Earl the Squirrel's Rule #72 |
"Kemla's Farewell", slapped together for the tale's finale, was released on social media. It didn't go viral but it was very well received, even by those who didn't know the back story. For this we are very grateful. Among these responders was a film producer who, if funding can be found, might want to turn the project into a movie. (The irony here is in prose intended to resuscitate poetry being resuscitated by poetry.)
Assuming this movie doesn't come about, we've thought of the "novid" (pronounced "NAW-vid"), a multimedia novel paralleled in whole or part by a video. Typically, the text would be a complete novel with embedded videos of key scenes. For example, when the key characters, Todd and Kemla, perform onstage the online reader would have the option of clicking on videos of performers depicting this.
Actors wishing to play the role of Todd can post their rendition of "Studying Savonarola" to a site like YouTube or Vimeo. Actresses vying for the role of Kemla can do the same with her departing message (below). If they start the title of their entry with the title, "Studying Savonarola" or "Kemla's Farewell", as appropriate, interested producers will have no difficulty finding them.
This modest speech is what revived interest in "Love Is A Weakness":
Kemla's Farewell from "Love Is A Weakness" here on Vimeo.
You showed me how to wait
in Capistrano.
You showed me love
is a weakness,
stronger than power.
You showed me grace
is the present
tense of sorrow
but what time
can take from us
was never ours.
---------------------------------------------------------------
You showed me home
is a person
not a place.
I watch the time
collapsing
in your wake.
My hands retrace your touch
across my face,
along my breast,
toward the next mistake.
---------------------------------------------------------------
You said there cannot be a little candor;
the truth, once trimmed, can never last.
I swore I wouldn't flatter,
wouldn't pander.
I promised you an unregretted past.
If chance is kind you'll understand
this vow, this wish,
a thousand happy nights
from now.
Background: Having revived poetry through her performances, Kemla composes her wedding vows. Later, and with no apparent reason, she announces her departure to her friends and, especially, her lover...using the same words.