It’s odd when what we’re reading merges with where. So it is when Dan’s
interior meditation
on a William Carlos Williams poem fuses with the visages of fellow train travelers.
on a William Carlos Williams poem fuses with the visages of fellow train travelers.
Our thanks to guest artist
Ann Ropp for her haunting images of isolated faces (selected from
her watercolor series titled “Ancestors”).
-- Suzanne
[For more about Ann's art, see the bio below.]her watercolor series titled “Ancestors”).
-- Suzanne
_________________________________________________________________________________
Note to Doctor Williams, from a DC
Subway,
in the
Lull Between Christmas
& New Year’s Eve
“To
give a damn”
(and
to not give a damn) —
most difficult
resolution!
William Carlos Williams
when your
Christmas greens went up in flame
by your own hand (town father’s and
life-giver’s),
at once a
conflagration and a prayer,
I breathed that
thickened heat
with you . . . .
Writing this on a
train,
your book in
hand,
I dwell on
faces purified, this moment,
by the task of
being human,
simmering, I imagine,
with the slow
incessant flame of gentle sorrow.
An earlier version of "Note to Doctor Williams … " appeared in Dan's original book of
poems, The Artist and the Crow (Purdue University Press), and
will be included in his
forthcoming selected volume, "Back to the Source: Selected Poems & Parables" (San
Francisco Bay Press, 2018).
_________________________________________________________________________
forthcoming selected volume, "Back to the Source: Selected Poems & Parables" (San
Francisco Bay Press, 2018).
_________________________________________________________________________
Ann Ropp has exhibited work in galleries throughout the
recipient of a Southern Arts Federation / NEA Fellowship. Since earning an MFA from
Columbia University (NYC), she’s maintained a studio in
2011, Ann and Suzanne first collaborated on an unusual series of drawings, later exhibited
as “Two Characters in Search of a Title” at East Tennessee State University’s Tipton Gallery
(see Scott Contreras-Koterbay’s lively review in Antennae: The Journal of Animals and
Visual Culture at http://www.antennae.org.uk/back-issues-2013/4583481046
issue 25, Summer 2013).
Wonderful visually--of the subway and the watercolor portraits.
ReplyDeletesound / sight / word : very well done -- feels like i'm there in the subway + the way i feel after xmas
ReplyDeleteIan M.
This post is so poignant with all the “gentle sorrow” around us these days. Paintings are so moving, so freely executed.
ReplyDelete