Oscar Wilde wrote: “Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation.”
Pages
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Monday, December 29, 2008
Photos by Mary Ellen Mark
In 1968, around the time she was focusing her lens on war protesters and transvestites in New York, Mary Ellen Mark took a job as a still photographer on the set of “Alice’s Restaurant,” directed by Arthur Penn.
More than 100 films later Ms. Mark culled thousands of images, both impromptu and staged, for her latest book, “Seen behind the scene/Forty years of photographing on set/Mary Ellen Mark” (Phaidon). Some of the images will be on view at the Staley-Wise Gallery in SoHo starting Jan. 9.
Sunday, December 28, 2008
Way to go Paula, way to go ...
The Guardian interviews the magnificent Debra Winger
Love lift us up where we belong ... irresistable
.
Saturday, December 27, 2008
On reading of the death of Harold Pinter
this quiet denouement in the dead of night
brought into being here
(if not into complete awareness of itself)
above the silent tracks
of suburban Sydney's railway lines
running east to west
or vice versa
depending on the inexorable
moment's need to travel.
And so you pause - reflect,
reverberate with hope
you will not stoop to mimic, imitate
or, parrot-like, regurgitate
that other voice,
original,
which being neither sinful
in its own right
nor imbued with saintliness
speaks out (and still insistent) to demand
that each of us speaks too
so that we may be
still heard -
on this morning after.
.
Friday, December 26, 2008
Death of an adjective
By the time I studied The Birthday Party at university in 1977 his plays had already been performed for twenty years. That's all of my life so far. They'll still be performed long after I've buggered off.
Michael Billington's obituary in The Guardian
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Dear Santa
still in darkness
with frosted window panes, thick snow
like a blanket of silence over
the garden of a child's half-memory
would we still discover that a kind old gentleman
dressed in red
and sporting a large white beard, white whiskers,
had left his sooty finger prints
on a strategically placed china tea cup
before half-finishing a McVittie's digestive biscuit,
perhaps too rushed,
perhaps confronted by one biscuit too many
on that, his busiest night
of the year now risen to its climax;
to be met by a lost boy's hopes, perhaps his expectations
of all he wished for:
a big red fire engine, that dazzling bicycle
(all emerald and gold) and, best of all,
the Airfix model kit of a Saturn VI rocket,
bearing not just Neil Armstrong and all the rest
of the Apollo space programme we grew up with
(their names forgotten mostly)
but also met by other hopes; our expectations
of everything that morning promised it would bring.
.
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
The House Was Quiet And The World Was Calm
The reader became the book; and summer night
Was like the conscious being of the book.
The house was quiet and the world was calm.
The words were spoken as if there was no book,
Except that the reader leaned above the page,
Wanted to lean, wanted much to be
The scholar to whom his book is true, to whom
The summer night is like a perfection of thought.
The house was quiet because it had to be.
The quiet was part of the meaning, part of the mind:
The access of perfection to the page.
And the world was calm. The truth in a calm world,
In which there is no other meaning, itself
Is calm, itself is summer and night, itself
Is the reader leaning late and reading there.
Wallace Stevens
Monday, December 22, 2008
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Walking with old men I'd never met
they came to greet me as old friends might meet
somewhere on a quiet country road, near dusk
and after many years apart, roving separately
in search of life's adventures later to be shared,
not quite as tall tales to be told in fading light
as old friends strolled in search of somewhere
welcoming - but not entirely as the gospel either;
not when you've barely crossed the threshold,
barely made your own way into the world
down any road at all ahead of you, where life,
you could still see, stretched out enticingly.
And as we walked and talked, some truths
spoke more than others yet I walked untroubled,
listening less than carefully but certain that no words
that they could say to me that day could sway me
from my purpose or make me hesitate or think again
to wonder what the journey might be worth or cost.
.
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Carol Ann Duffy's Mrs Scrooge
Scrooge doornail-dead, his widow, Mrs Scrooge, lived by herself
in London Town. It was that time of year, the clocks long back,
when shops were window-dressed with unsold tinsel, trinkets, toys,
trivial pursuits, with sequinned dresses and designer suits,
with chocolates, glacé fruits and marzipan, with Barbie,
Action Man, with bubblebath and aftershave and showergel;
the words Noel and Season's Greetings brightly mute
in neon lights. The city bells had only just chimed three,
but it was dusk already. It had not been light all day.
Mrs Scrooge sat googling at her desk,
Carol Ann Duffy's Mrs Scrooge in today's Guardian
......................
Friday, December 19, 2008
Some poets ought not to be read unless there’s an adult in the house with you
an obviously well-read and erudite man with quite a lot to say,
and any one of his poems from A Short History of the Shadow -
let’s imagine for the sake of a literary argument
...................................................................we might have chosen
IF THIS IS WHERE GOD’S AT, WHY IS THAT FISH DEAD –
read on a close, some might say stuffy while others choose oppressive,
December night not long after a massive electrical storm
...................................................................has passed overhead
leaving sulphurous tones in the atmosphere to challenge some senses
while playing quietly in the background of an almost empty apartment
The Tallis Scholars 25th Anniversary (Disc 2) fills what might be a void
..................................................................with Media Vita for 6 voices
(which I’ve taken to listening to quite a lot, these still surprising days)
and there, I think, you have it - not to put too fine a point on it;
the makings of a contemplative moment or two of introspection,
...................................................................self-reflection perhaps –
although some observers, sitting on one’s shoulder let’s further imagine,
might offer up less generous interpretations of a man’s late night ruminations
by choosing words such as self-indulgent, self-pitying or even morbid.
...................................................................But that’s for those others
to say. Now - nothing seems certain, not even the words one chooses.
But the night’s quiet has finally arrived because at one thirty-three a.m. suburban
trains no longer rattle along the tracks below the veranda window, wide-open
to let in as much of the still night’s air as the darkness will permit.
.........
Thursday, December 18, 2008
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Maybe me
how to say –
I seek a simpler way
to be the man I must become,
perhaps the man I have become
already, without seeing how
it happened, how it was or is
that I’ve become
this somehow different creature
this strange chameleon
- utterly transformed -
this unknown person,
this man I dare not recognise
and barely comprehend
although he must be me
must always have been in me
must always have so wanted to be free
to be at last what he and me - may be.
Monday, December 15, 2008
Sunday, December 14, 2008
Saturday, December 13, 2008
Friday, December 12, 2008
Mr Percival
His myspace site can't even begin to do justice to his skill.
Breakfast in Annandale
litters the wet road outside the corner café
where a French waitress with short spiky hair,
Gucci glasses and an accent to die for
smiles as we enter - remembering our first visit
perhaps - but possibly because she sees love
joining us at the small, square table beneath
a great window through which the sun’s struggle
against the early morning clouds and drizzle
barely disturbs our deconstruction of the menu.
And if it seems that we may be wholly oblivious
to all that the world and this day have to offer -
forgive us – for we have wasted too much time
and risked the loss of everything we hope for
which makes this breakfast, here in
not simply a question of which tea to take
and not just about a momentary pause to praise
the cappuccino; nor can it be wholly explained
by the way you lick my honey from your finger tips
or lift a button mushroom to your lips and smile.
But it’s in such small, connected acts of love
that we may once again discover what it was
and is and will forever be - the force that makes
you quiver when we kiss and me grow calm
so that the noise desists inside my puzzled head
just long enough to have no fear and feel no pain
and long enough to learn to trust the sense within
the moment that our pulses race towards the infinite,
where we may find - not just the pleasure of it all
but reach the heart of what it is that we complete.
Thursday, December 11, 2008
Thank God your good friend owns a clapped out old Transit van ...
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
rain falls on a cobbled lane
Tuesday, December 09, 2008
We were younger then ...
Saw them live in The Appollo, Glasgow in 1973. It's been demolished but we might be still there calling out for more.
Monday, December 08, 2008
Drenched again
a force of nature bearing down upon the ground
I could not find my solid footing on today,
in the dark of that redemptive tempest’s winds
which wrapped my bones in shredded nightmares
ripped by all the fears we weave into our hopes
out of the dreamer's yarn we cut as cloth to suit
the fashion of our age, temperament and disposition
as if such styling mattered or might make a difference
to indifferent storms that weather sends our way
regardless of our lack of readiness for wind and rain.
After midnight
its oppressive
tempered by the softest breeze,
no more than hinted at; gently
caressing the perplexed brow
of a man who knows not how
to sleep, although the day’s dead
weight bears down on him,
to hold him between thoughts
of what he might have done
(but differently) and hopes
of what he might yet do, if time
permits and opportunity arises
like the sun, presaging dawn.
.
Sunday, December 07, 2008
My story does not end this way ...
Please excuse the impersonal nature of this note. Due to the high volume of material we receive we cannot write a personal response to everyone.
It just doesn't end that way. Stubborn of me, I know, as well as egotistical and maybe wholly delusional but it simply doesn't end like that.
_
Saturday, December 06, 2008
Dreams, doctor?
There’s a snow covered raised area below me. It has the proportions of a postage stamp but it is huge, the size of a football field. There are spectator stands around three sides of the raised area. The snow is pristine, without a mark upon its unbroken surface which, for some reason, is significant. Something will happen on this virginal space, something unpleasant, like a sacrifice maybe or public executions. There is an air of foreboding about the scene. Don’t know why.
A group of skiers appears from the river valley. They are dressed in huge parka jackets with hoods and fur fringes. All are dressed in white jackets except one who is wearing a blue parka. The group ski onto the raised playing field. They ski backwards and forwards, round in circles, up and down, all over the formerly pristine surface. They are obviously intent on messing up the perfection of the untouched area. As they plough through the snow they churn it up revealing a sickly looking yellow substance below. It has the colour and consistency of custard but it could just as easily be puss spilling out of an infected wound.
As they totally destroy the surface shouts, wails, horrified angry cries break the silence. The skiers stop, look beyond the stands then at each other. They seem satisfied that they have achieved what they came to do. They speed away pursued by irate, evil blond haired people – the Midwich cuckoos, maybe, grown up into their mid-twenties.
The skiers head up the river which is frozen solid. Beneath the thin covering of snow there is jet black ice, as smooth as glass, thick and strong. They ski as fast as possible pursued by the Miwdwich adults who are demonically angry. The river opens up into a vast frozen lake. The skiers head for the shore. Upon reaching the frozen water’s edge each skier throws him or herself into the tufts of frozen bracken style grasses bordering the lake. They vanish into / underneath the land. Their pursuers are incensed.
I’ve become one of the skiers, maybe the guy in the blue parka. I leap into the bracken but I don’t vanish. I’m about to be discovered by the evil pursuers – I think they’re human flesh eaters by this time – when I’m grabbed from beneath the earth and pulled down to safety.
Friday, December 05, 2008
Australia
Thursday, December 04, 2008
Quiet, soul
who I am, just who it is
I think
I am;
this man before you now,
unknown to him,
himself - confused -
not as an affectation
nor an exercise
in self-effacing, false
humility (which hides
itself within an easy hubris)
but in this old frame: this simple
man with little noise to make?
Wednesday, December 03, 2008
Tuesday, December 02, 2008
Monday, December 01, 2008
Jo Shapcott's Muse
of your body, you make that noise like a dog
dreaming, dreaming of the long run he makes
in answer to some jolt to his hormones,
running across landfills, running, running
by tips and shorelines from the scent of too much,
but still going with head up and snout
in the air because he loves it all
and has to get away. I have to kiss deeper
and more slowly - your neck, your inner arm,
the neat creases of your toes, the shadow
behind your knee, the white angles of your groin -
until you fall quiet because only then
can I get the damned words to come into my mouth.
Some days, a man needs a little help.
_