Thursday, 30 May 2013

Monet refuses the operation by Liesel Mueller

Doctor, you say there are no halos

around the streetlights of Paris

and what I see is an aberration

caused by old age, an affliction.

I tell you it has taken me all my life

to arrive at the vision of gas lamps as angels,

to soften and blur and finally banish

the edges you regret I don’t see,

to learn that the line I called the horizon

does not exist and sky and water,

so long apart, are the same state of being.

Fifty-four years before I could see

Rouen cathedral is built

of parallel shafts of sun,

and now you want to restore

my youthful errors: fixed

notions of top and bottom,

the illusion of three-dimensional space,

wisteria separate

from the bridge it covers.

What can I say to convince you

the Houses of Parliament dissolve

night after night to become

the fluid dream of the Thames?

I will not return to a universe

of objects that don’t know each other,

as if islands were not the lost children

of one great continent. The world

is flux, and light becomes what it touches,

becomes water, lilies on water,

above and below water,

becomes lilac and mauve and yellow

and white and cerulean lamps,

small fists passing sunlight

so quickly to one another

that it would take long, streaming hair

inside my brush to catch it.

To paint the speed of light!

Our weighted shapes, these verticals,

burn to mix with air

and change our bones, skin, clothes

to gases. Doctor,

if only you could see

how heaven pulls earth into its arms

and how infinitely the heart expands

to claim this world, blue vapor without end.

 

Friday, 24 May 2013

Desire by Alice Walker



My desire
is always the same; wherever Life
deposits me:
I want to stick my toe
& soon my whole body
into the water.
I want to shake out a fat broom
& sweep dried leaves
bruised blossoms
dead insects
& dust.
I want to grow
something.
It seems impossible that desire
can sometimes transform into devotion;
but this has happened.
And that is how I've survived:
how the hole
I carefully tended
in the garden of my heart
grew a heart
to fill it.

Friday, 17 May 2013

Wild Daisies by Bub Bridger


If you love me
Bring me flowers 
Wild daisies 
Clutched in your fist 
Like a torch 
No orchids or roses 
Or carnations 
No florist's bow 
Just daisies 
Steal them 
Risk your life for them 
Up the sharp hills 
In the teeth of the wind 
If you love me 
Bring me daisies 
That I will cram 
In a bright vase 
And marvel at

Thursday, 9 May 2013

The Visit by Jenny Bornholdt

Megan

Mary

You approach the world
with open arms and hope
it wants you. Hope to be
asked in to sit amongst the
fine furniture. The world is
busy and polite and believes
in independence. You want
to make friends, be
boisterous. You'd expected
something a little more
gregarious but you'll
take a photo anyway to show
your friends. Here it is.
Here's the world on a good
day, turned slightly
away, but this is no
offence, merely the sun was
in its eyes and it turned
briefly to avoid being
blinded by it.





Thursday, 2 May 2013

Sprezzatura by James Arthur

Mary

Megan


        Effortlessness, I learn again,
        means putting all opinion & mulishness aside,

    
        so when this almost-nothingness
        alights, as occasionally it must

        it lands with the padding footfall of a child ballerina
        who's terrified to be there, & hopeful,

        so that when it turns,
        fast, spinning
        as a dreidel spins, it seems to have no contours
        or definite sides,

        so that it's compact
        & can deflect any point
        & springs like laughter, for it's of the world
        & there is such a thing