Categories
Napowrimo

#4 – ‘The Thames’, lithotint, 1896

Oops! I posted this over at PFFA and forgot to post it here as well.

The Thames, lithotint, 1896

The river reflects a watery light,
diffused through fog and coalsmoke.

On his balcony at the Savoy,
Whistler brushes tusche onto limestone,
trying to catch the greys of stone and water
in a wash of grease and lampblack.

His wife lies on the couch inside
in a restless opium sleep. Her skin is pale
and her eyes are smudged with shadows.
The cancer eats away at her.

One by one, the gaslights flicker on.
Hansoms clop on the Enbankment.
Whistler works to differentiate
the shades between dark and light.

Categories
Nature

candles

“Sometimes entire animals such as the stormy petrel and the candlefish of the Pacific Northwest were threaded with a wick and burned as candles.”

from here.

Categories
Napowrimo

#3 – ‘why I didn’t write a poem’

I wrote
an oak is a malignant acorn

but the new hornbeam leaves were opening
like tiny fans.

——-
I really will try and manage something rather longer soon. Harry

Categories
Culture

Robert Creeley RIP

Robert Creeley died. I’m not familiar with his work.

There are lots of poets whose work I don’t know as well as I should, of course. But I’m always surprised by how little poetry crosses the Atlantic. You’d think it would be a quite naturally international activity.

Categories
Culture

Caravaggio – the final years

No, really, that’s what the exhibition was called.

I suspect a few Caravaggio-related poems will turn up during napowrimo, because I can’t afford to waste material. It had me thinking, though, what would the poetry version of chiaroscuro be? The effect of chiaroscuro in a painting – to highlight a few points and draw the eye to them – is of course something that language does very naturally. But would there be a way of writing that be analogous to the contrasting areas of light and dark? And what would the effect be?

Categories
Napowrimo

#2 – ‘A Lesson Unlearnt’

‘A Lesson Unlearnt’

There is some stupid part of me
that still expects
a cigarette
to be a cool blue draught
curling past teeth and tongue

so after a few pints
I sometimes scrounge one
and surprise myself again
with the nauseating tang of them.