In Hinnom in Israel there is a place where people where sacrificed and buried. It also means land without laws (hell).
I think the author mixes a man experience with women with this place. At the beginning he talks about this man having sex with someone, and without finding it enough he goes to La Grange (a prostitutes place in a ZZ top song).
I like the part that says "all this time, with your heart in mind, did you edit?" as he is asking him if he looked after his heart by doing this.
He has lost his faith in love that he vets them (a check up before buying a horse) and by doing this he finds satisfaction (the in-vetted). In Hinnom there is potter's land and wet land. The man vets potter's land to find dirt mixed with ice in cheek (unappealing women) but at the end he find the wettest land and the voice tells him "not to vet it" as if he wont find anything horrible that would satisfy him (dead corpses). Land or earth is female in many cultures.
Well, is my interpretation
In Hinnom in Israel there is a place where people where sacrificed and buried. It also means land without laws (hell).
I think the author mixes a man experience with women with this place. At the beginning he talks about this man having sex with someone, and without finding it enough he goes to La Grange (a prostitutes place in a ZZ top song).
I like the part that says "all this time, with your heart in mind, did you edit?" as he is asking him if he looked after his heart by doing this.
He has lost his faith in love that he vets them (a check up before buying a horse) and by doing this he finds satisfaction (the in-vetted). In Hinnom there is potter's land and wet land. The man vets potter's land to find dirt mixed with ice in cheek (unappealing women) but at the end he find the wettest land and the voice tells him "not to vet it" as if he wont find anything horrible that would satisfy him (dead corpses). Land or earth is female in many cultures. Well, is my interpretation