The Garden of Turkish Delights
they tempted him with an idea --
a cedar-scented memory of Friday afternoons
in the room above the chapel
at St Andrew's School for Boys
and Bosch's triptych
projected onto the dry-wipe board.
The sadistic pleasures of Hell
where tortured souls writhed on pitchforks and
cavorted with the heads of birds and fish;
the austere calm of Heaven
where angels sang with sweet devotion
and the Garden of Earth Delights
where mortals were tempted by sins of the flesh;
The gluttony and the fornication
and the perversions of apples.
But when he got to the club
and paid his admittance (plus the one-off membership fee)
his visions of belly dancers and slave girls
were shattered by the reality
of rose-scented jellies
and women in hair nets like canteen staff
who offered to feed him from long-handled tongs.
At the hotel
he picks at the scabs of spoiled childhood
and remembers the guilty pleasure
of lying on his front with one hand down his trousers
and Botticelli's 'Birth of Venus'.
23 comments:
This is truly a work of singular beauty. I love this poem, Rachel.
hank you. Truly.
Amazing.
And your pic has reminded me of one that I have never been able to find after leaving The Beater behind.
It was called 'The Fairy Tree Feller'.
Nice blog. I really like your poem. Enjoyed going through it. keep up the good work. Cheers :)
Thank you all.
Aims: http://www.theacademylb.com/images/2009/06/fairy_feller_large.jpg
I 'think' that is it!
The Beater had a huge one up on a wall - it was in different colours but the 'feller' looks the same.
I always thought it a disturbing and sad picture. The killing of belief - which really reflected my situation didn't it?
Ah - I think I just wrote something I'll be using in The Wailings.
Thank you my friend.
Glad to be of service, my friend.
And now that I've had a chance to look at a bigger image of it - it definitely is it! Did you know of it before?
I did, as it happens, though i don't like it much -- the 'branches' are too obtrusive.
As I recall - in his picture - which was more bluish I think - the faeries were really hard to see - you had to really look at it to pick them out.
Strange that your one pic has brought back this memory. I'll not go on about the other memories involved with The Beater.
I'm sorry if my posting this brought you pain. I used to have a poster of Bosch's 'Hell' on my wall.
Oh my dear friend - no pain. Do you know how glad I am that I survived him? And I know - as does Jasfoup - that he'll get his.
Now what is 'Hell' - give me a link? I'm interested in that.
I can only find little details of Hell but here's the whole triptych
http://home.actlab.utexas.edu/~litlgirlblue/SoundClass/Bosch.gif
If you google image 'Bosch hell' you'll see the details
I concur with stephanie's remars. It's beautiful. Interesting comments from aims too.
Thank you Gina.
Was it this one?
http://www.abcgallery.com/B/bosch/bosch23.html
Or this one?
http://www.abcgallery.com/B/bosch/bosch28.html
Or this one?
http://www.abcgallery.com/B/bosch/bosch28.html
Perhaps this one?
http://www.abcgallery.com/B/bosch/bosch38.html
38, yes. Well found.
Wow! How long did you keep that on your wall?!
three or four years. It probably explains a lot.
Amazing! Thanks for sharing my friend.
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