Tuesday, June 04, 2013

TUESDAY POEM | Rare Sounds Abound In These Places Where Wind Is Dressed In White by CB





*



aa

aatacttaat
atataagacc
catatatata
ttatctaaat
ctataataca
ttaatactta
acacttaata
cttttaaagt
acataattac
taatttaaaa
ctaaaattac
tacttatatt
ttattacttt
tcccatatta
tcacttacca
ttattatata
tcataatcta
atattataac
atattacaaa
tactattata
ttattatata
tataaatat.



                                                                        CB - New Harbor, Antarctica, 2005/6

  






This week's editor on the Tuesday Poem hub is Janis Freegard with a gorgeous fragment - an untitled, unfinished poem - by New Zealand poet Robin Hyde (1906 - 1939).

Janis writes, ". . . A tantalising sliver of a poem can leave us wondering about the whole, the turns it might have taken, the feelings it might have evoked.  In this case, we get the start of the journey, but not the final destination. . ." 



Please click on the quill to enjoy Robin's writing then follow the links to a host of other Tuesday Poems. Fellow poet and novelist, Christchurch-based Helen Lowe, has been publishing a series of 'ekphrastic' poems these past weeks, the concluding poem being the one she's posted today. I meant it to be a poem about sparrows led Helen and I into an unexpected and mutually-satisfying painting/poetry collaboration. You can read Helen's poem here and at the same time see the painting it gave rise to. There's a bit of a background story (isn't there always?). Thanks, Helen.  







* Finding The Vertical - Gesso & Ink on Paper 2009








2 comments:

  1. I want to know more about this image -- it's so intriguing.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I am stunned that there are no comments yet, although this is my second time to visit this post; the first time, I was without words!

    This is stunning in its bleakness, and the more beautiful for that.

    ReplyDelete