each time Dan and I stand before those ancient lion-hunt friezes, we wonder: How could an artist have sculpted these exquisitely sensitive images
of such a brutal ritual of slaughter? This paradox says so much about that haunting dichotomy of human nature.
I chose the second poem for our companion video before fully realizing how much it balanced the violent mood of Assyrian Lions. In his
“Moore’s Doves” piece Dan sees some local birds in a fresh light after contemplating Henry Moore’s sculptures — bringing to mind Oscar Wilde’s
quip that “nature imitates art.” And isn't it true that what we perceive in art museums so often influences our vision of the natural world?
Another paradox in our human experience . . . — Suzanne
"Sketching the Assyrian Reliefs, with My Wife, at the British Museum"
"Moore's Doves"
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Sketching the Assyrian Reliefs, with
My Wife, at the British Museum
Were it not
mere alabaster, hewn
the better portion of 3000
civilizing years, the Dying Lioness
of Nimrud , writhing in the
grey
spew
of an archer’s flank-sprung
shaft, would
continue,
year on year, to writhe
on the black friezes
of tossed sleep, to nudge
with her bruised snout
and dark closed eyes
into our dreams, like
painful words
that sputter eons to rekindle
in the corners of
the mind, like hunters’ fires
verging on our harmless
seekers’ lives — stalking
the beautiful, found rarely,
never uncombined
with pain.
Moore’s Doves
IN MEM. Henry Moore (1898-1986)
Soft sculpture of
the morning. Sunlight rose
on their swollen breasts,
where
they roost on the hard blackness of the
power
lines. Coo
gently as we pace upon
our
early walk,
beneath. Who
says an artist's vision, true
enough,
can't change
the living world — the way, forever after,
that we see:
merging craft
with blood's
warm living pulse? Round soft breasts, like Moore ’s globed forms,
against the rising light. Or
like Cycladic women, small
heads &
rounded bosoms
— tiny fecund
sculpture, in glass cases,
that
he surely saw, as
we
had, in the British
Museum halls. And thought, as we,
how they’d reminded
him
— beyond their
ancient lore —
of sun-tinged
hills / or the soft breasts of cooing doves / before the rush of day.
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*“Sketching the Assyrian Reliefs, with / My Wife,
at the British Museum ” first appeared in
the literary journal, Epoch (Cornell
University Press), and later in Dan’s
first full-length volume of poems, The Artist and the Crow (Purdue University Press) // “Moore ’s Doves” first appeared in the final issue of the Massachusetts journal
Diner, and was later reprinted in the International Poetry Review (UNC,Greensboro ) in
its original form. This revised version will appear, alongside “Assyrian Reliefs,”
in Back to the Source: Selected Poems & Parables [San Francisco Bay
Press, 2018].
first full-length volume of poems, The Artist and the Crow (Purdue University Press) // “
Diner, and was later reprinted in the International Poetry Review (UNC,
in Back to the Source: Selected Poems & Parables [