The Popol Vuh 120-239

I’m glad there are longer poems in the second half of Popol Vuh, and there is more distinction of the brother’s lives. There’s more describing and explaining when the poems are a bit longer, which gives the reader more clearer context when they might feel lost. Once the brothers decide to leave home, the book does amazing work at helping you visualize the colors of the desert, and the harsh terrain. The animals and the characters all coexist with each other and there’s more to the story while reading the remainder of the book. It kind of becomes comical the way the animals speak in the text, and the poems. There’s a sense of innocence from reading about the brother’s growing up story, and the innocence of children playing ball, and giving paying each other flowers as prizes.

I do like the remaining poems and construction of the final words of the book, they become much easier to read and follow along with. The poems become more descriptive, and appealing to the reader’s eye. It almost becomes full circle talking back to creation, and end and beginning, and suffering and re-living. There was a long journey, but we got there anyway, basically what i’m taking away from this novel is the importance of persistence and never giving up on your goals, if the characters didn’t keep moving forward, they’re life experiences away from home wouldn’t have been lived, kind of like moving away from home to go to college, we never know what will happen until we try!

2 thoughts on “The Popol Vuh 120-239

  1. Jon

    Thanks for this, but it’s a little short… perhaps you can say something a bit more substantial about *what* is said or described in the second half of the book?

    Reply
  2. Isabella F

    Hi Devlin,

    I never noticed the innocence from their story until you pointed it out. Perhaps this done for the audience to remember and recognize that despite the gruesome things the twins have ensured or done, they are still children. I found the Xibalan’s choice to be payed in flowers rather odd, in which I figured it must’ve had to do with some sort of trick. Yet it also shows that they take the twins as “children”, to be foolish and how something so simple should be an easy enough task for them to be difficult. However the twins are tricksters and we can notice this in their stories.

    Isabella (F)

    Reply

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