Mircea Cartarescu Theodoros Direct
Cărtărescu stopped sleeping. Or rather, sleep stopped being a refuge and became a second, more rigorous workshop. In dreams, Theodoros taught him the architecture of the sfera : the nested spheres of existence that Cărtărescu had spent his career trying to describe in prose. But where Cărtărescu’s spheres were made of bone and light and the mucus of unborn children, Theodoros’s spheres were made of time . Solid, granulated time, which you could hold like a pomegranate and crack open to release not seeds but entire centuries.
Θεόδωρος.
Cărtărescu, at sixty-two, had grown accustomed to visitors. They came at the blue hour, when the body’s membrane between self and other grew thin. Poets who had died in the ‘40s, their lips still wet with typed stanzas. Childhood neighbors whose faces had dissolved into the plaster of demolished houses. But Theodoros was new. And Theodoros was not a ghost. mircea cartarescu theodoros
“You see the flaw,” Theodoros said one night, sitting on a throne of petrified bread. “You’ve always written the world as if it were a dream of the world. But the world is a dream of me .” Cărtărescu stopped sleeping
Cărtărescu reached out. His hand of paper met Theodoros’s hand of mercury. And together, they stepped into the mirror—not as creator and creature, but as twins, as synapothanontes , two beings who had never existed separately and would now die together into a more permanent fiction. But where Cărtărescu’s spheres were made of bone