-Gracias Paty, aunque ya nadie lea poesía.
"Little Red Riding Hood"
First, grant me my sense of history:
I did it for posterity,
for kindergarten teachers
and a clear moral:
Little girls shouldn't wander off
in search of strange flowers,
and they mustn't speak to strangers.
And then grant me my generous sense of plot:
Couldn't I have gobbled her up
right there in the jungle?
Why did I ask her where her grandma lived?
As if I, a forest-dweller,
didn't know of the cottage
under the three oak trees
and the old woman who lived there
all alone?
As if I couldn't have swallowed her years before?
And you may call me the Big Bad Wolf,
now my only reputation.
But I was no child-molester
though you'll agree she was pretty.
And the huntsman:
Was I sleeping while he snipped
my thick black fur
and filled me with garbage and stones?
I ran with that weight and fell down,
simply so children could laugh
at the noise of the stones
cutting through my belly,
at the garbage spilling out
with a perfect sense of timing,
just when the tale
should have come to an end.
1 comentario:
Hay un libro que se llama Women Who Run with the Wolves, de Clarissa Pinkola Estés. En él, la autora hace un analisis muy interesante de diferentes cuentos de hadas, y el motivo del lobo es muy importante... pero no menciona a la Caperuza, que yo me acuerde...
Beso
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