Wednesday 29 April 2015

Elena Ferrante: Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay


Men, dazed by pleasure, absent-mindedly sow their seed. Overcome by their orgasm, they fertilize us. They show up inside us and withdraw, leaving, concealed in our flesh, their ghost, like a lost object.

Marriage by now seemed to me an institution that, contrary to what one might think, stripped coitus of all humanity.

She went like that saint who, although she still has her head on her shoulders, is carrying it in her hands, as if it had already been cut off.

I feel like the knight in an ancient romance as, wrapped in his shining armor, after performing a thousand astonishing feats throughout the world, he meets a ragged, starving herdsman, who, never leaving his pasture, subdues and controls horrible beasts with his bare hands, and with prodigious courage.

How can I explain to this woman—I thought—that from the age of six I've been a slave to letters and numbers, that my mood depends on the success of their combinations, that the joy of having done well is rare, unstable, that it lasts an hour, an afternoon, a night?

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