Clandestine in Chile by Gabriel García Márquez
Author:Gabriel García Márquez
Language: eng
Format: epub
Published: 2015-02-20T02:11:02+00:00
GABRIEL GARCiA MARQUEZ
form covered by a sheet. He was buried in the mausoleum
of Marmaduque Grove's family in the Santa Ines cemeterv
with no other offering than the bouquet of flowers placed
there by his widow as she said: "Salvador Allende, president
of Chile, is buried here." The dictatorship hoped they could
move Allende out of the reach of popular veneration, but it
was not possible. Although the government went so far as to
spread a rumor that the body had been moved, pilgrims continue to arrive daily and gifts of flowers are left anonymously on the gravestone.
The cult of Pablo Neruda also thrives among the new generation, and the poet's former seaside home at Isla Negra has become its shrine. Despite its name, this legendary place is
neither an island nor black, but a fishing village with yellow
dirt paths running between giant pine trees and a wild green
sea, located twenty-five miles south of Valparaiso near the
San Antonio highway. Pablo Neruda's house there is a mecca
for lovers from the world over. Frankie and I had gone ahead
to set up a shooting schedule while the Italian crew was finishing up the last shots in Valparaiso. The carabinero on duty showed us where the bridge was, and the inn, and the
other places celebrated by the poet in his verses, but he
warned me that it was forbidden to visit the house.
While waiting at the inn for the others to arrive, we could
appreciate how the poet had been the soul of Isla Negra.
\Vhenever he was there, the place would be overrun by
young people carrying his Twenty Love Poems as their only
guidebook. All they wanted was to see him for a moment or,
perhaps, to ask for an autograph . For most, it was enough
to take away a memory of the place. In those days the inn
was a gay and noisy place where Neruda would appear from
time to time in one of his gaudy ponchos and Andean cap,
bulky and as slow-moving as the pope. He would come there
to use the telephone-he had had his own rcmowd to a\'oid
G l
CLANDESTINE IN CHILE
interruptions-or to discuss with Dona Elena, the proprietress, how to prepare a dish for friends the same night at his house. Neruda was an expert in culinary delights and could
cook like a professional himself. He had refined the art of
good eating to such a degree that he fussed over even the
smallest details of the table setting and was quite capable of
changing cloth, dishes, or silverware until they were in harmony with the food being served. Twelve years later, all of that had been swept away by a desolate wind . Dona Elena,
overwhelmed by her painful memories, had left for Santiago
and the inn was near collapse. One scrap of poetry remained:
since the last earthquake, tremors continued to be felt at Isla
Negra every ten or fifteen minutes of every day and through
the night .
The Earth Trembles at Isla Negra
We found Neruda's house in the shade of its sentinel pines,
surrounded by the fence several feet high with which the
poet had protected his private life. Flowers had sprung from
the wood .
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Futebol by Alex Bellos(2137)
Colombia Travel Guide by Lonely Planet(1944)
Touching the Void (1987) by Joe Simpson(1703)
Lonely Planet Guatemala by Lonely Planet(1638)
The Everything Gluten-Free Slow Cooker Cookbook by Carrie Forbes(1584)
The Unconquered by Wallace Scott(1533)
Lost in the Jungle by Yossi Ghinsberg(1400)
Betty Boo by Claudia Piñeiro(1332)
The Old Patagonian Express: By Train Through the Americas by Paul Theroux(1296)
First Comes Love, then Comes Malaria by Eve Brown-Waite(1277)
Practice Makes Perfect by Gilda Nissenberg(1261)
Insight Guides Central America by Insight Guides(1241)
The Rough Guide to Belize by Rough Guides(1237)
Ancient Technology in Peru and Bolivia by David Hatcher Childress(1209)
Open Door by Iosi Havilio(1191)
The Rough Guide to Panama by Rough Guides(1188)
Marching Powder: A True Story of Friendship, Cocaine, and South America's Strangest Jail by Thomas McFadden & Rusty Young(1176)
Insight Guides: Chile by Insight Guides(1171)
Impossible Journey by Michael Asher(1158)
