Showing posts with label Owl's Head. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Owl's Head. Show all posts

Sunday, July 31, 2011

The Summons Comes For Mr Standfast





       


    
     They took Peter from the wreckagewith scarcely a scar except his twisted leg. Death had smoothed out some of the age in him, and had left his face muchas I remembered it long ago in the Mashonaland hills.  In his pocket was his old battered Pilgrim’s Progress.  It lies before me as I write, as beside it,for I was his only legatee – the little case which came to him weeks later,containing the highest honour that can be bestowed upon a soldier of Britain.


 



  

        It was fromthe Pilgrim’s Progress that I readnext morning, when in the lee of an apple orchard Mary and Blenkiron and Istood in the soft spring rain beside his grave. And what I read was the tale of the end, not of Mr Standfast who he hadsingled out for his counterpart, but of Mr Valiant-for-Truth whom he had nothoped to emulate.  I set down the wordsas a salute and a farewell:





 

         “Then said he, ‘I am going to my Father’s;and though with great difficulty I am got hither, yet now I do not repent me ofall the trouble I have been at to arrive where I am. My sword I give to himthat shall succeed me in my pilgrimage, and my courage and skill to him thatcan get it.  My marks and scars I carrywith me, to be a witness for me that I have fought His battles who will now bemy rewarder.’



 


        “So he passed over, and all thetrumpets sounded for him on the other side.” 









John Buchan, Mr Standfast (Chapter 54).  London, Hodder & Stoughton (1919) 

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Plover













I was the solitary plover
a pencil
        for a wing-bone
From the secret notes
I must tilt

upon the pressure
execute and adjust
      In us sea-air rhythm
"We live by the urgent wave
of the verse"








Lorine Niedecker, From Paean to Place (!968), included in Collected Works (ed. Jenny Penberthy), Berkeley, University of California Press, 2002

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Archilochos 279 (How Many Times)








How many times,
How many times
On the gray sea,
The sea combed
By the wind
Like a wilderness 
Of woman's hair,
Have we longed, 
Lost in nostalgia
For the sweetness 
Of homecoming.








1. Top image:  Vija Celmins, Ocean Surface, 1992, Woodcut, Museum of Modern Art, New York City


2. Lower image, Vija Celmins, Ocean Surface, 2000, Wood engraving, National Galleries of Scotland.


3.  Archilochos translation by Guy Davenport. Included in Seven Greeks, New York, New Directions, 1995.