These shots somehow call to mind one particular fragment from Archilochos. Here it is, translated by Guy Davenport in his Seven Greeks. Note the range of tones as Archilochos carries us through even this brief piece.
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
The Oracle of Light
These shots somehow call to mind one particular fragment from Archilochos. Here it is, translated by Guy Davenport in his Seven Greeks. Note the range of tones as Archilochos carries us through even this brief piece.
Saturday, September 24, 2011
Alter Ego and Friends: Poetry and Clay
Passages: Charon's Steamboat
Friday, September 23, 2011
Passages: Going Solo with Duff Around Ireland
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Book Jacket Fantasy
Oskar Kokoschka's The Crab (1939-40)
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Four Friends
Saturday, September 17, 2011
Yeats: "The Moods" and "The Mask"
Friday, September 16, 2011
"For I Will Consider My Cat . . ."
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Haunted By Lice: The Power of Suggestion
Sunday, September 11, 2011
"Whirl Is King"
Saturday, September 10, 2011
A Handful of Clay
Thursday, September 8, 2011
"Hail Muse, Etc.": Poems as Prompts II
Sunday, September 4, 2011
Surfmat Poetics II
Can you see the now-faint markings?
Gear ready for a bit of wave-riding. I'll need my old mask & snorkel as well as the camera too, after I've warmed up a bit and dredged up some skills.
I'd covered my surfmat with poetry and proverbs and only later realized I was blowing my cover as a strictly physical diver-guy (as if anyone would have looked at my skinny-lanky bespectacled self and not said "English major" already).
Even a bit of Beowulf, lines that translate as "Fate often saves the undoomed man, if his courage is good."
1978 vintage, recall, so you won't be surprised to find out that there's a slow leak--at least one--in the old 'mat. I breathed it full in the evening, but in the morning after I got my coffee I found the surfmat to be rather flat.
"Kiss my ab" --abalone, that is. Just quoting.
Where's that patch kit?
Friday, September 2, 2011
Passages: Kodak Moment?
"Every picture tells a story--don't it?" That's Rod Stewart singing, but today I'm thinking of how pictures work standing alone, as history, and in that difficult, turbulent territory that exists between subjective history and pure image.
Richard Ford is a writer I admire, both in his novels and in his short stories. I read him avidly, and I've taught his short stories to my students. The Ultimate Good Luck is Ford's second novel, a sort of detective-story-without-a-detective, a wonderfully tense excursion that has Hemingway's short stories, Robert Stone's Dog Soldiers, and Tim O'Brien's Going After Cacciato in its bloodlines. (I don't know the truth of those possible influences, but that's what I thought when I first read the book in 1986, and I still do).
There are so many moments I could quote for you, but today I want to pull out one moment. This passage concerns the way a picture can tell different stories to different people, concerns how a picture may be worth a thousand words, but we just may need those thousand words to properly appreciate the picture (or the real life of the picture), and concerns the manner in which the character Quinn just may be too susceptible to what the character Rae thinks and wants. (And Rae matters to him, though he'd better figure out how to make that work and be okay with it; happiness would just be a bit too much to ask for--themes of the larger novel.)
Anyway, here's the part of one paragraph from a tense, action-oriented, reflective novel that held my attention today. And, as I have been telling my students, writing that holds my attention is writing I value:
There was a picture taken nearly that long ago that showed him standing alone on the sand beach on Mackinac Island, staring gloomily into the camera as though into a dark thundercloud that threatened to ruin his day. Rae said he looked saturnine and didn't like the pose. But the truth was that he had just fucked a big Finnish girl from Ludington, whom he'd met on the boat from St. Ignace, and who had wide Finnish blue eyes and dusty skin and was older than he was. And he was, he thought, in the best spirits of his life, and had gone back in fact, the very next moment, and found the girl and fucked her again. But in his mind, over time, he had defeated the facts, become convinced that he was sour and out of sorts, and he didn't like to look at the picture and kept it in his footlocker where he never saw it.
--Richard Ford,
from The Ultimate Good Luck