A poem should be palpable and mute
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Gilding the Lily
A poem should be palpable and mute
Posted by Joanne Cage -- Joanne Cage at 10:08 AM 0 comments
Saturday, August 24, 2013
My Son the Thinker
Posted by Joanne Cage -- Joanne Cage at 10:07 AM 2 comments
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Aesthetically Embarrassing Story
Once when I was very young, I fell in love at my doctor. Oh, he was ruggedly handsome, sort of like one of those dark western actors. He was married, of course, so I stifled the emotion all possible. Then one day, in church, I saw him with his wife and little daughter. The wife was rather good-looking, but the child looked exactly like her father. That was the only really plug-ugly child I had ever seen, before or since, and immediately my warmth toward the doctor froze over and dried up.
In addition to all his other qualities, Mr. Cage made beautiful children.
Posted by Joanne Cage -- Joanne Cage at 11:23 AM 1 comments
Friday, August 16, 2013
Week In Review
Jed came over Sunday, and we spent the next three days "supervising" the work in the kitchen: new faucets, cooktop and ovens. The dishwasher still sits in its crate, to be installed today, as some repairs had to be made to the floor and wiring under the old washer. Jed went back to Atlanta Wednesday afternoon, but I think he'll be back again this weekend. The new appliances are shiny white and beautiful, accentuating the shabby appearance of everything else in the kitchen. But all that will change eventually.
I slept four or five hours last night, then lay awake for an hour. Finally rose up, made coffee, and finished reading the last hundred pages of Master and Commander. If I could write like Patrick O'Brian, I'd feel as rich as old Jay Gould.
Also, last night Ramey sent her latest work on the sequel to Sweet Music On Moonlight Ridge by email, another good read.
Posted by Joanne Cage -- Joanne Cage at 6:25 AM 3 comments
Labels: appliances new
Sunday, August 11, 2013
Cesar
Posted by Joanne Cage -- Joanne Cage at 7:11 AM 4 comments
Friday, August 9, 2013
Old Notes
My dad was the only person who liked to hear me play the piano. He didn't care much for the Moonlight Sonata, Clair de Lune or the Chopin preludes, but he liked the hymns I would play by ear. Many times I have searched the phone directory and the internet, hoping I could rent a piano, but nothing ever comes of it.
I think it's time I forgave my mother for giving away or lending our piano to someone whose house subsequently burned down. Mama probably had reasons that I can't imagine, or don't want to.
The man is coming Monday morning to install the new kitchen appliances. I would give them all for a plain old piano, even one with a couple of dead keys.
*
On the other hand, it would probably be just another way to waste time.
Posted by Joanne Cage -- Joanne Cage at 11:26 AM 2 comments
Sunday, August 4, 2013
An Old Poem
Winter At the Inn
My merry muse departs, with all her train
of sweet beguilers. Fare you well, O joys
and gentle smiles, brave banisher of pain
stout laughter, all you valiant natural foes
of this old man Despair. Come back in spring,
and I will entertain you with the crumbs
this grimmer guest, who cannot smile or sing,
may overlook; and, when the summer comes,
we'll turn him out, we'll laugh him off the place--
Together we can do it, you and I--
Alone I am no match for him; his face
defies me to evict him. With a sigh,
spreading his bed of spikes, he takes his rest,
as if it were his house, and I the guest.
By JRC
Posted by Joanne Cage -- Joanne Cage at 10:45 AM 0 comments
Labels: Poems by me
Friday, August 2, 2013
Hero
A pit bull and two little dogs, looked like curly-haired dachshunds, had wandered into my yard. The big dog was dragging a leash, actually a piece of rubber hose or something similar, about three yards long. Gretchen ran them out of the front yard, and the little dogs hung around the periphery. But the pit bull ran to the back patio and got his leash wrapped around the deck stairs. I had to go and untangle him before he and his two little companions would leave the area, with Gretchen hot on their trail. She made sure they were all off the property.
The old pit bull looked at me and grinned when I got him loose from the stairs, and none of them acted aggressive toward me or Gretchen. Those were three beautiful dogs, and I hope they go home or their owner finds them soon. I'm sort of cautious about dogs I don't know, so I didn't get close enough to look at their tags.
Also yesterday I sent a bunch of poems to Negative Capability Press.
Posted by Joanne Cage -- Joanne Cage at 10:11 AM 0 comments
Labels: dogs