I can imagine someone reading My Flannel Knickers without any familiarity with author Leonora Carrington's background and thinking: 'Now that's strange, completely wacko.'
But
if that same someone rereads this tale after being informed of the
cruelty and torture Leonora was forced to undergo during those dreadful
months when she was held captive in a Spanish mental hospital against
her will...well, then the bizarre images and happenings in My Flannel Knickers immediately take on deeply profound and, for Leonora, personal meaning.
Oh,
yes, as part of Leonora's 'treatment' in the mental hospital, she was
forced to receive injections of Cardiazol, a drug administered to
schizophrenics, a drug producing things like violent seizures and spasms
having a particular effect in the area of the mouth and jaw.
Leonora
the rebel, the hater of conformity and polite society, beginning when
she was a little girl - remember this when you read " An ardent
heart, however, beat under the fashionable costumes, and this very
ardent heart was like an open tap pouring quantities of hot water over
anybody who asked."
With all this in mind, enjoy Leonora's scathing snapper -
MY FLANNEL KNICKERS
Thousands of people know my flannel knickers, and though I know this may seem flirtatious, it is not. I am a saint.
The
‘Sainthood,’ I may say, was actually forced upon me. If anyone would
like to avoid becoming holy, they should immediately read this entire
story.
I live on an island. This island was bestowed upon me by
the government when I left prison. It is not a desert island, it is a
traffic island in the middle of a busy boulevard, and motors thunder
past on all sides day and night.
So…
The flannel knickers
are well known. They are hung at midday on a wire from the red green and
yellow automatic lights. I wash them every day, and they have to dry in
the sun.
Apart from the flannel knickers, I wear a gentleman’s
tweed jacket for golfing. It was given to me, and the gym shoes. No
socks. Many people recoil from my undistinguished appearance, but if
they have been told about me (mainly in the Tourist’s Guide), they make a
pilgrimage, which is quite easy.
Now I must trace the peculiar
events that brought me to this condition. Once I was a great beauty and
attended all sorts of cocktail-drinking, prize-giving-and-taking,
artistic demonstrations and other casually hazardous gatherings
organized for the purpose of people wasting other people’s time. I was
always in demand and my beautiful face would hang suspended over
fashionable garments, smiling continually. An ardent heart, however,
beat under the fashionable costumes, and this very ardent heart was like
an open tap pouring quantities of hot water over anybody who asked.
This wasteful process soon took its toll on my beautiful smiling face.
My teeth fell out. The original structure of the face became blurred,
and then began to fall away from the bones in small, ever-increasing
folds. I sat and watched the process with a mixture of slighted vanity
and acute depression. I was, I thought, solidly installed in my lunar
plexus, within clouds of sensitive vapor.
If I happened to smile
at my face in the mirror, I could objectively observe the fact that I
had only three teeth left and these were beginning to decay.
Consequently
I
went to the dentist. Not only did he cure the three remaining teeth but
he also presented me with a set of false teeth, cunningly mounted on a
pink plastic chassis. When I had paid a sufficiently large quantity of
my diminishing wealth, the teeth were mine and I took them home and put
them into my mouth.
The Face seemed to regain some of its
absolutely-irresistible-attraction, although the folds were of course
still there. From the lunar plexus I arose like a hungry trout and was
caught fast on the sharp barbed hook that hangs inside all
once-very-beautiful faces.
A thin magnetic mist formed between
myself, the face, and clear perception. This is what I saw in the mist.
‘Well, well. I really was beginning to petrify in that old lunar plexus.
This must be me, this beautiful, smiling fully toothed creature. There I
was, sitting in the dark bloodstream like a mummified fetus with no
love at all. Here I am, back in the rich world, where I can palpitate
again, jump up and down in the nice warm swimming pool of outflowing
emotion, the more bathers the merrier. I Shall Be Enriched.’
All
these disastrous thoughts were multiplied and reflected in the magnetic
mist. I stepped in, wearing my face, now back in the old enigmatic smile
which had always turned sour in the past.
No sooner trapped than done.
Smiling horribly, I returned to the jungle of faces, each ravenously trying to eat each other.
Here
I might explain the process that actually takes place in this sort of
jungle. Each face is provided with greater or smaller mouths, armed with
different kinds of sometimes natural teeth. (Anybody over forty and
toothless should be sensible enough to be quietly knitting an original
new body, instead of wasting the cosmic wool.) These teeth bar the way
to a gaping throat, which disgorges whatever it swallows back into the
fetid atmosphere.
The bodies over which these faces are suspended
serve as ballast to the faces. As a rule they are carefully covered
with colors and shapes in current ‘fashion.’ This ‘fashion’ is a
devouring idea launched by another face snapping with insatiable hunger
for money and notoriety. The bodies, in constant misery and
supplication, are generally ignored and only used for ambulation of the
face. As I said, for ballast.
Once, however, that I bared my new
teeth, I realized that something had gone wrong. For after a very short
period of enigmatic smiling, the smile became quite stiff and fixed,
while the face slipped away from its bonish mooring, leaving me
clutching desperately to a soft grey mask over a barely animated body.
The
strange part of the affair now reveals itself. The jungle faces,
instead of recoiling in horror from what I already knew to be a sad
sight, approached me and started to beg me for something which I thought
I had not got.
Puzzled, I consulted my friend, a Greek.
He
said: ‘They think you have woven a complete face and body and are in
constant possession of excess amounts of cosmic wool. Even if this is
not so, the very fact that you know about the wool makes them determined
to steal it.’
‘I have wasted practically the entire fleece,’ I
told him. ‘And if anybody steals from me now I shall die and
disintegrate totally.’
‘Three-dimensional life,’ said the Greek,
‘is formed by attitude. Since by their attitude they expect you to have
quantities of wool, you are three-dimensionally forced to “Sainthood,”
which means you must spin your body and teach the faces how to spin
theirs.’
The compassionate words of the Greek filled me with
fear. I am a face myself. The quickest way of retiring from social
Face-eating competition occurred to me when I attacked a policeman with
my strong steel umbrella. I was quickly put into prison, where I spent
months of health-giving meditation and compulsive exercise.
My
exemplary conduct in prison moved the Head Wardress to an excess of
bounty, and that is how the Government presented me with the island,
after a small and distinguished ceremony in a remote corner of the
Protestant Cemetery.
So here I am on the island with all sizes of mechanical artifacts whizzing by in every conceivable direction, even overhead.
Here I sit.
Comments
Post a Comment