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/lit/ - Literature

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>> No.10427321 [View]
File: 196 KB, 600x469, 8f9b5548e5dca1f257326b2052eaaeef.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
10427321

Desire

It doesn't speak and it isn't schooled,
like a small foetal animal with wettened fur.
It is the blind instinct for life unruled,
visceral frankincense and animal myrrh.
It is what babies bring to kings,
an eyes-shut, ears-shut medicine of the heart
that smells and touches endings and beginnings
without the details of time's experienced part-
fit-into-part-fit-into-part. Like a paw,
it is blunt; like a pet who knows you
and nudges your knee with its snout—but more raw
and blinder and younger and more divine, too,
than the tamed wild—it's the drive for what is real,
deeper than the brain's detail: the drive to feel.

I get most of what this poem is saying, but what about this line:

>It is what babies bring to kings

?

What is the relation of this line to the theme of desire? Is it something like:

>Babies are completely ruled by their own desires; they don’t have any logical reasoning and any education, and when they want something they want something. They will cry for milk, they will cry for attention and warmth, they will cry to force their mothers (the source of their pleasures) into giving them everything they desire. So, what babies bring to kings is actually something Kings never loosed since the time they were babies: this blind force that makes them want things and do whatever they need to do to obtain them. They only learned how to be functional in a society, how to muzzle and curb their desires when they need to, but this ancient force, this baby-philosophy has never left their flesh.

What do you guys think?

>> No.9585706 [View]
File: 196 KB, 600x469, 8f9b5548e5dca1f257326b2052eaaeef.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9585706

>>9579317

Where to start with her?

What are her best books?

What are the best short stories?

>> No.9579301 [View]
File: 196 KB, 600x469, 8f9b5548e5dca1f257326b2052eaaeef.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9579301

I love Klimt

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