Showing posts with label Doubloon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doubloon. Show all posts

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Moya Cannon: "Emptinesses Which Hold"


NAUSTS

There are emptinesses which hold

the leveret's form in spring grass;
the tern's hasty nest in the shore pebbles;
nausts in a silvery island inlet.

Boat-shaped absences,
they slope to seaward,
parallel as potato drills,
curved a little for access --

a mooring stone, fore and aft,
and a flat stone high up
to guide the tarred bow
or a hooker, pucan, or punt

when the high tide lifted it
up and in, then ebbed,
leaving it tilted to one side,
in its shingly nest.

--Moya Cannon


'WE ARE WHAT WE EAT'

That's what she said,
'Every seven years
almost every cell in our body is replaced.'
I thought of her own art,
how faithfully rendered
the miraculous lines, the miraculous lives,
of feather and bone --

and I remembered an oak rib,
honeycombed with shipworm,
given as a keepsake to another friend,
who had sailed from Dublin to the Faroes
in a wooden fishing hooker,
which was later rebuilt.

These boats are rebuilt, renamed,
until every plank and rib
has been replaced so often
that nothing remains
except the boat's original lines
and a piece of silver,
hidden under the mast.

--Moya Cannon

Salvage Work (small): sculpture mix; blue slip; clear glazing; copper wire; twig; twine.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Flipping the Doubloon

I've been thinking of Coyote and Raven and Puck. Captain Puck at the helm of a swift ship with black sails.

I've been navigating the mytho-historical shoals of Sir Francis Drake, Sir Henry Morgan, and Captain Jack Sparrow, all on behalf of one of those novels I don't expect to write. Such plodding and plotting lead naturally, for me, to Beowulf, Brecca, and Unferth; to Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser; and to Corum, Elric, and the Eternal Champion. The Green Knight, Gawain, and Arthur the Bear join the crew of my mind's flagship; Shelley, Keats, and Byron, stepping lively, limping lively, as well.

Never far from thought: Theseus and the bull-leapers. Archilochos, Euripides, and Sappho crowd onto the deck. Would there be room for Medea, Ariadne, and Dido? How not?

And what about the Colossus of Rhodes? Are his feet of clay?

I could never really be a trickster or a pirate, but what's the enduring, recurring appeal then? Appeal? Fascination and yearning, more like, belike. Still, it's not that simple, never that simple.

Frankly, I'm more Law than Chaos (Thank you, Michael Moorcock), and I recoil from James Joyce's stubborn "non serviam" (being a steady student of Virgil and my father's son), and yet, and yet, and yet, and yet, and yet, and yet . . . .

What are those famous lines of St. Augustine?
Why do I see him at the helm of a swift ship with black sails?

Is that Robin Hood beside him or just Errol Flynn?