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Category: poetry

The Quality of Sprawl: flower power/ word power

 

 

The moment I saw this exuberantly “bird-ready” example of Western Australia’s floral emblem, I suddenly remembered one of my favourite Australian poems.

Les Murray (1938 – 2019) never became a Nobel Laureate.

Depending on my mood, I find that fact “puzzling” (at his best, Murray was so very obviously – for much of his adult life – one of the greater 20th century poets) or “utterly predictable”. (his verse was so overtly Australian, and his views were not always “palatable”)

The Quality of Sprawl’s opening verse:

 

Sprawl is the quality

of the man who cut down his Rolls-Royce

into a farm utility truck, and sprawl

is what the company lacked when it made repeated efforts

to buy the vehicle back and repair its image.

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Word power: Natalie Merchant and Walt Whitman

 

 

Natalie and Walt have just unwittingly delayed the promised leopard post!

(it will be the next one, I promise)

The photo alludes to one of my favourite Walt Whitman poems, from Leaves of Grass.

Most printed interviews with musicians are time-wasting, publicist-driven piffle.

A notable exception is The New Yorker interview, published today – worth reading, whether or not you admire/know Natalie Merchant’s singing/songs.

There aren’t a lot of people writing love songs to Walt Whitman.

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Hope

 

Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune without the words,
And never stops at all…

So begins a justly celebrated poem by Emily Dickinson.

In this post “hope” is viewed through photographic, musical and poetic “lenses”.

 

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