« From Sonja Howle | Main | »

Monday Morning Memo - Roy H. Williams

Quixotecontemplate At The Heart of Romance

From Claude Monet's impressionistic portrait of his wife and son, to Sue Monk Kidd's tender book, The Secret Life of Bees, to the nosecones of bombers and the biceps of bikers, to the garish and awkward Miss America pageant, we continue to project the feminine ideal onto whatever canvas we can find to hold it.

But Don Quixote's perfect woman lived only in his mind: "Her name is Dulcinea, her kingdom, Toboso, which is in La Mancha, her condition must be that of princess, at the very least, for she is my queen and lady, and her beauty is supernatural, for in it one finds the reality of all the impossible." - from Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes, 1605.

I believe it is our search for Dulcinea, the softer side of God, that is the driving force behind much of our music, literature, sculpture, architecture, photography and painting.

In 1607, a 15 year-old prince of India caught a glimpse of a young girl hawking silk and glass beads in the Meena Bazaar. Five years later when she was 19, he married her and made her his empress. But it was to be a marriage cut short. When his beautiful Arjumand Banu died after just 19 years of marriage, Shah Jahan built a memorial to her that is recognized as one of the world's supreme accomplishments of architecture; the Taj Mahal.

George C. Boldt came to America in the 1860's, the son of impoverished Prussian parents. Encouraged by his wife Louise, Boldt became America's most successful hotel magnate. His empire included New York's Waldorf-Astoria and Philadelphia's Bellevue-Stratford. At the pinnacle of his success, Boldt purchased an island and began building a 120-room stone castle to be his gift to his wife on Valentine's Day. But in January, 1904, Louise Boldt died. Heartbroken, her unstoppable husband telegrammed the construction crews that all work be stopped. Three hundred workmen dropped their tools and walked away. Boldt never returned to the island.

Throughout his life, surrealist Salvador Dali was energized by his wife, Gala, the subject of many of his greatest works. When Gala passed away in 1982, Dali stopped painting. Seven years later he died.

What did Salvador Dali see when he looked at Gala? What strength did George Boldt draw from Louise? What magic danced in the eyes of Arjumand Banu?

I believe it was Dulcinea.

Roy H. Williams

PS – Wedding Chapel Dulcinea will be the heart of Wizard Academy, offering a postcard-perfect venue for couples to exchange their vows at no charge; a gift to the world's lovers from the students and friends of Wizard Academy. So far, we've collected about two-thirds of the funds necessary to complete the chapel by its April 23rd dedication date and we have confidence that the rest of the money will soon arrive. We hope you're planning to share that day with us.

Today's illustration shows a glimpse of Boldt Castle within a heart overlaid onto an image of the extraordinary painting of Don Quixote and Dulcinea, by Martin Mondrus.

Comments

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In

About this Blog


  • Welcome to the blog called Touch Points. We all have good and bad Customer experience stories that have happened to us when we have shopped or dealt with companies around the world. This blog is for you and me to learn what it might take to improve customer service. You are invited to submit stories that will hopefully lead us on a journey together. The destination is known but the map hasn’t been drawn to get us there yet. We are the explorers who will chart this course that will help us and others improve the touch points in their businesses. So put on your loosest, most comfortable travelling clothes, because here we go. Enjoy the trip!

Wizard of Ads Blogs