These Bach Baroque Suites for guitar go perfectly with these sublime poems.
I would like to ask everyone to pray for all the people in the northwest who are experiencing the fires. This includes personal family members and blogging friends and their families.
And while we're at it pray for the people on the Gulf Coast.
Hopefully Hurricane Sally will become depressed, lose her will to survive and give up, like Marco did.
This is an embarrassingly late review. I was given this collection of poetry months ago and time got away and then I flat out forgot. I am actually not a fan of poetry, I don't know why. Takes too much discipline to read.
Poetry isn't meant to be gulped, but savored. I feel so overwhelmed with Mount TBR that I find myself reading non fiction and mysteries just because they're easy to devour.
However.
I really enjoyed this book of poetry. Maybe it is the minimalism. One thing that does appeal to me in poetry is the painting of visual imagery through power of expressive words. Frank Watson's words wash over me in rich, deep yet cool colors. I am going to post a couple of the poems because they can speak well enough for themselves.
origins
to the poet there
is a love for beauty
in all its terrifying forms
in the quiet
stirrings before
the world wakes
when even the night
creatures cease to speak
with distant sands
turned white as flecks
on wild black hair I follow the Northern Winds
to where the world begins
before Creation
cast in stone
we built this world
on what was sown
since all eternity is rest
why not use this
time to do our best?
adrift
pallid and hollow
we’ve drifted
through this town
for centuries
and no one’s home
her words
strung up
on stranded hair—
blown away
in the winter wind
smoke gun
thoughts in the air—
these words sit silent there
the naked despair
of a people
without courage
who wander
another’s land
walking
in breathless prayer
for centuries
without imagination
where flames drive me deep
into the song of sleep
and the narrow road
that carries me off somewhere
And finally, one short one:
fit into a cube
and packed, as is,
into another dimension
where the spoken word
shall never leave
12 comments:
I also sometimes have trouble with poetry. It takes patience and time. I like what you posted.
I so hope that these natural disasters abate soon. The loss to life and the serious disruption of lives is terrible.
Poetry and I are always hit and miss -- some I love and remember forever, some just...passes me by. Of the two you posted, "Origins" speaks more to me than "Adrift", for whatever reason..
i confess i like Elizabethan poetry better than modern: there's more action and ambiguity... these are nice, tho... ditto on Google: i'm a computer dolt anyway, and any time i do something right it seems like an accident, lol... we hope and trust Ms. Sally doesn't do you all wrong...
Oh, Lord. The fires are just sickening.
Hi Brian!
I don't know why I have such a hard time disciplining myself to read poetry. It's worth it.
It looks like Sally has run her course. My parents got back their power yesterday.
Hi Stephen
That's what I wonder. Watson's poetry I found enjoyable to read, but normally I have a hard time. Why does one work speak to us, but not another?
Hi Mudpuddle,
You definitely have superior powers of concentration to mine. I have to work at reading Elizabethan poetry. That's probably an attitude problem on my part. I feel in such a hurry that I must rush through what I read.
Next year I am not going to require that I read so many books in a year. It really defeats the purpose of reading.
How's your children?
my son went back to his house but my daughter is still evacuated... the air where we live is awful: impossible to spend any time outdoors...
Man! I'm sorry.
Loved your poetry
Hi Sandy, These are crazy, extreme days. But He is on His throne.
Thank you, Ashok!
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