li talĂĄlka) - indulatok Ă©s ösztönök kendĆzetlen megmutatĂĄsa - Ă©lĆbeszĂ©dszerƱ megnyilvĂĄnulĂĄsok - szokatlan tĂ©mĂĄk ( erotika, brutalitĂĄs nyomor erĆszak ) NovellĂĄi TragĂ©dia Korai mƱvei közĂŒl az egyik legnagyobb hatĂĄsĂș novellĂĄja a TragĂ©dia (1909). A cselekmĂ©ny mĂĄsfĂ©l nap esemĂ©nyeit dolgozza föl, közĂ©ppontjĂĄban egyetlen szereplĆvel, Kis JĂĄnossal. Az in medias res felĂŒtĂ©sszerƱ kezdĂ©snek hangulatteremtĆ szerepe van: Ă©letkĂ©pszerƱen mutatja be a mezĆn dolgozĂł emberek ebĂ©d utĂĄni pihenĂ©sĂ©t. A vidĂĄm, trĂ©fĂĄlkozĂł, a következĆ napi lakodalomrĂłl beszĂ©lgetĆ, âizgĆ-mozgĂłâ emberek közĂŒl mintha talĂĄlomra vĂĄlasztanĂĄ ki az elbeszĂ©lĆ az egyiket. A harmadik bekezdĂ©sben az âelbeszĂ©lĆi kamera rĂĄközelĂtâ egyetlen alakra, Kis JĂĄnosra. ElkĂŒlönĂŒl a többiektĆl, rĂĄ nem jellemzĆ mĂĄsok vidĂĄmsĂĄga, jĂłkedve. A âSenki sem törĆdött vele, a tulajdon fia sem.â mondat erre utal, de e mondat kĂ©sĆbbi ismĂ©tlĆdĂ©seinek (âĂszre se vette senkiâ, valamint a zĂĄrĂłmondat: âSenki se vette Ă©szre, hogy eltƱntâŠâ) mĂĄr az a szerepe, hogy egyetlen âjellemvonĂĄsĂĄtâ: jelentĂ©ktelensĂ©gĂ©t, âlĂĄthatatlansĂĄgĂĄtâ nyomatĂ©kosĂtsa. ĂletĂ©nek gĂ©piessĂ©ge azt az Ă©rzetet kelti, hogy csak kĂŒlsĆ megjelenĂ©sĂ©ben ember, inkĂĄbb igavonĂł baromra emlĂ©keztet, mint emberre. Egyetlen nevetĂ©se Ă©s egyszeri jĂłllakĂĄsa viszolyogtatĂł, döbbenetes, mikĂ©nt az is, hogy az evĂ©sen kĂvĂŒl mĂĄs nem Ă©rdekli. âSzeplĆs, mĂĄlĂ©szĂĄjĂșâ fia, aki âijesztĆen hasonlĂtott hozzĂĄâ, nyomorĂșsĂĄgĂĄnak âörököseâ, ami szintĂ©n riasztĂł. Az elbeszĂ©lĆ egyĂ©rtelmƱ szĂĄndĂ©ka a megdöbbentĂ©s, meghökkentĂ©s. NyilvĂĄn a korabeli olvasĂł szĂĄmĂĄra is ismeretlen volt ez a âmĂ©lyvilĂĄgâ, mikĂ©nt a mai szĂĄmĂĄra is az. Az elbeszĂ©lĆ szenvtelen tĂĄrgyilagossĂĄggal tudĂłsĂt. A novella cselekmĂ©nye egyrĂ©szt az idĆ linearitĂĄsĂĄra Ă©pĂŒl (az elsĆ nap ebĂ©didejĂ©tĆl a mĂĄsnap dĂ©lutĂĄni lakodalmi vacsorĂĄig), mĂĄsrĂ©szt a vezĂ©rmotĂvumra, az evĂ©sre. A fĆszereplĆt elĆször ebĂ©dje elfogyasztĂĄsa utĂĄn lĂĄtjuk. Fontos momentum, hogy egy falatot sem hagy fiĂĄnak az âalmĂĄsĂ©telâ-bĆl. EbĂ©d utĂĄni ĂĄlmĂĄban ismĂ©t eszik: finom, lakodalmi Ă©teleket, s Ă©bredĂ©s utĂĄni rosszkedvƱ monologizĂĄlĂĄsĂĄban megprĂłbĂĄlja elkĂ©pzelni, mi lesz a gazda lĂĄnyĂĄnak eskĂŒvĆjĂ©n. ArrĂłl ĂĄbrĂĄndozik, hogy mennyit enne, ha meghĂvnĂĄk, de felidĂ©zĆdik benne egy kellemetlen gyermekkori emlĂ©k (egy lakodalom â tehĂĄt evĂ©s) is. DĂŒhe Ă©s haragja ebben a jelenetben mĂ©g Ă©rthetetlen, tehetetlensĂ©gĂ©ben felrĂșgja az ĂŒres edĂ©nyt. HaragjĂĄt vĂ©gĂŒl a âvĂ©n Sarudyraâ fordĂtja, azĂ©rt dĂŒhöng, mert Ășgy gondolja, nem mehet el a lakodalomra. A kĂ©sleltetett elbeszĂ©lĆi jellemzĂ©sbĆl az is kiderĂŒl, hogy apja halĂĄla is összefĂŒggĂ©sben van az Ć mohĂł Ă©hsĂ©gĂ©vel. PrimitĂvsĂ©ge, nyomora mĂ©g az Ă©telekrĆl valĂł ĂĄlmodozĂĄsĂĄnak is korlĂĄtot szab, ugyanazokat az Ă©telneveket ismĂ©telgeti. A novella fordulĂłpontja a gazda bejelentĂ©se: összes munkĂĄsĂĄt meghĂvja a lakomĂĄra. Az âegyszer laknĂ©k jĂłlâ vĂĄgya ettĆl kezdve realitĂĄssĂĄ vĂĄlik, Kis JĂĄnos szĂĄmĂĄra pedig feladattĂĄ. A szĂłtlanul elfogyasztott âkorpacibereâ utĂĄn nem tud elaludni, gyötrelmes hĂĄnykolĂłdĂĄsĂĄban is csak a feladatra tud koncentrĂĄlni. A kissĂ© homĂĄlyos âfeladatâ mĂĄsnap reggel vĂĄlik Ă©rthetĆvĂ©. Kis JĂĄnos kĂ©ptelen fogadalma (âEgye meg a fene a vĂ©n Sarudyt, ma kieszem a vagyonĂĄbul.â) legalĂĄbb annyira megdöbbentĆ, mint azok a tĂ©nyek, melyek eddig kiderĂŒltek rĂłla. SzĂĄnalmassĂĄga azonban fokozatosan eltƱnik, mĂĄrtĂr-elszĂĄntsĂĄga (nem eszik sem reggel, sem dĂ©lben), szegĂ©nysĂ©ge, nyomora elleni âlĂĄzadĂĄsaâ (hajnali fĂ©lĂĄlmĂĄban âelrĂșgja magĂĄtĂłl a szegĂ©nysĂ©getâ), elkĂ©pesztĆ terve, elszĂĄntsĂĄga szinte naggyĂĄ formĂĄlja ezt a jelentĂ©ktelen embert. A ânaggyĂĄnövelĂ©sâ ĂrĂłi eszköze a novella kezdetĂ©n is alkalmazott filmszerƱ megoldĂĄs. Csak most mintha alsĂł kameraĂĄllĂĄsbĂłl filmeznĂ©k a fĆszereplĆt: Kis JĂĄnos egyedĂŒl, ĂłriĂĄssĂĄ növekedve ĂĄll a vilĂĄggal szemben, megszƱnik körĂŒlötte minden, mĂĄr csak a feladatot lĂĄtja maga elĆtt. MĂ©gis szĂĄnalmas marad, hiszen vĂ©gtelenĂŒl magĂĄnyos, vĂĄllalĂĄsa öncĂ©lĂș Ă©s Ă©rtelmetlen. KĂŒzdelme az Ă©telekkel â a zsĂros hĂșslevessel, a tepertĆs tĂșrĂłs csuszĂĄval, a lencsĂ©vel, majd ĂĄlmai netovĂĄbbjĂĄval, a töltött kĂĄposztĂĄval â valĂłdi Ă©let-halĂĄl kĂŒzdelemmĂ© vĂĄlik, s vĂ©gĂŒl halĂĄlĂĄt okozza az evĂ©s. A rezignĂĄlt zĂĄrĂłmondat csak azt a tĂ©nyt közli, hogy halĂĄlĂĄban Ă©ppĂșgy Ă©szrevĂ©tlen maradt, mint amilyen Ă©letĂ©ben volt. A novella drĂĄmai erejĂ©t, szuggesztivitĂĄsĂĄt az okozza, hogy Kis JĂĄnos olyan alak, akinek jelleme, sorsa, gondolatai mĂĄr szinte valĂłszerƱtlenek. A valĂłsĂĄgos környezet, az elbeszĂ©lĆ tĂĄrgyilagossĂĄga, a fĆszereplĆ nĂ©zĆpontja zavarĂłan hitelessĂ©, hihetĆvĂ© teszi mindezt. Az elbeszĂ©lĆi vĂ©lemĂ©ny hiĂĄnya pedig elgondolkoztatja az olvasĂłt, hisz olyan vilĂĄggal szembesĂŒl, amelyrĆl inkĂĄbb igyekszik nem tudomĂĄst venni. BarbĂĄrok tartalom Egy napon a juhĂĄsz legelteti nyĂĄjĂĄt, ahogy eddig is, egyszer csak elkezd ugatni a puli. KĂ©t juhĂĄsz lĂ©pett oda hozzĂĄ. Az egyik szamĂĄron a mĂĄsik gyalogolt, Ă©s kĂ©t komondor is volt velĂŒk. LeĂŒltek a földre de nem beszĂ©lgettek. MegĂ©rkezett a juhĂĄsz 12 Ă©ves fia is. Az Ășj juhĂĄszok kĂ©rdezĆsködtek a felesĂ©g felĆl, majd a juhĂĄsz szĂjĂĄra esett a szĂł. Meg akarjĂĄk venni tĆle, de Ć nem akarja adni, mert azt magĂĄnak csinĂĄlta. A kĂ©t juhĂĄsz agyonverte a juhĂĄszt Ă©s a fiĂĄt, mĂ©g a pulit is. Gödröt ĂĄstak Ă©s eltemettĂ©k Ćket, majd fogtĂĄk a nyĂĄjat Ă©s elhajtottĂĄk. 10 nap mĂșlva jött a felesĂ©g Ă©s sehol nem talĂĄlta sem a juhĂĄsz, sem a gyereket, sem a pulit, sem a nyĂĄjat. Elindult megkeresni Ćket, amikor juhĂĄszokba botlott. A juhĂĄszok azt hazudjĂĄk, hogy a az urĂĄnak meggyĂŒlt a baja a törvĂ©nnyel ezĂ©rt el kellett mennie. Hogy bizonyĂtsĂĄk itt jĂĄrtĂĄt emlegettĂ©k a szĂjat, mire az asszony buzgĂłn bĂłlogatott, hogy az tĂ©nyleg az ura. Elindult DunĂĄntĂșlra, amerre a juhĂĄszok mondtĂĄk. Tavasszal fogta a puli kölykĂ©t Ă©s kimentek a pusztĂĄra. Egyszer csak a kutya kiĂĄsott egy kalapot. Az asszony rĂĄjött, hogy fĂ©lrevezetĆi öltĂ©k meg az urĂĄt elment tehĂĄt Ćket is megkeresni. KiderĂŒlt, hogy bevittĂ©k Ćket vallatni. HiĂĄba vallattĂĄk a veres juhĂĄszt, nem akarta bevallani, hogy Ć volt. BĂĄrmit bevallott csak ezt nem. A vizsgĂĄlĂłbĂrĂł nagyon mĂ©rges lesz Ă©s elkĂŒldi a juhĂĄszt. Ahogy megy kifele, egyszer csak meglĂĄtta a szĂjat. Megmerevedett, majd lassan megfordult Ă©s beismerte tettĂ©t. 25 bot bĂŒntetĂ©st kapott. A törtĂ©net 3 rĂ©szre tagolĂłdik 1.rĂ©sz: A kettĆs gyilkossĂĄg (birkĂĄkĂ©rt, övĂ©rt) 2. rĂ©sz Az asszony keresi a fĂ©rjĂ©t ( majdnem 1 Ă©v) A puli kölyke segĂtsĂ©gĂ©vel megtalĂĄlja a sĂrt 3.rĂ©sz A vizsgĂĄlĂł bĂrĂł kihallgatja a veres juhĂĄszt. TörtĂ©netet összefƱzĆ központi motĂvumok - az öv - a nĂ©phiedelem vilĂĄgbĂłl babonĂĄbĂłl felĂ©pĂtett tĂĄrgy ïȘ az övnekâ lelkeâ van A barbĂĄrsĂĄg ïš Az elmaradottsĂĄg a civilizĂĄciĂłn kĂvĂŒli vilĂĄg A cĂm is az utolsĂł szĂł is ïš BARBĂROK Kire mire vonatkozik, - a brutalitĂĄs jelkĂ©pe ( a gyilkosokra) - a pusztabĂ©li törvĂ©nyek jelkĂ©pe (babonĂĄkra) - minden szereplĆre vonatkozhat mĂĄsmilyen Ă©rtelmekben (vizsgĂĄlĂłbĂrĂłra) Az elbeszĂ©lĂ©s jellegzetessĂ©ge: - nĂ©pnyelvi Ă©s tĂĄjnyelvi szavak hasznĂĄlata ïš Az elbeszĂ©lĂ©smĂłd hitelesĂ©gĂ©t erĆsĂti. Az elbeszĂ©lĂ©snek nincs befejezĂ©se, a vizsgĂĄlĂłbĂrĂł zĂĄrĂłmondata (cĂm!) elgondolkodtatĂł ĂtĂ©let, vĂĄd, de nem megoldĂĄs. Az elbeszĂ©lĆ sem mond vĂ©lemĂ©nyt, mint ahogy az elbeszĂ©lĂ©s sorĂĄn sem fƱz kommentĂĄrt az esemĂ©nyekhez. A pusztai emberek vilĂĄga szembeĂĄllĂthatĂł a civilizĂĄltvilĂĄggal, de szĂĄmos kĂ©rdĂ©s merĂŒlhet föl az olvasĂłban. Ki a hibĂĄs azĂ©rt, hogy ilyen emberek Ă©lnek mĂ©g, mi az oka annak, hogy a vilĂĄgtĂłl elszigetelten Ă©lĆk között ilyen indulatok feszĂŒljenek, hogyan lehetsĂ©ges, hogy pusztĂĄn a szerzĂ©svĂĄgy ilyen aljassĂĄgra kĂ©sztessen embereket? BarbĂĄrsĂĄguk a civilizĂĄltember (vizsgĂĄlĂłbĂrĂł) szempontjĂĄbĂłl igaz, felvetĆdik a tĂĄrsadalmi felelĆssĂ©g kĂ©rdĂ©se is. A veres juhĂĄsz halĂĄlos ĂtĂ©lete, megbotoztatĂĄsa nem oldja meg a törtĂ©nettel pĂ©ldĂĄzott problĂ©mĂĄkat. MĂłricz elbeszĂ©lĂ©se ugyanis nem a törtĂ©nelmi mĂșltbĂłl vett kĂŒlönös törtĂ©net, hanem a kortĂĄrs magyar tĂĄrsadalom vilĂĄgĂĄbĂłl vett tĂ©ma. Az elbeszĂ©lĂ©sben jelentĆs szerepe van az ismĂ©tlĆdĂ©seknek. A puli jelzi a veszĂ©lyt az elsĆ rĂ©szben, majd a puli (kölyke) talĂĄlja meg az elföldelt ĂĄldozatokat a mĂĄsodik rĂ©sz vĂ©gĂ©n. A veres juhĂĄsz ugyanazokat a hazugsĂĄgokat ismĂ©tli a bĂrĂłsĂĄgon, melyekkel Bodri juhĂĄsz felesĂ©gĂ©t is igyekezett fĂ©lrevezetni. A vĂĄndorlĂĄs-keresĂ©s (âmenĂ©sâ) a mĂĄsodik rĂ©sz fĆ motĂvuma, mĂg az elbeszĂ©lĂ©s szimbolikus vezĂ©rmotĂvuma a rĂ©zveretes szĂj. LĂĄtszĂłlag emiatt ölik meg Bodri juhĂĄszt, ezzel hĂșzzĂĄk be tetemĂ©t a gödörbe, errĆl beszĂ©lget a veres juhĂĄsz Bodri juhĂĄsz felesĂ©gĂ©vel (maga hozza szĂłba!), vĂ©gĂŒl ennek lĂĄttĂĄra tesz vallomĂĄst a veres juhĂĄsz.
Pandora's Box Vocabulary
âOn this night, we share a roof protecting us from fleets of inequity. Our unification promises a better tomorrow. Those larger than myself, sitting on their marble thrones, sipping blood from cups composed of human skin and singing songs of so-called virtue, grow weaker each moment. Their caravans are revolting. There is hope yet. There is progress! Though tonight may mark a countdown, it is still a celebration. Look at all we have done, not just for Trials but for Palatium Infra as a whole. In four years, when Iâm no longer Sovereignty, the Spoiled Purity and his people will continue to strive. So drink! Smoke! Crush up those exotic plants and snort them! We will not falter, weaken, or wane. Our influence is expanding, and somebody new opens their eyes every day. Even the Silbys of Aculeus have reached alarming potentials despite their embittered minds. So long as you relish in tonight, dance, and pray to your âdeadâ Gods, our revolution shall rise beyond the bounds of class, and when Iâm only a commoner, we shall rise again beyond our brainwashed adversaries! Cheers, my people. Cheers!â Followers raised their cups. Some clinked theirs together. Others stood still and screamed breathlessly in agreement. I smiled with courtesy, then stepped off my platform. My voice still rang across the cellar. Speeches before were grander. Those displays were supposed to be emptying, and yet this one left me bloated, swollen tight. I watched as they popped the corks of their bottles and chanted in the name of Purity. Maybe the quality of my words wasnât what mattered to them anyway, so long as I screamed loud enough. Thereâs no merit in attacking your people, a voice corrected me. âThatâs right,â I said aloud. âKnox, my-my Sovereign!â squealed a nearby devotee, jittering as he stuffed his face with catered pastries. He was one Iâd never seen before or had failed to remember. âLook what Iâve found! Itâs wine, and not the shoddy Infran kind, either. Earth-made with good fruit! I donât know how anyone managed to get their hands on this. Maybe some space travel mischief.â He giggled and held up a small glass bottle. âHow neat.â âI want you to have it, Sir.â I nodded my head. âYes, of course. Thank you.â Backing off into the midst of rowdy disciples, I clutched the bottle. What a waste of grapes. It could have been jam instead. Earthly food had a superior taste, ripe with delicate intricacies and nostalgia, but Palatium Infra had mastered the art of alcohol. Why waste your time with a drunkenness so sad and sickening? The booze of trash. Not many more followers approached me. The barren peroration must have upset them. My hands itched to submerge into my suit pockets, and my legs stood suddenly numb, wobbling. Four more years until Iâm nothing. But tonight, you are nothing. âShut up,â I told myself. Tightly packed together in the corner of the dwelling sat the Sibyls. A mound of writhing fabric and tones of skin made up their unified silhouette. I snapped the strap of the nearest gown, balancing on my hands and knees, waving the bottle before them. In their almost rodent nature, narrow noses prodded my way. Their dresses wrinkled and fell to their ankles. Knees dropped, and eyes widened. Many grumbled at me like hungry she-beasts. Those newer ones with faded curtains for hair, sunken eyes, and dirtied nails looked, hid their face, then sobbed. I imagined them in a pack together, fighting wildly against the Spoiled Purity in their rat decorumâbiting down with square teeth laced with rabies. âIâve got you all something,â I said. âGo back off to your pedestal and yap some more. We donât want it.â A woman rose from the pile and spat. âYou donât even know what it is yet. It's Earth hooch, or more likely a near-flawless replica. I figured you girls would also like a chance to enjoy yourselves tonight.â âYour playmates have been harassing us since the moment you hung the banners and opened the cellar door.â The youngest, with a striking cyan mop upon her head, uncoiled from the mass. What was she now? 20, 21? We celebrated a birthday recently, I thought as she spun around me. âI remember something about a promise. Multiple promises, actually. Are you trying to bribe us into just shutting up and taking it? Because if another sticky, 40-year-old, Earth-born virgin gropes my shoulder, Iâm going to have an aneurysm!â the girl continued. âWhy not an Infran follower? Do you like it when they touch you?â I returned her accusing tone. âIâm sorry, sweet prophets, that you feel Iâve neglected my duties. Iâll keep a better eye out. Remember, you can always just holler if somebody is bothering you. And Anwen, friend, if Iâve ever tried to bribe you with anything, it was certainly the hair dye. I mean, look at you! Such handsomeness!â I exclaimed. The other Siblys began to encircle her, uttering compliments or even announcements of their envy. Anwen disappeared in a wink with flushed cheeks back into the mound. âIâll just leave this here.â Smiling, I set down the bottle. ** â141, 143. . .â I counted each step as I trekked the staircase. There was no doubt I lost track somewhere. The ledges kept spawning under my feet, infinitely multiplying until I wasnât moving at allâswallowing me up in a whirlpool of stone. My tie still hung around my neck, and my blazer remained tied around my hips as a skirt. Streaks of red dribbled off from the cavity in my chest. It was a gorgeous marking, sensual to my fingertips as I traced its edges. Purity, oh, Purity. Purity and his wings of burnt skin. Purity and his many faces. Purity the spoiled. Purity the mutilated. The Silbys did not bother waiting for me. On bare feet, they stormed up the stairs to their room. A trail of red, though in paint unlike mine, streamed after them. None looked remotely near me as they squeaked and gossiped intangibly. I saved them, those Infran broads, enlightened them. As much as they liked to deny it, spit at me, and bask in the thought of their victimhood, in this home, they stood empowered. Youâve done well, my thoughts affirmed, though in the manner of an insincere commentator rather than a hype man. Teeth grace in tile violin goes laundry paper when. It dissolved into an intruding drivel. I rubbed my head and sniveled. âDo you need help, Knox?â called a Silby. Fattened by my coddling, her shadow fell upon me from the doorway steps ahead. I attempted counting again. There mustâve been at least another hundred between me and her. âIâm hallucinating some,â I said, breathing deeply to suppress a burp as I struggled to recall her name. Two syllables. Typically Latin, though sometimes English. Drops of slobber leaked from my mouth. âIâm hallucinating some, Tybal. Do you like your name, Tybal? I would have named you something better. Ty-Tyballinia. No, weâd have to eliminate the âballâ aspect. It sounds too crude.â âOne foot in front of the other,â she said. So I walked. Mess greeted me at the doorway. Dirtied culinary obscured the dark wooden countertops, and the sink lay running. I approached the kitchen table, sat, and set my face down upon its cool wooden surface. Assaulting my nose was the smell of neglected flowers, like soil mixed with the kind of sweet cough medicine that would have left me gagging as a child. Open windows whispered songs of the twilight hour through the vessels of busy trolleys and shooting guns. My mouth strained to vomit, but there was nothing in my stomach to regurgitate except the petals of Stultoâs bloom, which came out effortlessly in little sputters. Teetering, I stood up and brushed disgorged plant parts off the tabletop. âLove,â I said as I slogged up yet another staircase. âAre you awake?â She said sheâd wait. Somebodyâs gotten her. No, she always misses movie night. That sleepyhead, I assured myself. There was a stirring amidst the manorâs cloak of dusk. Portraits of myself, my wife, and my daughter turned to face me as the hallway lights flickered, escaping their quartz frames to penetrate my ears with nonsense. The taxidermied heads of Infran creatures bared their teeth. I stopped to stare at my favorite, an adabactor with daunting spiked tusks poking out from its forehead. Its nose remained black and sharp, and its eyes wide with malice. âWhere is my Spes, Adaba-boy? Is she sleepy?â Thereâs someone in the house. The sounds of the stirring rose along with my blood pressure. Footsteps orbited around me, drawing near and far and then near again, little dancers in the dark. The carpet immersed me in its mass of purples and blues, leaving my skin stained indigo and my vision abstracted. I toiled to reach the master bedroom across the aisle as it stretched out to me with bright lights and celestial howling, like a dove struggling in a pool of oil. Never again with Stultoâs bloom. Never again on what was already a bad night. My hand brushed the doorknob, and the high abruptly faded into only a persistent hum-buzz twirling around my brain. The portraits returned to their typical depressionâSpes posing with her ax, Ariâs school photo, and myself in the cap I wore when addressing the military with the Verbis emblem embroidered in its center. All lifeless shots. Who were they for when they captured not the subjectâs essence but only some fragment of their identity? They used to feel personal, not advertisements of some supposed characters. Servants, babysitters, and likewise civilian guests, I reminded myself, mustnât forget whose home theyâre in. Yet my body moved independently, taking Ariâs from its hook and laying it backward against the wall to hide her distant grin and tamed posture. It was time for new pictures. Sweet ones, real ones; time was ticking. I approached my own when the stirring began again. Groans and squeals erupted from the vents as if someone had set a pen of pigs loose in my crawlspace. No, not the crawlspace, my bedroom door. I turned the ruby knob. Underneath a blanket wrestled my two squealing piglets, their skins melting together beneath the layer of duvet. Fishnet leggings and manicured nails outstretched and scraped at the sheet beneath them. One raised its head, a salmon-colored man with sweat running down his forehead. Through the crack in the door, we met eyes, his Infran Dr. Sesuss nose flaring its narrow nostrils. No mark of the Spoiled Purity existed carved onto his naked body. My chest felt tight. I stepped back. I was suffocating. Spes emerged from the linens, her hair flowing down her back and her dark skin glistening in front of the bedroom window. She giggled and held the man, the blanket falling and revealing inches of her body I had not seen in months. âDarling,â whispered the rosy-faced man, âlook.â He was unfathomably ugly and grotesquely young, with beady, lifeless pupils that dilated when he faced me. The excess flesh on his face sagged while he bit down on his thin lips. My wife faced me, gasped, and strained to cover herself. Suddenly, I was a stranger. A small child who had walked into his parents having sex. I unfurled the door completely. âGet out of my house,â I said. The man stayed in place. âGet out of my house,â I repeated. âKnox,â Spes began. Tears ran down her round cheeks. âShut up!â I turned to the man, picking up a marble trophy from on top of my dresser. âGet out of my house! Iâll kill you!â âKnox!â Spes sobbed. âGod damn it! I hate you! You barely look at me. Every day, thereâs less passion. God, God, God, I donât want to fuck a dead man!â she screamed, âYou get out! Get! Get!â My hands wrapped tighter around the statue. That pig of a man was attached to her at the side, his face equipped with a scowl that challenged mine. He thought I was weak; frail like a decaying dementia-ridden senior. I imagined his skull bashed in, his scowl gone, and the feist and confidence in his face beaten into numbness. A new portrait was in order of such brutality, him as a splintered slab of wood, rashed and beaten, a carcass licking my boot. The churning in my brain had come back. Every wall shook. Clock faces came to life and rang in alarm. Indescribable noises caressed my eardrum before breaking into sorrowful weeps. Was it my own? I stared at Spes in motionless frenzy, clenched my teeth, and screamed like a siren. Passionless. What a lie! An excuse, more like. One that erased all my ventures, reducing me to a nobody. But I was not a nobody. I thought of my sect, my campaigns, my endurance through the political brutality of my empty hive-mind worldâeven my collection of literature, maps, and artifacts. I thought of daring nights alone with Spes when we were young, ravaging each other, two sardonic eggheads suddenly overcome with desire. The veins in my neck throbbed as I gasped for air. It was all I had. I threw the figurine at the manâs head. Eye shut, I heard the thud. A million singing voices of victory flooded out of the cracks in the floorboard. Proving myself a man to the woman I loved in a display of fervent violence was passion. I strained my ears for his cries, though I did not look yet. There had to be a pause, a moment of relief, where I stood tall as a skyscraper and seemingly fought to stay contained in front of my wife and her wounded, quivering paramour. Frantic footsteps rushed off the bed and past my side. I turned and grappled against myself to seize my wifeâs shoulder. âSpes!â My eyelids lifted. Escaping was the man with that same numb expression in which I had imagined him. âYouâre insane,â he said. I swiveled back towards the bed. With her curly locks flowing over her breasts and her limbs bent at her sides, Spes sat limp pressed against the headboard, her forehead bludgeoned and the statue resting on her stomach. Lips pursed and sweet, my Renaissance beauty reclined there in the guise of a squashed bug. But she was not dead. The desk ornament I flung was only the size of my shoe. Spes, that dramatist, may have been slightly hurt but was far from dead. She only wanted me to think she was to observe me at my most distraught, like a leech feeding on misery. âGet up.â Staggering toward the bed, I said. âYou wanted passion? I showed you passion. âShoved it right into your head. Of course, we both know who that gesture was meant for. . .â I fumbled to find my wit. Cold skin met my hands as I stroked her face, unable to resist checking her pulse, even though she was not dead. âI love you, Spes,â I said. Rain pelted against a nearby window. âSpes, please. Please.â No vibration answered my plea. I lifted my hand, sitting next to her now. Tears did not come. There was not any blood on the trophy, but when I picked it up, it felt to be now only a cruel instrument. It depicted a younger me in white marble, with my glasses and collared shirt being the only things painted. Both were in pink. It was a favorable color. I scrambled from the bed to vomit pure digestive bile on the rug. My stomach heaved. I ran my nails along every piece of myself I saw, a dog chasing my tail. As I slammed myself against walls and convulsed, my own heart grew ever louder in my chest. âDad? I heardââ Ariâs slippered feet hammered across the floor. âMom? Mom?â I kept my eyes on the storm. Silence fell. âShe-She isnâtâyourâ.â Gasps interrupted every syllable she spoke. âYouâre a murderer. Bad. Like they said,â she breathed, â You beat her!â The words became mush, alphabet soup. Ari ran back down the hall. âMy-My mom is dead. . . .Yes. . . Manor of the Trials Sovereignty. . .Ari Sorkin. . . Iâm afraid heâs going to hurt me,â she said, presumably over the phone. It was all too fast. I crawled onto the windowsill, opened the glass, and let myself plummet into the alley below. Gusts of wind howled. The lack of motion or sensation informed me I had passed and again lived. Another Palatium Infra, another strange planet in which the celestial endowed rotting men with the opportunity to inhabit. Was this it? Was it all just an impossible limbo of galactic traveling? My surroundings were overwhelmingly gray, an abyss of clouds. Perhaps I had now met the real coming world, and my family and old friends lived here, ready to rush to my sides, lift me up, and jump for joy. Spes would be there. She would be enraged, but at least sheâd be there. You are a bad man. You are a bad man. My eyelashes fluttered. There was a tugging sensation in my leg. The fog was wavering along with my ascendance. âNo,â I yearned, trying to grip the clouds and stick them in place. âStay with me.â But the peace was fleeting. I felt the cement under me and the moist garments clinging to my figure. My leg burned. Carefully, I craned my neck, only to observe the promenade as my surroundings. The most underwhelming of filth and danger, individually Infran. Forever my coming world. What a fool I was, having forgotten my blessing. Those idiot Gods could not tell the difference between assassination and self-infliction; a faulty insurance plan. The urge to cry at last set over me, and so I sat and wailed hot salvia into my palm, shielding my mouth to muffle the noise. Thunder echoed my hushed howling. Raindrops turned to pebbles. Under the ambiance of the stormy night, I could have sworn I heard troops stomping, guns cocking, and the chanting of my name. They had all been waiting for this. Billboards came to life, and I could only sit and spectate as the scenery flashed red. I inhaled fear and sobriety through runny nostrils. âTrials Sovereign Vsevolod âKnoxâ Sorkin is currently at large for the suspected homicide of Spes Sorkin, breaking the first term of the Sovereignty Charter. We now instruct you to report any sightings of the Earth-born, caucasian, roughly 195 centimeters tall, brown-haired, and brown-eyed man to your local Guard post. One can identify the suspected convict specifically by an occult tattoo of Purityâs Coronet on his lower back. No attempted execution or elongated punishment will take place until our Guards conduct an autopsy proving his guilt, per Lifeâs 1238 commandment. We cannot be sure when or if the Gods will revoke his blessing. Remember, when Gods frown upon strife, opt for a peaceful life. We permit all grieving festivities until Cagidus 4th. Good year!â towering buildings sang out in broadcast, repeating that same convoluted message quicker the instant it ended. Sometimes, the announcer spoke in Latin for the Infran children, other times in Chinese, Hindi, or Spanish to cater to those of irrelevant tongues. You arenât a bad man. You are a stupid boy. Puddles sloshed. Somebody was approaching. I didnât dare waste any remaining energy avoiding the Guards and their prodding blades. How did that phrase go? You dug your grave. Now lie in it. And so I embraced the cement. âKnox?â said the Guard. No, her tone was too sincere, and no authority would proceed in such a manner. There wasnât confirmation on whether or not I was armed, and it wasnât as if she could shoot me first. She was a partygoer, having just left from the cellarâs backdoor. I shooed her away with my hand. She hovered, and I discerned her shadow hesitating over my body. A man could not rot in peace. âCome on, get up! Theyâre after you!â Hands reached around my torso, struggling to handle my weight as they urged me onto my feet. That leg, the burning one, my right, trembled and bent unnaturally upon impact with the ground. The partygoer slung my arm over her shoulder, balancing me. My eyes caught a glimpse of a cyan mop. âAnwen?â I rasped, âhu-who let you out?â Keys jangled in her handsâmy keys. âI escaped,â she said casually, coercing me to walk beside her. âQuicken your pace. I just heard somebody on your front porch. âYou see that compost bin down the alley? Weâre gonna burrow right down into the depth of that. If they open it and uncover us, Iâll be on top, and I can hide you and act like Iâm just a homeless amica trying to take a nap.â With a tightening grip, she led me like livestock to the stinking crate. âI donât understand, Anwen,â I said. âTheyâre going to torture and kill you, stupid. You know theyâve been wanting to, and you just handed the opportunity to them!â âI understand that.â It was becoming increasingly challenging to hide the fragility emerging in my voice. âYou said you were escaping. Why stop and help your captor?â âWhat else could I do? Leave you there?â Attempts to shove my wounded body inside its mass of discarded fruits and vegetables began. She yanked down upon my head and submerged me in the fertilizer sea. The evidence grows indisputable, I thought as I stared at the abruptly humane Infran girl, diving in after me, that I belong here. âDamn me to hell! Iâve killed her! My love is dead!â an uncontrollable cry leaped from my mouth. âShut up! Soon youâll be, too, if you donât quiet down.â The actual noise of the Guards darted past us: disorientated marching, guns clanking against each other, cluttered belts rattling, the Latin squawking. One paused to open the binâs lid, though only rummaged through the surface layer of peat before carrying on. âWhat are they talking about? I struggle with my Latin,â I whispered. âThe search, mainly.â Aggression remained firey in Anwenâs clenched jaw. Though she sat on top of me, there was a monumental distance between our rain-soaked forms. I curled up into a ball, ducked my head between my knees, and dreamt of Spes, ignoring the stench of spoiled food rising from every crevice of my dwelling. The next coming world was due to adopt me again as I forced sleep. I prayed for a canyon of fluffy haze, where I waltzed with pale memories but found nothing but the petrifying stillness of my mind. Killed and ran. Violent as a Guard just to prove a point and watch it backfire. Why would any heaven want to welcome me? I clung to the picture of Spes in my head like it was the last ember of an extinguished flame. âDid you mean to kill her?â Anwen interrogated. âSomeone like you would immutably believe yes.â âAnd who is someone like me? You canât even treat me like a person for a moment, can you?â grating drama decorated her words. âYou know my opinions. I have not seen much of your or your breedâs faces besides that of cruelty and ignorance.â I retorted. âI just saved you! Does that make me cruel and ignorant?â âIt makes you an idiot, which is another word for somebody ignorant.â âAnd why am I an idiot?â She asked. âBecause you helping me does no good. Thank you anyhow. Now, do yourself a favor and scram.â As she bent her leg in anticipation, preparing to strike me on the forehead, I sensed an invisible withdrawal widening the gap between us. âYou never answered my question,â Anwen took me by the end of my tattered tie suddenly and started her game of shepherd and sheep over again, pulling me back up to the crateâs exit. It appeared as a shining light at the end of a maze of rubbish and mold. âNo. Of course not. Spes was my everything,â I sniffled. âI knew it. You couldnât even bring yourself to hit us, let alone murder your wife. The girls and I always figured you were sensitive.â My heart rate quickened. Today was one of humbling and miseryâone to pray a hail spike would fall from the sky as sharp as a needle, pierce into my eyelid, and lobotomize me. I wished I could have merely died or hit my head hard enough not to have to deal with it all. No, I wished I was Anwen with her snarky, careless glow and lack of depth in her eyes. As we emerged from the compost bin together, I fantasized about strangling her until her face turned purple, her weakening spirit no longer categorizing me as âsensitiveâ, but the thought could only remind me of wielding that trophy and the microscopic traces of my wifeâs tender skin tainting it, which turned my guts inside out. âThatâs why I think you could use a little help,â Anwen said, âIt seems like you canât walk, either. Your leg is all twisted up.â She undid one of her trim pigtails and handed me the band. âTake off your tie and put up your hair. âWill make you less recognizable. Then swallow your pride and stick with me.â
Name: Marco Ramirez - âI Am Not Batmanâ TW: language Itâs the middle of the night. And the sky is glowing like mad radioactive red. And if you squint, you could maybe see the moon through a thick layer of cigarette smoke and airplane exhaust that covers the entire city like mosquito net that wonât let the angels in. And if you look up high enough you could see me-standing on the edge of a eighty seven story building. And up there-a place for gargoyles and broken clock towers that have stayed still and dead for maybe like a hundred years-up there is me. And Iâm freakin Batman. And I gots Bat-mobiles and Bat-a-rangs and freakin Bat-caves like for real, and all it takes is a broom closet or a back room or a fire escape and Dannyâs hand-me-down jeans are gone. And my navy blue polo shirt? â The one that looks kinda good on me but has a hole on it near the butt from when it got snagged on the chain linked fence behind Arturoâs but it isnât even a big deal cause I tuck that part in and its like all good? âthat blue polo shirt? â Itâs gone too. And I get like, like transformational. And nobody pulls out a belt and whips Batman for talking back â-Or for not talking back âAnd nobody calls Batman simple â- Or stupid â- Or skinny â- And nobody fires Batmanâs brother from the Eastern Taxi Company âcause they was making cutbacks, neither, âcause they got nothing but respect, and not like afraid-respect. Just like respect-respect. âCause nobodyâs afraid of you. Cause Batman doesnât mean nobody harm. Ever. Cause all Batman really wants to do is save people and maybe pay Abuelaâs bills one day and die happy and maybe get like mad famous. For real.âŠAnd kill the Joker. Tonight, like most nights, Iâm all alone. And Iâm watchingâŠAnd Iâm waiting⊠Like a eagle. Or like a âno, yea, like a eagle. And my cape is flappinâ in the wind (âcause itâs freakinâ long), and my pointy ears are on, and that mask that covers like half my face is on too, and I got like bulletproof stuff all in my chest so no one could hurt me and nobody â nobody â is gonna come between Batman, And Justice. From where I am I could hear everything. Somewhere in the city thereâs a old lady picking Styrofoam leftovers up outta a trash can and sheâs putting a piece of sesame chicken someone spit out into her own mouth. And somewhere thereâs a doctor with a whack haircut in a black lab coat trying to find a cure for the diseases that are gonna make us all extinct for real one day. And somewhere thereâs a man, a man in a janitorâs uniform, stumbling home drunk and dizzy after spending half his paycheck on forty-ounce bottles of twist-off beer and the other half on a four hour visit to some ladyâs house on a street where the lights have all been shot out by people whoâd rather do what they do, in this city, in the dark. And half a block away from JanitorMan thereâs a group of good-for-nothings who donât know no better waiting to beat JanitorMan with rusted bicycle chains and imitation Lousiville Sluggers, and if they donât find a cent on him â which they wonât â theyâll just pound at him till the muscles in their arms start burning, till thereâs no more teeth to crack out. But they donât count on me. They donât count on no dark night (with a stomach full of grocery store brand macaroni-and-cheese and cut up Vienna sausages), Cause theyâd rather believe I donât exist, And from eighty-seven stories up I could hear one of the good-for-nothings say âGimmethecashâ real fast (like that) just âGimmethefuckingcashâ and I see JAnitorMan mumble something in drunk language and turn pale and from eighty-seven stories up I could hear his stomach trying to hurl its way out of his Dickies. So I swoop down like and fast and Iâm like darkness. Iâm like SWOOSH â- And I throw a Bat-a-rang at the one naked lightbulb â- And theyâre all like âwhoa-motherfucker-who-just-turned-out-the-lights?â ââWhatâs that over there?â â-âWhat?â â- âGimme whatchou got old manâ â- âDid anybody hear that?!â â- âNo, reallyâ â- âThere ainât. No. Bat.â â But then â- One out of three good-for-nothings gets it to the head! And number Two swings blindly into the dark cape before him but before his fist hits anything I grab a trash can lid and â-- Right into the gut, and number One comes back with a jump-kick but I know judo-karate too so Iâm like â-- Twice â-- but before I can do any more damage suddenly we all hear a CLIC â CLIC âAnd suddenly everything gets quiet And the one good-for-nothing left standing grips a handgun and aims straight up, like heâs holding Jesus hostage, like heâs threatening maybe to blow a hole in the moon. And the good-for-nothing who got it to the head who tried to jump-kick me and the other good-for-nothing who got it in the gut is both scrambling back away from the dark figure before him. And the drunk man the JanitorMan is huddled in a corner, praying to Saint Anthony âcause thatâs the only one he could remember. And thereâs me, Eyes glowing white, cape blowing softly in the wind. Bulletporoof chest heaving. My heart beating right through it in a Morse code for âfuck with me, just once, come on, just try.â And the one good-for-nothing left standing, the one with the handgun, he laughs he lowers his arm, and he points it at me and gives the moon a break, and he aims it right between my pointy ears, like goalposts and heâs special teams. And JanitorMan is still calling Saint Anthony but he ainât pickinâ up, And for a second it seems likeâŠmaybe Iâm gonna lose. Naw. SHOO â SHOO! FUACATA! --âDonât kill me man!â ââSNAP! â Wrist CRACK â Neck â SLASH! â Skin â meets â acid â âAHH!!â âAnd heâs on the floor. And Iâm standing over him. And I got the gun in MY hands now. And I hate guns, I hate holding âem cause Iâm Batman, and âBatman donât like guns âcause his parents got iced by guns a long time ago â but for just a second, my eyes glow white, and I hold this thing, for I could speak to the good-for-nothing in a language he maybe understandsâŠCLIC â CLICâŠAnd the good-for-nothings become good-for-disappearing into whatever toxic-waste-chemical-sludge-shit-hole they crawled out of. And itâs just me and JanitorMan. And I pick him up. And I wipe sweat and cheap perfume off his forehead. And he begs me not to hurt him and I grab him tight by his JanitorMan shirt collar and I pull him to my face, and heâs taller than me, but the cape helps so he listens when I look him straight in the eyes and I say two words to him: âGo home.â And he does, checking behind his shoulder every ten feet. And I SWOOSH from building to building on his way there, âcause I know where he lives. And I watch his hands where he lives. And I watch his hands tremble as he pulls out his keychain and opens the door to his building. And Iâm back in bed before he even walks in through the front door. And I hear him turn on the faucet and pour himself a glass of warm tap water And he puts the glass back in the sink. And I hear his footsteps, And they get slower as they get to my room. And he creaks my door open like mad slow. And he takes a step in, which he never does. And heâs staring off into nowhere, his face the color of sidewalks in summer, and I act like Iâm just waking up, and I say, âWhatâs up, Pop?â And JanitorMan says nothing to me. But I see, in the dark, I see his arms go limp and his head turns back, like towards me, and he lifts it for I could see his face, For I could see his eyes, And his cheeks is dripping but not with sweat. And he just stands there, breathing, like he remembers my eyes glowing white. Like he remembers my bulletproof chest. Like he remembers heâs my pop. And for a long time I donât say nothing. And he turns around, hand on the doorknob, and he ainât looking up my way but I hear him mumble two words to me. âIâm sorry.â And I lean over and open my window just a crack.⊠If you look up high enough you could see me. And from where I am? I could hear everything.
What's In? Quick flash back on EM waves. "WHAT AM I?"
Am I all right? While John Gilbert was in hospital, he asked his doctor to tell him whether his operation had been successful, but the doctor refused to do so. The following day, the patient asked for a bedside telephone. When he was alone, he telephoned the hospital exchange and asked for Doctor Millington. When the doctor answered the phone, Mr. Gilbert said he was inquiring about a certain patient, a Mr. John Gilbert. He asked if Mr. Gilbert's operation had been successful and the doctor told him that it had been. He then asked when Mr. Gilbert would be allowed to go home and the doctor told him that he would have to stay in hosptial for another two weeks. Then Dr. Millington asked the caller if he was a relative of the patient. 'No,' the patient answered, 'I am Mr. John Gilbert.'