Recycling is good for the Earth and prevents global warming, or not, as the case may be.
In the Capuchin Catacombs in Palermo, which you can enter for a modest
fee; I don’t remember how modest the fee was, only that she was modesty
personified, a jewel of modesty and Christian virtue, whereas I can
remember every detail of her very immodest sister, including the shots
afterwards; you can see the cream of Palermitano society hanging on the
walls. I do not know why 18th and 19th century Sicilian swells thought
that being stuffed and mounted in a church basement was such a good
idea, but they did, and who are we, the enthusiasts of the Hula-Hoop,
the Pet Rock, and Pamela Anderson to point the finger of absurdity at
anyone?
The catacombs form a natural refrigerator of sorts and the
galleries feature separate areas for priests, nuns, including the mortal
remains of one mother superior hanging from the ceiling doing her
impression of the Flying Nun, and one archbishop in full episcopal
regalia, with scintillating hints of Congregationalism around the
pockets, looking as though someone put him together from cigarette ashes
and Elmer’s Glue. There were several galleries of the rich and locally
famous, the upper crust in their Sunday best, all of them moldering
away along with their social pretensions. Here you have the society
swain of 1830 hanging across the way from the rich girl he got in
trouble in back in the early summer of 1829. The girl’s parents hang
next to her, as if to make sure there’ll be no more of this monkey
business here, thank you very much, and the swain hangs between the
girl’s two brothers, whose heads are turned slightly towards their
sister’s seducer and whose skeletal grins seem to say, “What? Twenty-
seven stab wounds weren’t enough? You want more?” And so there they
are, the rich in their full if more than slightly moldy glory, awaiting
the Resurrection so they can get a change of clothes. Nowhere in the lot
is there a poor person, nowhere in the lot is there someone having any
connection with the advertising business. Life and death were both
unfair in those days. Hanging on the wall after you died just wasn’t
good enough for the poor and outcast way back then, although just
hanging by the neck until you were dead was.
Nowadays, of course, we live in a much more democratic world and
the poor may choose to be interred where they will, and today the same
freeze dry technology gives you a great cup of coffee every morning is
now available to stiffs, living and dead, of every income level. Why go
through the trauma of a wake and funeral when it is possible to have
Grandma freeze dried and left in her favorite chair in the corner? Why
try to explain the concept of death to your children when you can keep
Grandma as part of the family forever? Freeze drying lets you keep those
near and dear to you exactly where they were the last time you saw
them. You can even buy special attachments for your vacuum cleaner that
will let you clean Grandma off before the neighbors notice she’s getting
a bit dusty for her age. There’s even a line of clothes for the hip
but deceased Grandma so she will never feel out of it, and no, I don’t
know how they’ll get those clothes on her, but where there’s a will and
you’re in it, there’s always a way.
Labels: baked goods, Democrats, Italy, Roberta Vasquez, Sicily, the dead, vacations, yellow cling peaches in heavy syrup
1 Comments:
At 10:57 AM, Dick Stanley said…
I always thought Pamela Anderson was pretty cool. Nice upper story, anyhow.
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