Look within. Within is the fountain of the good, and it will ever bubble up, if thou wilt ever dig.
~Marcus Aurelius
Happy Poetry Friday!
Many Poetry Friday friends pick OLW (One Little Word) as a touchstone or inspiration for their year. I don't usually pick a word (although "flexibility" has picked me a couple of times). This year, though, I picked "generosity." I wanted to learn the hard lessons about generosity. I found it a bit perplexing. The easy stuff is easy, but digging up some generosity in disagreeable situations is indeed hard. Recently, I started thinking about generosity of opinion.
I tend to have a surprising amount of Candor and I have a lot of opinions related to taste (it seems like anyone who has been an editor has to do a lot of choosing according to their tastes.) What I'd really like is to not be generous with sharing my opinion. It feels generous NOT to share it.
I'm talking myself in circles, so here's Andrea Cohen's Gift Economy to get you thinking another way about generosity (and also as a possible mentor poem):
Gift Economy
by Andrea Cohen
I give you a gift card for a store that doesn’t accept gift cards.
The store is in another galaxy.
I give you a paper airplane and a paper ticket for the plane.
I let you fly the plane.
I give you the manifest which says this is a cargo plane filled with
horses.
I tell you the horses don’t think of themselves as cargo.
I give you sugar cubes for the horses, and apples.
They’re gifts you can look at in the horses’ mouths.
I give you a flight plan and a lighter with which to ignite it.
You give me the flash fire that begs an encore.
I give you me going up in smoke.
******************
Reverie has the Poetry Friday round-up today. Thanks, Patricia!
* A special shout-out to Michelle Kogan for her generosity! I didn't participate in the Holiday Poem Swap this year because we had an odd number, but I was the lucky recipient of a wonderful gift from Michelle.
"The opposite of love is not hate, it's indifference. The opposite of art is not ugliness, it's indifference." ~ Elie Wiesel
Thursday, December 29, 2022
The Guennol Lioness
Looking at the face of the lioness, it should be clear that this carving was the result of close observation and that five thousand years ago, close observation of a big cat meant either victory or death.
~George Rodart
The Guennol Lioness, an Elamite figure believed to have been created circa 3000–2800 B.C., ...is thought to have been created at approximately the same time as the first known use of the wheel, the development of cuneiform writing, and the emergence of the first cities. [Wikipedia]
~George Rodart
The Guennol Lioness, an Elamite figure believed to have been created circa 3000–2800 B.C., ...is thought to have been created at approximately the same time as the first known use of the wheel, the development of cuneiform writing, and the emergence of the first cities. [Wikipedia]
Monday, December 26, 2022
Wilderness and bees
Bees! Bees! Hark to your bees!
"Hide from your neigbours as much as you please,
But all that has happened, to us you must tell,
Or else we will give you no honey to sell!"
~The Bee-Boys Song, Rudyard Kipling
For Music Monday, two songs. First, The Wilderness Yet (Rosie Hodgson, Rowan Piggott, and Philippe Barnes) performs Wild Northeaster:
Second, The Bee-Boy's Song, Rosie Hodgson (with Rowan Piggott):
"Hide from your neigbours as much as you please,
But all that has happened, to us you must tell,
Or else we will give you no honey to sell!"
~The Bee-Boys Song, Rudyard Kipling
For Music Monday, two songs. First, The Wilderness Yet (Rosie Hodgson, Rowan Piggott, and Philippe Barnes) performs Wild Northeaster:
Second, The Bee-Boy's Song, Rosie Hodgson (with Rowan Piggott):
Thursday, December 22, 2022
The year's threshold
For years I wanted to be older, and now I am.
~Margaret Atwood
Happy Poetry Friday! A winter solstice poem today by Margaret Atwood, who has written many more poems that people usually suspect! Hope y'all are able to keep warm (if you're in my vicinity or one of the other cold spots). Sending love to you all, wherever you are.
excerpt from SHAPECHANGERS IN WINTER
by Margaret Atwood
This is the solstice, the still point
of the sun, its cusp and midnight,
the year’s threshold
and unlocking, where the past
lets go of and becomes the future;
the place of caught breath, the door
of a vanished house left ajar.
Taking hands like children
lost in a six-dimensional
forest, we step across.
The walls of the house fold themselves down,
and the house turns
itself inside out, as a tulip does
in its last full-blown moment, and our candle
flares up and goes out, and the only common
sense that remains to us is touch,
as it will be, later, some other
century, when we will seem to each other
even less what we were.
But that trick is just to hold on
through all appearances; and so we do,
and yes, I know it’s you;
and that is what we will come to, sooner
or later, when it’s even darker
than It is now, when the snow is colder,
when it’s darkest and coldest
and candles are no longer any use to us
and the visibility is zero: Yes.
It’s still you. It’s still you.
**********************
WHITE-EYES
by Mary Oliver
In winter
all the singing is in
the tops of the trees
where the wind-bird
with its white eyes
shoves and pushes
among the branches.
Like any of us
he wants to go to sleep,
but he's restless—
he has an idea,
and slowly it unfolds
from under his beating wings
as long as he stays awake
But his big, round music, after all,
is too breathy to last...
read the rest here
**********************
Live Your Poem has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Irene!
~Margaret Atwood
Happy Poetry Friday! A winter solstice poem today by Margaret Atwood, who has written many more poems that people usually suspect! Hope y'all are able to keep warm (if you're in my vicinity or one of the other cold spots). Sending love to you all, wherever you are.
excerpt from SHAPECHANGERS IN WINTER
by Margaret Atwood
This is the solstice, the still point
of the sun, its cusp and midnight,
the year’s threshold
and unlocking, where the past
lets go of and becomes the future;
the place of caught breath, the door
of a vanished house left ajar.
Taking hands like children
lost in a six-dimensional
forest, we step across.
The walls of the house fold themselves down,
and the house turns
itself inside out, as a tulip does
in its last full-blown moment, and our candle
flares up and goes out, and the only common
sense that remains to us is touch,
as it will be, later, some other
century, when we will seem to each other
even less what we were.
But that trick is just to hold on
through all appearances; and so we do,
and yes, I know it’s you;
and that is what we will come to, sooner
or later, when it’s even darker
than It is now, when the snow is colder,
when it’s darkest and coldest
and candles are no longer any use to us
and the visibility is zero: Yes.
It’s still you. It’s still you.
**********************
WHITE-EYES
by Mary Oliver
In winter
all the singing is in
the tops of the trees
where the wind-bird
with its white eyes
shoves and pushes
among the branches.
Like any of us
he wants to go to sleep,
but he's restless—
he has an idea,
and slowly it unfolds
from under his beating wings
as long as he stays awake
But his big, round music, after all,
is too breathy to last...
read the rest here
**********************
Live Your Poem has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Irene!
Labels:
Margaret Atwood,
Mary Oliver,
Poetry Friday,
Winter Solstice
Glad you've been good
Mari Lwyd, Lwyd Mari
A sacred thing through the night they carry.
Betrayed are the living, betrayed the dead
All are confused by a horse's head.
~Vernon Watkins
When I was reading about The Monsters of Christmas it was clear that back in the day, people thought naughty kids didn't just get coal in their stockings, haha! I feel like this little boy's sister knew he had it coming:
A 1900s greeting card reading 'Greetings from Krampus!'
Unknown author - Historie čertů Krampus Uploaded by Kohelet
Krampusz (1907)
Unknown author
A different, but still scary, look for Krampus:
Wooden mask of the Carinthian "Bartl or Krampus" a horrible man with beard in Austria, EU
photo by Naturpuur
Time for the Mari Lwyd, the Welsh horse skull creature. Welsh journalist Jude Rogers says, "There's something timelessly terrifying about her." Kind of like scary carolling, "The Mari Lwyd party would approach a house and sing a song in which they requested admittance. The inhabitants of the house would then offer excuses for why the team could not enter. The party would sing a second verse, and the debate between the two sides – known as the pwnco (a form of musical battle similar to flyting) – would continue until the house's inhabitants ran out of ideas, at which time they were obliged to allow the party entry and to provide them with ale and food." [Wikipedia]
Mari Lwyd
by Rhŷn Williams
The Yule Goat doesn't usually seem scary, but "Old Christmas" is creeping me out in this one:
'Old Christmas', riding a yule goat
1836 illustration by Robert Seymour
from "The Book of Christmas" by Thomas Kibble Hervey
We'll finish off with a beautiful Yule Goat:
Julbocken
by John Bauer (1912)
A sacred thing through the night they carry.
Betrayed are the living, betrayed the dead
All are confused by a horse's head.
~Vernon Watkins
When I was reading about The Monsters of Christmas it was clear that back in the day, people thought naughty kids didn't just get coal in their stockings, haha! I feel like this little boy's sister knew he had it coming:
A 1900s greeting card reading 'Greetings from Krampus!'
Unknown author - Historie čertů Krampus Uploaded by Kohelet
Krampusz (1907)
Unknown author
A different, but still scary, look for Krampus:
Wooden mask of the Carinthian "Bartl or Krampus" a horrible man with beard in Austria, EU
photo by Naturpuur
Time for the Mari Lwyd, the Welsh horse skull creature. Welsh journalist Jude Rogers says, "There's something timelessly terrifying about her." Kind of like scary carolling, "The Mari Lwyd party would approach a house and sing a song in which they requested admittance. The inhabitants of the house would then offer excuses for why the team could not enter. The party would sing a second verse, and the debate between the two sides – known as the pwnco (a form of musical battle similar to flyting) – would continue until the house's inhabitants ran out of ideas, at which time they were obliged to allow the party entry and to provide them with ale and food." [Wikipedia]
Mari Lwyd
by Rhŷn Williams
The Yule Goat doesn't usually seem scary, but "Old Christmas" is creeping me out in this one:
'Old Christmas', riding a yule goat
1836 illustration by Robert Seymour
from "The Book of Christmas" by Thomas Kibble Hervey
We'll finish off with a beautiful Yule Goat:
Julbocken
by John Bauer (1912)
Tuesday, December 20, 2022
Wonders to find
Where I actually grew up was just completely removed from anything resembling a town or a city...What that granted me was a lot of isolation and when you are bored you tend to work really hard on your interests.
~J.D. McPherson
As I have mentioned other years, I 💖 Christmas music. I can't cope with Mariah Carey's song any more, must have heard it too much last year, but I really enjoy the lesser-known stuff! Today's song is by J.D. McPherson:
Bonus song! "Written in 1916 by Ukrainian composer Mykola Leontovich and titled “Shchedryk,” the song tells the tale of a swallow flying into a household to proclaim the plentiful year that the family will have. The song's title is derived from the Ukrainian word “shchedryj,” which means “bountiful.” Eileen:
~J.D. McPherson
As I have mentioned other years, I 💖 Christmas music. I can't cope with Mariah Carey's song any more, must have heard it too much last year, but I really enjoy the lesser-known stuff! Today's song is by J.D. McPherson:
Bonus song! "Written in 1916 by Ukrainian composer Mykola Leontovich and titled “Shchedryk,” the song tells the tale of a swallow flying into a household to proclaim the plentiful year that the family will have. The song's title is derived from the Ukrainian word “shchedryj,” which means “bountiful.” Eileen:
Sunday, December 18, 2022
Tell me your tale
St. Dymphna is honored as the patron saint of anxiety, stress, mental disorders, depression, and other neurological disorders. She is also invoked as the patron saint of runaways and survivors of incest and sexual assault. Her name means “poetess.”
~ConnectUS
Hi y'all! I just deactivated my Twitter account because, as much as I loved it, I just couldn't stand the owner. I'm on Mastodon now and would be happy to follow you if you're there (I'm "caorann" which means "rowan tree" in Gàidhlig.)
A while back, I posted a poem (Subjective Units of Distress Scale 1-10) that featured the Irish saint Dymphna. I hadn't heard of St Dymphna until then, but I was intrigued. This brave girl with flowers, a sword, and a book is the patron saint of mental health. What can I say, I'm a fan. I bought a Dymphna ornament, and one of our dogs mangled it before she made it onto the tree. Since the original Dymphna was beheaded, that seemed fairly par for the course, but I couldn't let that be the end of her story. I ordered a new one and she is safely ensconced on the tree. Here she is, intact:
For Music Monday, Nightingale by Norah Jones:
~ConnectUS
Hi y'all! I just deactivated my Twitter account because, as much as I loved it, I just couldn't stand the owner. I'm on Mastodon now and would be happy to follow you if you're there (I'm "caorann" which means "rowan tree" in Gàidhlig.)
A while back, I posted a poem (Subjective Units of Distress Scale 1-10) that featured the Irish saint Dymphna. I hadn't heard of St Dymphna until then, but I was intrigued. This brave girl with flowers, a sword, and a book is the patron saint of mental health. What can I say, I'm a fan. I bought a Dymphna ornament, and one of our dogs mangled it before she made it onto the tree. Since the original Dymphna was beheaded, that seemed fairly par for the course, but I couldn't let that be the end of her story. I ordered a new one and she is safely ensconced on the tree. Here she is, intact:
For Music Monday, Nightingale by Norah Jones:
Thursday, December 15, 2022
Compasses in our hands
We are asleep with compasses in our hands.
~W. S. Merwin
For Poetry Friday, two poems by W.S. Merwin:
THE DAY
If you could take the day by the hand
even now and say Come Father
calling it by your own name
it might rise in its blindness with all
its knuckles and curtains
and open the eyes it was born with
TRAVELLING TOGETHER
If we are separated I will
try to wait for you
on your side of things
your side of the wall and the water
and of the light moving at its own speed
even on leaves that we have seen
I will wait on one side
while a side is there
**********************
Karen Edmisten has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Karen!
~W. S. Merwin
For Poetry Friday, two poems by W.S. Merwin:
THE DAY
If you could take the day by the hand
even now and say Come Father
calling it by your own name
it might rise in its blindness with all
its knuckles and curtains
and open the eyes it was born with
TRAVELLING TOGETHER
If we are separated I will
try to wait for you
on your side of things
your side of the wall and the water
and of the light moving at its own speed
even on leaves that we have seen
I will wait on one side
while a side is there
**********************
Karen Edmisten has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Karen!
Hoarfrost
The ice was not only broken; it was shivered into a million fragments.
~ P G Wodehouse
For Art Thursday, hoarfrost: "When frost forms as minute ice crystals covering the ground, we just call it all frost. But sometimes the frost grains grow larger and are called hoarfrost crystals...Hoar frost is named after its hair-like appearance." (Mastery.wiki)
Szron na siatce
photo by Mariusz
Ice crystals on a barbed wire in Hausdülmen, Dülmen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Dietmar Rabich
Казахстан, Кокшетау
Брещук Сергей Евгеньевич
Winter Frost
photophat
Veere in de winter
Rubenf
The views of Twigen
Dominicus Johannes Bergsma
Hoar Frost Details
pleple2000
~ P G Wodehouse
For Art Thursday, hoarfrost: "When frost forms as minute ice crystals covering the ground, we just call it all frost. But sometimes the frost grains grow larger and are called hoarfrost crystals...Hoar frost is named after its hair-like appearance." (Mastery.wiki)
Szron na siatce
photo by Mariusz
Ice crystals on a barbed wire in Hausdülmen, Dülmen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Dietmar Rabich
Казахстан, Кокшетау
Брещук Сергей Евгеньевич
Winter Frost
photophat
Veere in de winter
Rubenf
The views of Twigen
Dominicus Johannes Bergsma
Hoar Frost Details
pleple2000
Monday, December 12, 2022
The Large Notebook
There are many composers in today's world, everyone wants to be heard and noticed.
~Alexander Litvinovsky
For Music Monday, Belarusian conductor Alexander Litvinovsky's Le Grand Cahier (Suite for String Orchestra), Nos études, performed by the Metamorphose String Orchestra conducted by Pavel Lyubomudrov.
~Alexander Litvinovsky
For Music Monday, Belarusian conductor Alexander Litvinovsky's Le Grand Cahier (Suite for String Orchestra), Nos études, performed by the Metamorphose String Orchestra conducted by Pavel Lyubomudrov.
Labels:
Alexander Litvinovsky,
Belarus,
composer,
Music Monday
Thursday, December 8, 2022
Quiet mystery
Art is for healing ourselves, and everybody needs their own personal art to heal up their problems.
~Linda Ronstadt
For Poetry Friday, a poem by Linnea Nelson:
Healing the Pasture
by Linnea Nelson
On our friends’ sheep farm, you pull the half-birthed
sac from a petrified ewe, jostling the slippery form and begging
C’mon little one, wake up, c’mon, c’mon. It lies
motionless, blue, in a mess of blood and amniotic membrane
and there is an impossible stretch of abject moment
during which we acknowledge the newborn is dead. As you
cease your coaxing and compressions,
it splutters, breathes, bleats to the mother
who calls back, and the lamb lives.
read the rest here
*************
More Art 4 All has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Michelle!
Terrain.org info for high school teachers and others
~Linda Ronstadt
For Poetry Friday, a poem by Linnea Nelson:
Healing the Pasture
by Linnea Nelson
On our friends’ sheep farm, you pull the half-birthed
sac from a petrified ewe, jostling the slippery form and begging
C’mon little one, wake up, c’mon, c’mon. It lies
motionless, blue, in a mess of blood and amniotic membrane
and there is an impossible stretch of abject moment
during which we acknowledge the newborn is dead. As you
cease your coaxing and compressions,
it splutters, breathes, bleats to the mother
who calls back, and the lamb lives.
When a pasture is left
alone—not required to grow anything—it is said...read the rest here
*************
More Art 4 All has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Michelle!
Terrain.org info for high school teachers and others
Frau Holle
The Nordic Frau Holle (believed to originally be called Hulda) is a deity that predates the Norse pantheon. She is associated with Winter, Yule season, and snowfall is said to be Frau Holle shaking out her feather mattress.
~Kerria
For Art Thursday, Mother Hulda a.k.a. Frau Holle.
Frau Holle (ca. 1939), Johann-Mithlinger-Siedlung
photo by Buchhändler
Frau Holle, Landschaftsvorlage: das Lahntal
Otto Ubbelohde - "Kinder- und Hausmärchen der Brüder Grimm" First published 1907-1909 by Leipziger Turm-Verlag
Festkalender von Hans Thoma
Berlin series for social welfare 1967, fairy tale of the Brothers Grimm, Mother Hulda
scanned by NobbiP
Berlin series for social welfare 1967, fairy tale of the Brothers Grimm, Mother Hulda
scanned by NobbiP
Frau Holle Denkmal im im Frau Holle Park in Hessisch Lichtenau
photo by Kroll Markus
Hölzerne Statue von Viktor Donhauser am Frau-Holle-Teich auf dem Hohen Meißner
photo by Markus Goebel
~Kerria
For Art Thursday, Mother Hulda a.k.a. Frau Holle.
Frau Holle (ca. 1939), Johann-Mithlinger-Siedlung
photo by Buchhändler
Frau Holle, Landschaftsvorlage: das Lahntal
Otto Ubbelohde - "Kinder- und Hausmärchen der Brüder Grimm" First published 1907-1909 by Leipziger Turm-Verlag
Festkalender von Hans Thoma
Berlin series for social welfare 1967, fairy tale of the Brothers Grimm, Mother Hulda
scanned by NobbiP
Berlin series for social welfare 1967, fairy tale of the Brothers Grimm, Mother Hulda
scanned by NobbiP
Frau Holle Denkmal im im Frau Holle Park in Hessisch Lichtenau
photo by Kroll Markus
Hölzerne Statue von Viktor Donhauser am Frau-Holle-Teich auf dem Hohen Meißner
photo by Markus Goebel
Labels:
Art Thursday,
Brothers Grimm,
Frau Holle,
winter,
Yule
Monday, December 5, 2022
Know That You Are Loved
I like not only to be loved, but also to be told I am loved.
~George Eliot
For Music Monday, Know That You Are Loved by Cleo Sol:
~George Eliot
For Music Monday, Know That You Are Loved by Cleo Sol:
Thursday, December 1, 2022
Bright fish
Food for the body is not enough. There must be food for the soul.
~Dorothy Day
Happy Poetry Friday! Hope you are enjoying all the poetry to be found.
SOULCRAFT
by John McCullough
It’s true: there is a light at the centre of my body.
If I could, I would lift aside a curtain of this flesh
and demonstrate, but for now it is my private neon.
It is closest to the air at certain moments,
like when buttercups repair a morning’s jagged edge.
Other times, a flock of days descends
and my soul flickers, goes to ground.
Without light, I’m all membrane; each part
becomes a gate. I pour across each margin
and nothing has enough hands to catch me,
my teeth knocking so fast I daren’t hold any piece
of myself near in case I start a banquet.
I’m only eased by accident. On the drenched path,
I pick up snails and transport them to safer earth
then feel a stirring. I watch as rain streams
from lopped-back elms, my face teeming with water
and―hello stranger―my soul glides to my surface
like it, too, belongs there; like a bright fish rising to feed.
*************
Reading to the Core has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Catherine!
~Dorothy Day
Happy Poetry Friday! Hope you are enjoying all the poetry to be found.
SOULCRAFT
by John McCullough
It’s true: there is a light at the centre of my body.
If I could, I would lift aside a curtain of this flesh
and demonstrate, but for now it is my private neon.
It is closest to the air at certain moments,
like when buttercups repair a morning’s jagged edge.
Other times, a flock of days descends
and my soul flickers, goes to ground.
Without light, I’m all membrane; each part
becomes a gate. I pour across each margin
and nothing has enough hands to catch me,
my teeth knocking so fast I daren’t hold any piece
of myself near in case I start a banquet.
I’m only eased by accident. On the drenched path,
I pick up snails and transport them to safer earth
then feel a stirring. I watch as rain streams
from lopped-back elms, my face teeming with water
and―hello stranger―my soul glides to my surface
like it, too, belongs there; like a bright fish rising to feed.
*************
Reading to the Core has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Catherine!
Luminous
Light in Nature creates the movement of colors.
~Robert Delaunay
Hi y'all! Many things are competing for my attention this morning. Making a post for Art Thursday, of course, plus today is the first day for the advent calendar of jellies and I want to bake something to put jelly on. The dogs want to be fed and taken outside (did that) and the crows wanted breakfast (did that). I fixed myself some coffee, so I guess now I can post. (Ugh, the crows came back for second breakfast but I'm pretending not to hear...)
Light is our focal point today, but first, here's an advent calendar to color by "World of Moose":
Cabins at Night
by Svend Svendsen
Glowing Nocturne
by Svend Svendsen
Man Reading by Lamplight
by Georg Kersting
~Robert Delaunay
Hi y'all! Many things are competing for my attention this morning. Making a post for Art Thursday, of course, plus today is the first day for the advent calendar of jellies and I want to bake something to put jelly on. The dogs want to be fed and taken outside (did that) and the crows wanted breakfast (did that). I fixed myself some coffee, so I guess now I can post. (Ugh, the crows came back for second breakfast but I'm pretending not to hear...)
Light is our focal point today, but first, here's an advent calendar to color by "World of Moose":
Cabins at Night
by Svend Svendsen
Glowing Nocturne
by Svend Svendsen
Man Reading by Lamplight
by Georg Kersting
Labels:
Art Thursday,
Georg Kersting,
Svend Svendsen,
World of Moose
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)