Charles Simic, 1938-2023

When you read a nice poem, somebody else’s poem, you become attuned to the words on the page. The language seems so rich, so beautiful, imagination making connections. You do need the reader as a collaborator. There could be other experiences beyond that of course. There might be some thoughts, some ideas emerging out of that, but I think the most basic fundamental thing is to give the reader something pleasurable. – Charles Simic

“Charles Simic, Pulitzer-Winning Poet and U.S. Laureate, Dies at 84” NYTimes obit, outside paywall.

Eyes Fastened with Pins, Poetry Foundation

Midsummer, Rattle 2016

The Vices of the Evening, Rattle 2016

Crepuscular, Poetry Foundation (see here for more)

Will be attempting to send blog posts to Mastodon as well. Let’s see how that goes.

Posted in Art in the world, photography, Poetry and Lyrics, Ripped from the headlines, taking time to look, the creative process | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

January 6, 2023

Two years ago, I sat, like many, watching the insurrection unfold on live television. I’d started out with the intention, like many, to watch this thing called the electoral college do its supposedly boring task and accomplish its part in the peaceful transfer of power.

It was clear that Trump and others had other ideas and plans to make this not happen.

One of the things that stands out in my mind is the camera crew that was stationed on a street corner, really just to provide background images and the odd bit of commentary with the capitol as background. They and others started reporting things like people with guns up in trees and people breaking through lines of police going into the capitol. There came a moment when a couple people started going past this news crew and you could sense that the crew wondered if they were in danger. One asked the people if they had any knowledge about what was going on. Who were they? Where did they come from? The reporter pressed on – do you know you have blood on you? Are you all right?

Whereupon the guy told how he had gone with a group into the Capitol and they had broken a window into the chamber and a woman had started to go through the window and was shot. And the blood was hers. And he told the story like it was out of last week’s news from another city.

Someday I’d love to hear what that news crew and reporter thought about all that. And I’d very much like to thank them for keeping the cameras and sound going so we could hear all that first hand. I was watching on the Washington Post live feed so I assume the crew was theirs or a pool crew. I know that some crews had damage done to their equipment since they were considered “fake news”, but we all got to see what happened, as it happened because they were there.

Because of the Jan. 6 committee we were able to see a lot of other footage from inside the building too and hear a lot of the communications that were going on.

So don’t try to convince me that Trump and the rest of them don’t deserve indictment, a trial and hopefully jail time for trying to take over the United States. We all saw the evidence and many of us watched it live.

Posted in Ripped from the headlines | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Happy Birthday J.R.R. Tolkien

And may hope stay with us in the new year:

…the night-sky was still dim and pale. There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a dark tor high up in the mountains, Sam saw a white star twinkle for a while. The beauty of it smote his heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and hope returned to him. For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the end the Shadow was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high beauty for ever beyond its reach. His song in the Tower had been defiance rather than hope; for then he was thinking of himself. Now, for a moment, his own fate, and even his master’s, ceased to trouble him. He crawled back into the brambles and laid himself by Frodo’s side, and putting away all fear he cast himself into a deep untroubled sleep.

~~J.R.R. Tolkien, The Return of the King, Book II, The Land of Shadow.

clouds

Posted in clouds, From the Quote Box, Lotr, reads | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Remember

Have things changed over the course of twenty-one years? Perhaps the edges are a little less jagged or surprising but it’s still there.

We still remember that beautiful September morning, blue skies and all the promise of back to school and autumn ahead. While I may repeat my post from year to year in memory of that day and the lives lost and changed forever, the feelings are fierce.

Things have changed in the world due to politics and a pandemic. The flow of days and what happens has changed, probably forever. But, we all know where we were; how we heard; what we thought; what happened next, even while trying to swim and keep our heads above water today. We may be frightened by different events as we were by the idea of homeland security and attacks against Americans by other Americans because they looked different or worshiped difference. Things aren’t that different now. Much of our fears and anger are created within our own borders these days. People are hard to understand, their actions sometimes unreasonable, dangerous, unloving, full of rage and hatred without realistic cause.

REMEMBER

911, quilt by Mary Beth Frezon, 2001. Photo by Pearl Yee Wong of the Michigan State University Museum

This is what I wrote as an early statement about this quilt:

September 11, 2001
The phone rang. I watched my mother talking and prepared myself to hear that someone had died. Who could have imagined? We didn’t have a TV where we were so we didn’t get the barrage of instant images. All we could do is listen to the phoned reports and wonder.

What stuck me about that day was the change. The sky was crystal blue, the Adirondack water still sparkled with the sun, the mountains still held in the lake on all sides. What had changed was me. I felt that someone had knocked a hole in my body or head. That there was a gap between the me of a few minutes before and the me now. I looked at the others and they seemed to have the same problem putting themselves into this new existence.

I’ve used simple images to portray that turning point where the innocent happiness changed on a moment in time. I’ve left a suggestion that this will continue to evolve. All grief becomes tempered over time but how long before the memory of that moment is softened?

We continue to remember and take the time to memorialize and to remember.

…I grabbed the last Sunday Times
You stole my cab
We waited forever at the bus stop
We sweated in steamy August
We hunched our shoulders against the sleet
We laughed at the movies
We groaned after the election
We sang in church
Tonight I lit a candle for you
All of you

from — “Nine-Eleven” by Charlotte Parsons


Remember.

Recently I realized that people coming into an age to work and to vote were either just born or about to be born in 2001. So we begin layers of people who have no connection, no memory of that day or its events. I realize that small children alive then don’t really remember, in the way that some younger than me at the time don’t remember Kennedy being killed. I don’t always know what to make of everything that brought us to this time, but I am still here, trying to do what’s right and making art and words and to keep remembering.

I remember being buoyed up by the responses to the September 11th attacks and also being worried about the sudden homeland security and searches and all “to protect us”. And I remember the rising tide of hatred, surrounded by all those flapping patriotic flags, hatred against those “other” people who hated us enough to want to hurt and terrify us. And here we are today.

Tides of fear and anger and hatred rise up over and over again and we must rise up too without fear and without anger and without hatred. Not in my name. Be strong enough to resist those easy paths and act with understanding.

Be kind. Be kind. Be kind.


This is the quilt I was working on that day as it was in September, 2001. It is still a favorite and still filled with loss.

This is Repercussion, the quilt I worked on in 2002. (Now in private collection)

Posted in Sept. 11 | Tagged | 1 Comment

for the quote box

Tip o’ the hat to James Gurney and his fine painting vlog:

The grandest and simplest things contain worlds within worlds… seeing them is a metter of the right point of view, and your painter’s eye is the special portal to such sights. — Richard Schmid

On a different note, (August) Poetry Postcard Fest is nigh upon us and the other night my brain went on the fritz and instead of sleeping it decided that I better remember how to write at least haiku… I finally gave up and turned on the light until we’d gotten some written down. Seriously brain, you come up with some weird stuff sometimes.

Anyway I have my cards ready to go for two groups and a general plan. On September 1 there’s a suggestion that we write an epic day-long poem, and I’m hoping that the brain lets me sleep some before that. Otherwise, I’ll be the one napping that day!

Posted in Art in the world, Do the Work, drawing, en plein air, From the Quote Box, haiku, postcard poetry fest, the creative process | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment