Annie Lighthart grew up in a house full of books and teachers. Since there were too many books to dust, to be continually reading was considered a contribution to keeping the house clean.
For Poetry Friday, two poets whose work I have shared before. Time for more!
The Hundred Names of Love
by Annie Lighthart
The children have gone to bed.
We are so tired we could fold ourselves neatly
behind our eyes and sleep mid-word, sleep standing
warm among the creatures in the barn, lean together
and sleep, forgetting each other completely in the velvet,
the forgiveness of that sleep.
Then the one small cry:
one strike of the match-head of sound:
one child’s voice:
read the rest here
**************
The Sound of It
by Annie Lighthart
Just a piano playing plainly, not even for long,
and yet I suddenly think of fields of timothy
and how a cow and I once studied each other over a fence
while the car ticked and cooled behind me.
When I turned around I was surprised that it had not
sprouted tall grass from its hood, I had been gone
so long. Time passes in crooked ways in some tales,
read the rest here
**************
**************
Praise
by Kelli Russell Agodon
Find me wild about stir-fry, about red velvet
sofas and the people who sleep inside books
and dream about commas. We are flooded
with forgetfulness, with fallen plum blossoms
misspelling our names on the driveway. Praise
our too many expectations, how we overestimate
read the rest here
**************
Bookseed Studio has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Jan!
Tabatha Yeatts: The Opposite of Indifference
"The opposite of love is not hate, it's indifference. The opposite of art is not ugliness, it's indifference." ~ Elie Wiesel
Thursday, January 26, 2023
Ohara Koson
The bird-and-flower motif started appearing in Japanese art around the Muromachi period during the 14th century, and developed its own distinct style. It also entered ukiyo-e woodblock printing, where it was known as kachō-e (花鳥絵).
~Wikipedia
For Art Thursday, prints by kachō-e artist Ohara Koson (1877-1945). My main focus was on animals and the moon, but I couldn't resist adding a couple of flower prints.
Goose at full moon
Ohara Koson
Crow at full moon
Ohara Koson
Rabbit at full moon
Ohara Koson
Geese at full moon
Ohara Koson
Green heron at full moon
Ohara Koson
Blue Irises
Ohara Koson
Chrysanthemums and Running Water
Ohara Koson
~Wikipedia
For Art Thursday, prints by kachō-e artist Ohara Koson (1877-1945). My main focus was on animals and the moon, but I couldn't resist adding a couple of flower prints.
Goose at full moon
Ohara Koson
Crow at full moon
Ohara Koson
Rabbit at full moon
Ohara Koson
Geese at full moon
Ohara Koson
Green heron at full moon
Ohara Koson
Blue Irises
Ohara Koson
Chrysanthemums and Running Water
Ohara Koson
Tuesday, January 24, 2023
Martinez Zogo
Although Cameroon has one of the richest media landscapes in Africa, it is one of the continent's most dangerous countries for journalists, who operate in a hostile and precarious environment.
~Reporters without Borders
Sometimes it feels like the world is more like an Avengers movie than we realize, minus the superheroes. Martinez Zogo was a journalist in Cameroon who was covering government corruption when he realized that his life was in danger. Zogo tried to get to the police for protection, but he was kidnapped first. Sadly, his body was found five days later. Where is the justice for Martinez Zogo?
~Reporters without Borders
Sometimes it feels like the world is more like an Avengers movie than we realize, minus the superheroes. Martinez Zogo was a journalist in Cameroon who was covering government corruption when he realized that his life was in danger. Zogo tried to get to the police for protection, but he was kidnapped first. Sadly, his body was found five days later. Where is the justice for Martinez Zogo?
Monday, January 23, 2023
Sibyl of the Rhine
I gave a lecture once where I played 14 different recordings of Hildegard, and the audience assumed they were all separate pieces. But they were really the same composition, in wildly different performances.
~Honey Meconi
For Music Monday, Hildegard of Bingen (1098–1179):
Another quote about Hildegard of Bingen from Honey Meconi:
One more thing that isn't music...YouTube suggested that I watch this and I was impressed. Rajiv Surendra:
~Honey Meconi
For Music Monday, Hildegard of Bingen (1098–1179):
Another quote about Hildegard of Bingen from Honey Meconi:
One the things I love about her is that she was 42 before she started writing anything down. In a sense, I think of her as the patron saint of “late bloomers.”
...Hildegard was also someone who didn’t accept her place in the world. She wrote her books, and created a new language, and, in a male-dominated church, she went on preaching tours at a time when women were not supposed to preach, especially in public.
One more thing that isn't music...YouTube suggested that I watch this and I was impressed. Rajiv Surendra:
Thursday, January 19, 2023
Invasion
Here is Light; it's too hot to touch
but don't remove your fingers.
~Nadya Agafonova
Poems this week from INVASION: Ukrainian Poems about the War, edited by Tony Kitt, translated from Ukrainian by Anatoly Kudryavitsky. Nadya Agafonova, the poet who wrote the above quote, was killed by a Russian rocket.
The Journey
by Anatoly Dnistroviy
I'm no Odysseus
my disturbed wanderings are confined to my room
and sirens don't sing to us nightly
only alarms to which we no longer respond
neither kids
nor cats
but a long journey awaits us all--
a journey to find our homes
in the darkness of doubt
and my home summons me
like a ray of light
**************
Home
by Sophia Lenartovych
the tree cuts the lantern light in two
paving a radiant track towards my feet
the train will arrive in a few minutes
but I still don't know where I am going
mother bade farewell to me and said:
home is where somebody's waiting for you
so I'm now travelling on a toy train
that moves along the bright rails towards her
**************
Metaphors
by Julia Musakovska
such awkward, terrible poems
soaked with rage,
controvertible
no beauty in them,
no aesthetics;
metaphors withered and scattered
deprived of blooming
metaphors buried
on playgrounds
under hastily made
crosses
frozen
in unnatural poses
across the thresholds,
strewn with dust
cooking food over an open fire
in attempt to survive
metaphors dying of dehydration
under the rubble
shot in a car
under a makeshift
white flag
lying on the footpath
with motley backpacks on their backs
next to their
executed pets
forgive me, but such poems
are all we have for you today,
ladies and gentlemen,
dear estimable spectators
in the theatre of war
Yale professor Timothy Snyder says:
**************
Marcie Flinchum Atkins has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Marcie!
but don't remove your fingers.
~Nadya Agafonova
Poems this week from INVASION: Ukrainian Poems about the War, edited by Tony Kitt, translated from Ukrainian by Anatoly Kudryavitsky. Nadya Agafonova, the poet who wrote the above quote, was killed by a Russian rocket.
The Journey
by Anatoly Dnistroviy
I'm no Odysseus
my disturbed wanderings are confined to my room
and sirens don't sing to us nightly
only alarms to which we no longer respond
neither kids
nor cats
but a long journey awaits us all--
a journey to find our homes
in the darkness of doubt
and my home summons me
like a ray of light
**************
Home
by Sophia Lenartovych
the tree cuts the lantern light in two
paving a radiant track towards my feet
the train will arrive in a few minutes
but I still don't know where I am going
mother bade farewell to me and said:
home is where somebody's waiting for you
so I'm now travelling on a toy train
that moves along the bright rails towards her
**************
Metaphors
by Julia Musakovska
such awkward, terrible poems
soaked with rage,
controvertible
no beauty in them,
no aesthetics;
metaphors withered and scattered
deprived of blooming
metaphors buried
on playgrounds
under hastily made
crosses
frozen
in unnatural poses
across the thresholds,
strewn with dust
cooking food over an open fire
in attempt to survive
metaphors dying of dehydration
under the rubble
shot in a car
under a makeshift
white flag
lying on the footpath
with motley backpacks on their backs
next to their
executed pets
forgive me, but such poems
are all we have for you today,
ladies and gentlemen,
dear estimable spectators
in the theatre of war
Yale professor Timothy Snyder says:
There is nothing problematic or awkward about the poem itself. It is elegant and powerful. It reminds us how metaphors work. The awkwardness and the frightfulness resides not in the poem, but in us. The poem helps us own this. What are we supposed to do, we the spectators of the theater of war?
...The way to relieve the sense of awkwardness is to do something to help. In this horrible war of atrocity, the Ukrainians have made this easy for us. This is not a conflict where it is unclear whom to help or how. Both the Ukrainian state and Ukrainian civil society are highly functional, which means that it is quite simple to do something more than spectate.
If you want to help Ukrainians stay warm despite the Russian campaign to take down their entire power grid with missiles and drones, make a (tax-deductible) donation to Razom. If you want to support Ukrainian aims through President Zelens’kyi’s own platform, United 24, you can do so here...If you want to support Ukrainians who are at work in the arts, sciences, and in journalism to document this war, make a (tax-deductible) contribution to Documenting Ukraine.
**************
Marcie Flinchum Atkins has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Marcie!
Black/Red
Red is the great clarifier bright and revealing. I can't imagine becoming bored with red. It would be like becoming bored with the person you love.
~Diana Vreeland
Black and Red for Art Thursday.
Mary Magdalene writing
by Master of the Female Half-Lengths a.k.a. Master of the Vienna Concert
Dutch-Southern Netherlandish painter, 1530-1540
Black Swan, Melbourne
photo by Buiobuione
Fleetwood Hesketh, 1769
by Joseph Wright of Derby
Tyria jacobaeae
by Svdmolen
Portrait of May Sartoris, c. 1860
Frederic Leighton
Flowers of Eucalyptus caesia subsp. magna
by Nick Pitsas, CSIRO
Portrait of Corvina Hezenbroek van Hofdijck
Michiel Jansz. van Mierevelt and workshop (1566–1641)
~Diana Vreeland
Black and Red for Art Thursday.
Mary Magdalene writing
by Master of the Female Half-Lengths a.k.a. Master of the Vienna Concert
Dutch-Southern Netherlandish painter, 1530-1540
Black Swan, Melbourne
photo by Buiobuione
Fleetwood Hesketh, 1769
by Joseph Wright of Derby
Tyria jacobaeae
by Svdmolen
Portrait of May Sartoris, c. 1860
Frederic Leighton
Flowers of Eucalyptus caesia subsp. magna
by Nick Pitsas, CSIRO
Portrait of Corvina Hezenbroek van Hofdijck
Michiel Jansz. van Mierevelt and workshop (1566–1641)
Monday, January 16, 2023
gonna write words, oh, so sweet
I sing to the god with the three pronged rod
And the whiskers wild and free
That I've got a man with a beard and tan
And a passion for the sea
~Connie Converse, Father Neptune
Kind of a rabbit hole for Music Monday. First I looked up Connie Converse, a singer/songwriter whose music Ariana introduced me to:
She has a mysterious story, and you can find multiple documentaries about her.
Then I found a video of The Ladles singing one of Connie Converse's songs, Father Neptune:
I found another Ladles song:
That led me to hearing the original by Fats Waller, which felt a bit slow at this point (lo siento, Mr. Waller), so I found this fun one by Martha Davis & Spouse with Perry Como:
And the whiskers wild and free
That I've got a man with a beard and tan
And a passion for the sea
~Connie Converse, Father Neptune
Kind of a rabbit hole for Music Monday. First I looked up Connie Converse, a singer/songwriter whose music Ariana introduced me to:
She has a mysterious story, and you can find multiple documentaries about her.
Then I found a video of The Ladles singing one of Connie Converse's songs, Father Neptune:
I found another Ladles song:
That led me to hearing the original by Fats Waller, which felt a bit slow at this point (lo siento, Mr. Waller), so I found this fun one by Martha Davis & Spouse with Perry Como:
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