A common man marvels at uncommon things. A wise man marvels at the commonplace. CONFUCIUS
Showing posts with label Norman Nicholson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Norman Nicholson. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 January 2014

Poetic Connections

My poem from a couple of days ago — with its lines I skipped away, a nobody with nothing, / And felt as light as dust and free as air — brought to mind the Beatles' song, Nowhere Man:

He's a real nowhere man,
Sitting in his Nowhere Land,
Making all his nowhere plans
For nobody.

Which made me recall this piece by Emily Dickinson:

I'm nobody! Who are you?
Are you nobody, too?
Then there's a pair of us! — don't tell!
They'd banish us, you know.

How dreary to be somebody!
How public, like a frog  
To tell your name the livelong day  
To an admiring bog!

Which caused me to think of my favourite Emily Dickinson poem: 

We introduce ourselves
To Planets and to Flowers
But with ourselves
Have etiquettes
Embarrassments
And awes

Which at once conjured up Wordsworth's daffodils: 

I wandered lonely as a cloud
That floats on high o'er vales and hills,
When all at once I saw a crowd,
A host, of golden daffodils;
Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.

Continuous as the stars that shine
And twinkle on the milky way,
They stretched in never-ending line
Along the margin of a bay:
Ten thousand saw I at a glance,
Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.

Which connected inevitably with other Lake District poets, including the great but underappreciated Norman Nicholson:

And what need therefore
To stretch for the straining kite? — for kite and flower
Bloom in my room for ever; the light that lifts them
Shines in my own eyes, and my body’s warmth
Hatches their red in my veins. It is the Gulf Stream
That rains down the chimney, making the soot spit; it is the Trade Wind
That blows in the draught under the bedroom door.
My ways are circumscribed, confined as a limpet
To one small radius of rock; yet
I eat the equator, breathe the sky, and carry
The great white sun in the dirt of my finger nails.

Which returned me to the wonderful Emily Dickinson, who ate the equator and breathed the sky despite being confined to Amherst, Massachusetts:

The wind tapped like a tired man,
And like a host, “Come in,”
I boldly answered; entered then
My residence within
  
A rapid, footless guest,         
To offer whom a chair
Were as impossible as hand
A sofa to the air.
  
No bone had he to bind him,
His speech was like the push         
Of numerous humming-birds at once
From a superior bush.
  
His countenance a billow,
His fingers, if he pass,
Let go a music, as of tunes
Blown tremulous in glass.         
  
He visited, still flitting;
Then, like a timid man,
Again he tapped —’t was flurriedly —
And I became alone.

I could go on like this all day, for poetic connections are so infinitely rich . . .

Tuesday, 10 February 2009

Yorkshire And Kent: The North/South Divide?

Some more quotations from my mother's commonplace book. The 1st is a poem by Vita Sackville-West: Bloomsbury-ite, bisexual, wife of Harold Nicolson, and lover of Violet Trefusis and Virginia Woolf.

Full Moon

She was wearing the coral taffeta trousers
Someone had brought her from Ispahan,
And the little gold coat with pomegranate blossoms,
And the coral-hafted feather fan;
But she ran down a Kentish lane in the moonlight,
And skipped in the pool of the moon as she ran.


She cared not a rap for all the big planets,
For Betelgeuse or Aldebaran,
And all the big planets cared nothing for her,
That small, impertinent charlatan;
But she climbed on a Kentish stile in the moonlight,
And laughed at the sky through the sticks of her fan.

I think this is a perfect gem of a conceit of a poem: the devil-may-care lightness of touch, the well judged repetitions, the exoticism (bringing the East and the romance of Space to the humble Garden of Kent, where Sackville-West lived in the not-so-humble Sissinghurst Castle), the sheer delicious exuberance.

And now for something completely different, as the saying goes, and one specially for The Weaver Of Grass...

Creation - Nobbut God

'First on, there was nobbut God...' Genesis 1.1 (Yorkshire Dialect Translation).

First on
There was silence.
And God said:
'Let there be clatter'.

The wind, unclenching,
Runs its thumbs
Along the dry bristles of Yorkshire Fog.

The mountain ousel
Oboes its one note.

After rain
Water lobelia
Drips like a tap
On the tarn's tight surface-tension.

But louder,
And every second nearer,
Like chain explosions
From farther nebulae
Light-yearing across space:
The thudding of my own blood.

'It's nobbut me,'
Says God.

From Seasons Of The Spirit by Norman Nicholson.