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  • Marie Ndiaye :” Trois femmes puissantes” and Sarkozy.

    November 14th, 2009

    It is not often that I refer to political issues on this blog, indeed I do the commentating (or critique) elsewhere on a politics blog.

    But today in the stead of my Saturday Woman Writer snippets ( both Poetic and literary) I wish to refer to the case of Ms Ndiayeand the situation in Paris. All morning there have been alerts regarding the situation wherein a 42-year-old mother of two has left France and moved to Berlin because of increasing surveillance , which she detailed in an Interview (August 2009) with Inrockuptiples Magazine.

    The issues of surveillance and repression always being an interest to me as a writer.

    Ms Ndiaye’s book : Trois femmes puissantes is based in the migration issue. So, I will consider this post a short note on the problems in Paris and indeed in Calais. Calais is ignored a lot isn’t it? far easier for French Newspapers to publish pretty pictures, unqualified gossip and other malarkey that ignores issues of migration/immigration right at Calais Port.

    • “Three Strong Women”, by Marie Ndiaye.
    • Marie Ndiaye and Three Strong Women.
    • Interview with Ndiaye.
  • from ‘ Lost Quatrains’ by Alain Bosquet

    November 14th, 2009

     

    The edition that the Lost Quatrains (Stances Perdues) are derived from is a Dedalus (Dublin) one, from the Poetry Europe Series No.6:

    Stances Perdues, Alain Bosquet, Trans, Roger Little.1999

    I have published one from this edition before now on Poethead; and of course referred in brief to Anatoly Bisk (Alain Bosquet) in brief, I will add in a brief bio link at the end of this small post.

    (i).

    My world is simple: an armchair , a mirror,
    a ceiling that comes down at my commanding,
    a book where everything occurs at hope’s
    margins. I’m happy sketching larks ascending.

    (ii).

    I’ve learnt to perish several days a week.
    A simple exercise : you ask your heart
    to stop awhile. You don’t feel any pain:
    you simply live, arise and then depart.

    (iii).

    I prize the elements of which I’m made:
    nitrate and quicksand, pepper there for taste.
    I greet the devil and caress the rose.
    When I get up, a crystal is displaced.

    This is a bilingual edition with short biographies on Translator and Poet. I put in the Max Ernst print because he is quite a favourite of mine and I have used him before to show poetic/artistic collaboration in the post of Rene Crevel‘s Babylon:

    Babylon : Art and Image.

     

    Alain Bosquet Books.

  • Tools ‹ poethead — WordPress

    November 9th, 2009

    Tools ‹ poethead — WordPress.

  • Protected: Unrelated image sequences, by C Murray

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  • ‘Regeneration’ by Eithne Strong

    November 5th, 2009

    Regeneration

     

    Let me out. I’m rising out of death’s skull.
    Aha, old devil’s dower I have victoried.
    I leave you in the morning: it deals
    with every death and spring defeats the catafalque.

    You see I must believe in resurrection.
    This is it. Now. I was dead and am alive.
    Hello eternity. I can die no more horrific
    death than I have died. No hell beyond

    the horrors of myself that murdered
    every life; saw death in every pregnancy
    of dog and nut and man. Found death
    the ever death. Come bomb, come

    my most killing hate, life lives outside
    the blasting skull. Computer is not final.
    I cannot give you proof of course,
    I merely have arisen.

    Regeneration, from Sarah in Passing, by Eithne Strong, Dolmen Press 1974, illustrated by John Hodge.

    The Hare Arch by Ní Dhuibhne

  • Irish Writer’s Centre Benefit Evenings (October to December 2009)

    November 3rd, 2009

    IWC Logo.

    I am placing herein a link to the Index page of the Irish Writer’s Centre in Parnell Square who have been running a series of Benefit evenings to increase core funding as a result of cutting by The Irish Arts Council, (along with fund cutting to the Western Writer’s Centre). The Cuts occurred just after the Minister Martin Cullen appointed a New Irish Art’s Council Board (Linked at base of this piece/Politics.ie).

    The Benefits have been running Oct > Dec 2009 and are chaired by Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill and John F Deane, I hope to get out to one or two of them also. The Index page of the IWC is here:

    IWC Index of Events for Oct-Dec 2009

    WWC/IWC fundcuts. (Cullen’s Adventures with the Scissors)

  • The National Campaign for the Arts Petition.

    November 2nd, 2009

    I have discussed here on Poethead before now the effects of a bad approach to arts, indeed compared this current Government’s paucity in funding to the first government in this state which underfunded, censored and failed at every level in arts development , leading to the evolution of such groups as The Irish exhibition of Living Art, The White Stag group, the friends of the Hugh Lane Gallery and many more. Most of these comments are noted in the threads about Blasphemy and the funding cuts to the Irish and Western Writer’s Centres. I spent a considerable amount of time listening to similar stories in music development in Mayo (theres a facebook going there too).

    I expect that it is a lack of cultural understanding about how art develops that plagues this government, not to mention a sense of propriety which belies an almost lunatic ignorance (which most of the growing Irish generation has witnessed in the approach to the destruction of Tara by Dick Roche, John Gormley and Bertie Ahern). Ireland needs a viable Art’s Council and a Minister capable of intellectual integrity .:. Sign the Petition here ‘:’

    National Campaign for the Arts Petition.
    Western Writers

  • Anne Brontë

    November 2nd, 2009

    From the National Portrait Gallery : Via Wikimedia.

    Its Monday and it’s cold in Dublin, am so glad I got a new all-weather but mostly Mountain-climbing Jacket on the Mayo Sojourn (Post-flu and dental recovery). Since I am unpacked and having done the school run where the little one was welcomed back with much happiness, I thought to publish some Bronte (Brunty) poems and whilst adoring Emily’s amazing poetry , I think Anne mostly neglected.

    Poethead is about women writers , the whole idea of the blog was sited in the Penelopiad , the woman in exile and the community of women who are sometimes nodded to in serious writer’s chorus’, chorus-lines or indeed hymn sheets, though most of the time critique is poetry and weekend supplements tends to the male voice and academic fields.

    The North Wind

    “That wind is from the North: I know it well;
    No other breeze could have so wild a swell.
    Now deep and loud it thunders round my cell,
    The faintly dies, and softly sighs,
    And moans and murmurs mournfully.
    I know it’s language: thus it speaks to me:

    ‘I have passed over thy own mountains dear,
    Thy northern mountains, and they still are free;
    still lonely, wild, majestic,bleak and drear,
    And stern, and lovely , as they used to be

    ‘When thou a young enthusiast,
    As wild and free as they,
    O’er rocks and glens, and snowy heights,
    Didst thou love to stray.

    ‘I’ve blown the pure, untrodden snows
    in whirling eddies from their brows;
    And I have howled in cavern’s wild,
    Where thou, a joyous mountain-child,
    didst dearly love to be.
    The sweet world is not changed, but thou
    art pining in a dungeon now,
    Where thou must ever be.

    ‘No voice but mine can reach thy ear,
    And heaven has kindly sent me here
    to mourn and sigh with thee,
    And tell thee of the cherished land
    of thy nativity.’

    Blow on wild wind; thy solemn voice,
    However sad and drear,
    is nothing to the gloomy silence
    I have had to bear.

    Hot tears are streaming from my eyes,
    But these are better far
    Than that dull, gnawing , tearless time,
    The stupor of despair.

    Confined and hopeless as I am,
    Oh, speak of liberty!
    Oh, tell me of my mountain home,
    And I will welcome thee!

    The edition the Poem was taken from is an Everyman: Everyman : Selected Poems, The Brontes, Ed, Juliet RV Barker, 1993 .

    Margaret Atwood list.
    25 Pins in a Packet
    Julian of Norwich

  • Protected: Thinking these last few days about Yeats’ Poems.

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  • Protected: Bridie is on her way to Prayer, by Poethead

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