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160 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1960
We stood on the frontiers of the known world, and on the selfsame threshold of the unknown.
A dog rose and stood over me. A horse it was in the uncertain grey light, half-wolf, half-donkey, monstrous, disconsolate; neighing and barking in one breath, its terrible half-hooves raised over me to trample its premature rider. I grew conscious of its closeness as a shadow and as death. I made a frightful gesture to mount, and it shrank a little into half-woman, half-log greying into the dawn. Its teeth shone like a misty rag, and I raised my hand to cajole and stroke its ageing, soulful face. I sat bolt upright in my hammock, shouting aloud that the devil himself must fondle and mount this muse of hell and this hag, sinking back instantly, a dead man in his bed come to an involuntary climax. The grey wet dream of dawn had restored to me Mariella’s terrible stripes and anguish of soul. The vaguest fire and warmth came like a bullet, flooding me, over aeons of time it seemed, with penitence and sorrow.
It was the seventh day from Mariella. And the creation of the windows of the universe was finished.
"their living names matched the names of a famous dead crew that had sunk in the rapids and been drowned to a man, leaving their names inscribed on Sorrow Hill which stood at the foot of the falls. But this in no way interfered with their lifelike appearance and spirit and energy" (p.26).At scarcely 100 pages, this
My Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Reading Around the World Challenge: Guyana
Set deep in the Guyanese jungle, Palace of the Peacock by Wilson Harris depicts a dangerous river expedition led by the ruthless Captain Donne. Along with his multiracial crew, he travels into the wilderness in search of a mysterious woman, but as they navigate the rapids, the voyage quickly dissolves into a hypnotic, non-linear dream-quest.
For me, this was a true high effort, high reward read. The prose is beautifully mystical, though the abstract imagery and broken grammar often make it feel like heavy lifting. Because the characters function more as symbolic archetypes, I found it a bit harder to form a personal connection with them, but the way Harris explores complex themes of racial reconciliation through this spiritual voyage is incredibly thought-provoking. It’s certainly not your typical jungle thriller, but for fans of magical realism, this is a beautiful and challenging piece of literature.
"The stars became peacocks' eyes, and the great tree of flesh and blood swirled into another stream that sparkled with divine feathers where the neck and the hands and the feet had been nailed. This was the palace of the universe and the windows of the soul looked out and in."
"I dreamt I awoke with one dead seeing eye and one living closed eye. I put my dreaming feet on the ground in a room that oppressed me as though I stood in an operating theatre, or a maternity ward, or I felt suddenly, the glaring cell of a prisoner who had been sentenced to die. I arose with a violent giddiness and leaned on a huge rocking-chair. I remembered the first time I had entered this bare curious room; the house stood high and alone in the brooding countryside. I had felt the wind rocking me with the oldest uncertainty and desire in the world, the desire to govern or be governed, rule or be ruled for ever."