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Thread: To Fidel Castro by Pablo Neruda

  1. #16
    Maybe YesNo's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Danik 2016 View Post
    São Paulo is also being flooded by global warming. Every year the heat gets up one grade.
    The cortadito is probably our "curto", the short coffee.
    I think there is some high land near São Paulo that the inhabitants on the coast could move to. In Florida, it is all pretty flat. What's worse, the ground is porous limestone and so one can't even put up a dike to hold back the water: it would just come up from the ground.

    What do you think of Neruda? I know a lot of people like his work. Personally, the only thing that I find interesting is the "Veinte Poemas de Amor" (http://www.archivochile.com/Homenaje...neruda0007.pdf), but even in those poems I wonder what is actually going on.

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    Darn that page turn! Looking forward to your response, Danik.

    Quote Originally Posted by Pompey Bum View Post
    So what was the answer to my question about free speech? Or let me put it another way. President-Elect Trump greeted the news of Castro's death with the following: “Fidel Castro’s legacy is one of firing squads, theft, unimaginable suffering, poverty and the denial of fundamental human rights." In your opinion, what would happen to Cubans who said the same? What would happen if they danced in the streets?!
    Quote Originally Posted by Pompey Bum View Post
    How about human rights violations? I've heard stories (just this morning) about dissidents being officially tortured and raped in Cuban prisons. In your opinion, are such stories true?
    Last edited by Pompey Bum; 11-27-2016 at 08:19 PM.

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    Registered User Clopin's Avatar
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    Good, he's dead. Intellectuals always like to **** about and cozy up to tyrants with sex appeal so I'm not too surprised by the poem.

    You should see what our pitiful spineless leader had to say about the "passing of a great man" PB.
    So with the courage of a clown, or a cur, or a kite jerkin tight at it's tether

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    Quote Originally Posted by Clopin View Post
    You should see what our pitiful spineless leader had to say about the "passing of a great man" PB.
    He needn't worry. Raul Castro has been in charge for a decade. Cuba retains every horror it enjoyed under the great man.

  5. #20
    Registered User prendrelemick's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pompey Bum View Post
    How about human rights violations? I've heard stories (just this morning) about dissidents being officially tortured and raped in Cuban prisons. In your opinion, are such stories true?

    Was that in Guantanamo bay ?
    ay up

  6. #21
    On the road, but not! Danik 2016's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by YesNo View Post
    I think there is some high land near São Paulo that the inhabitants on the coast could move to. In Florida, it is all pretty flat. What's worse, the ground is porous limestone and so one can't even put up a dike to hold back the water: it would just come up from the ground.

    What do you think of Neruda? I know a lot of people like his work. Personally, the only thing that I find interesting is the "Veinte Poemas de Amor" (http://www.archivochile.com/Homenaje...neruda0007.pdf), but even in those poems I wonder what is actually going on.
    The interior is usually still hotter than the capital. Rio is hotter than São Paulo but they have the sea brise there.To give you an idea last year we had what we called "winter 40 º" with temperatures soaring up to an uncommon level. This year winter and spring were more normal, they tell us it is on account of the stream "La ninã". Presently temperatures maxims are about 30º-32º .

    I like Pablo Neruda, but not specifically his love poems. His poems are loaded with a typically hispanian imagery, very sensuous and at the first look often incongruous. I think English poetry is more sober, the methaphors are more easy to understand. But he has his humorous side too, which I prefer. I found a selection of poems translated to English. Have a look at his "Ode for The Tomato":

    http://poetsofmodernity.xyz/POMBR/Sp...or_Toc12957994
    "I seemed to have sensed also from an early age that some of my experiences as a reader would change me more as a person than would many an event in the world where I sat and read. "
    Gerald Murnane, Tamarisk Row

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    Quote Originally Posted by prendrelemick View Post
    Was that in Guantanamo bay ?
    Ad hominem tu quoque fallacy, Prend (not that Gitmo isn't an abomination).

    Quote Originally Posted by Danik 2016 View Post
    The interior is usually still hotter than the capital. Rio is hotter than São Paulo but they have the sea brise there.To give you an idea last year we had what we called "winter 40 º" with temperatures soaring up to an uncommon level. This year winter and spring were more normal, they tell us it is on account of the stream "La ninã". Presently temperatures maxims are about 30º-32º .

    I like Pablo Neruda, but not specifically his love poems. His poems are loaded with a typically hispanian imagery, very sensuous and at the first look often incongruous. I think English poetry is more sober, the methaphors are more easy to understand. But he has his humorous side too, which I prefer. I found a selection of poems translated to English. Have a look at his "Ode for The Tomato":

    http://poetsofmodernity.xyz/POMBR/Sp...or_Toc12957994
    Another question, Danik: in your opinion is turning one's head from the reality of human evil one of the things that enables it?

  8. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Danik 2016 View Post
    The interior is usually still hotter than the capital. Rio is hotter than São Paulo but they have the sea brise there.To give you an idea last year we had what we called "winter 40 º" with temperatures soaring up to an uncommon level. This year winter and spring were more normal, they tell us it is on account of the stream "La ninã". Presently temperatures maxims are about 30º-32º .

    I like Pablo Neruda, but not specifically his love poems. His poems are loaded with a typically hispanian imagery, very sensuous and at the first look often incongruous. I think English poetry is more sober, the methaphors are more easy to understand. But he has his humorous side too, which I prefer. I found a selection of poems translated to English. Have a look at his "Ode for The Tomato":

    http://poetsofmodernity.xyz/POMBR/Sp...or_Toc12957994
    It seems to be unusually warm in Chicago for this time of year. Although we are at higher sea level, flooding could occur with a large quantity of rainfall that can't be drained fast enough.

    Neruda's tomato poem was nice. These two lines stand out for me: "Sadly we have to/murder it" That is not what I think I'm doing when I slice a tomato to make a salad.

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    Now where could Danik have gone?

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    On the road, but not! Danik 2016's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by YesNo View Post
    It seems to be unusually warm in Chicago for this time of year. Although we are at higher sea level, flooding could occur with a large quantity of rainfall that can't be drained fast enough.

    Neruda's tomato poem was nice. These two lines stand out for me: "Sadly we have to/murder it" That is not what I think I'm doing when I slice a tomato to make a salad.
    I hope you don´t get any floods, here they are disastrous, but they usually occur in summer.
    The tomatoes we slice are already dead, I think. But certain poems change our manner of looking at things.
    "I seemed to have sensed also from an early age that some of my experiences as a reader would change me more as a person than would many an event in the world where I sat and read. "
    Gerald Murnane, Tamarisk Row

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    Oh, there you are! Hey, I thought of another one: if Donald Trump had put his political enemies in front of firing squads, would you be still talking about the weather? ;-)

  12. #27
    Registered User prendrelemick's Avatar
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    I'd probably be dead.
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  13. #28
    Registered User prendrelemick's Avatar
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    Both Neruda and me hoped it would turn out better than it did.

    Castro was a very bad man. Perhaps those 700+ CIA plots against his life made him a little edgy in the mornings.

    Asinus asellum culpat .
    Last edited by prendrelemick; 11-28-2016 at 02:31 PM.
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    Quote Originally Posted by prendrelemick View Post
    Perhaps those 700+ CIA plots against his life made him a little edgy in the mornings.
    I'm sure they did. Lyndon Johnson went to his grave believing that Castro had killed Kennedy because Kennedy kept trying to kill him. But that's got nothing to do with the people Castro tortured and murdered.

    Quote Originally Posted by prendrelemick View Post
    Asinus asellum culpat.
    I disagree. Castro enjoyed enough useful idiots in his lifetime. As I said to Danik on another thread, silence breeds pestilence. He was a very bad man, as you say. Good men and women need to keep saying it.
    Last edited by Pompey Bum; 11-28-2016 at 03:29 PM.

  15. #30
    Registered User prendrelemick's Avatar
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    Yet Kennedy like Neruda supported the revolution at first. That's politics !

    "I believe that there is no country in the world including any and all the countries under colonial domination, where economic colonization, humiliation and exploitation were worse than in Cuba, in part owing to my country's policies during the Batista regime. I approved the proclamation which Fidel Castro made in the Sierra Maestra, when he justifiably called for justice and especially yearned to rid Cuba of corruption. I will even go further: to some extent it is as though Batista was the incarnation of a number of sins on the part of the United States. Now we shall have to pay for those sins. In the matter of the Batista regime, I am in agreement with the first Cuban revolutionaries. That is perfectly clear."
    — U.S. President John F. Kennedy
    Last edited by prendrelemick; 11-28-2016 at 05:27 PM.
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