Art and Earth

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2 notes &

Ode to a Happy Man (Poem by Corinna Parr)

Filed under poem poems poetry lit corinna parr erotica women sex happiness love couples bonding

1 note &

LOVES OF MY LIFE (Poem by Chris Brockman)


Some were only in a catalog,
Lovely, with no thorns pictured.
Others but buds of potential beauty,
To look, but otherwise strictured.

A few opened and spread,
Color a magnet, fragrance a drug,
Then faded with the night, lost
Color and perfume away on the frost

Roses bloom and roses fade.
But I’ve preserved the joy they made.
I’ve kept some petals, essential part,
Pressed in the pages of my heart.

One, it’s true, just grew and grew
Climbing trellis me,
Spread from stalk strong and green,
And blossomed repeatedly.

She is my garden, my bouquet,
But the loves of my life are a tiny part
Of my heart for we both know
That it’s love that makes love grow.

 
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Copyright 2013 by Chris Brockman 
Images: Octavio Ocampo

LOVES OF MY LIFE (Poem by Chris Brockman)

Some were only in a catalog,

Lovely, with no thorns pictured.

Others but buds of potential beauty,

To look, but otherwise strictured.


A few opened and spread,

Color a magnet, fragrance a drug,

Then faded with the night, lost

Color and perfume away on the frost


Roses bloom and roses fade.

But I’ve preserved the joy they made.

I’ve kept some petals, essential part,

Pressed in the pages of my heart.


One, it’s true, just grew and grew

Climbing trellis me,

Spread from stalk strong and green,

And blossomed repeatedly.


She is my garden, my bouquet,

But the loves of my life are a tiny part

Of my heart for we both know

That it’s love that makes love grow.


 

********************************************************************************************************************************

Copyright 2013 by Chris Brockman

Images: Octavio Ocampo

Filed under poem poems poetry loves life women men flowers octavio ocampo collections lit national poetry month

12 notes &

49 Plays

She Will Not Say by Krista Detor

Tonight an ill wind is blowing, blowing
Something wicked comes this way
To the woods your daughter’s going, going
For what she will not say

I hear a fire is glowing, glowing
And women dance around
Why this is I am not knowing, knowing
But they never make a sound

Get your horse and your saddle, saddle
And ride up to the hill
Mind you stay in the shadow, shadow
And you keep very still

They say they conjure a blue light, a blue light
And hold it in their hands
They cast a spell on the ones that they desire
to get their wedding banns

Pity the man whose woman, woman
Is not mild or meek
Pity the man who finds himself wed
To one he did not seek

For if she’s dancing in the moonlight, moonlight
The fire feeds her need
And if she’ll wander off without him, without him
His rule she will not heed

I hear a fire is glowing, glowing,
And women dance around
Why this is I am not knowing, knowing
But they never make a sound

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Composed and performed by Krista Detor

Image: Luis Ricardo Falero

Filed under music piano ballads wicca pagan druid lilith women womens' rights krista detor dominance submission lyrics art fine art luis ricardo falero mythology

4 notes &

Inside Old Man Rattler by Selene Skye

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When I am old

it will be okay for me to talk to old man snake

out in the sun

up the spine of Canyon de Chelly

I will be beveled like stained glass

with sunshine in my veins

and sand underneath my fingernails

When I have the luxury of being gray

and bent over the mesa in my many skirts

it will be okay for me to be crazy

and tell the stories

about the rattler who fell in love with me

when I was a young woman

He was old and lonely

tired of coiling around rocks

and I came with bruises on my lips

and cherries in my little apron

our from the hogan

where eagle sat drying his drunken youth into an aging man’s 

dying liver

Jack Daniels dripping down his fingertips

with my blood

Old Man Rattler loved my youth

he came to eat the cherries from my palm

and pull me into the shadow of his rock from the burning Arizona 

sun

he coiled me into his dreams

shifting me across a thousand miles of sand and mesas on sleek

belly

and scales

he kissed me a thousand times

deep inside my heart from the cold desert night

we watched the stars

and he dreamed of being human again

and knocking the hell out of the jackal for this bad joke of a forked 

tongue

and unhinged jaw

and I dreamed myself into the stars

out of the blood taste in my mouth

and the bruised taste on my soul

When I am an old woman

it will be okay for me to talk to rattlesnakes

and to find the rock

in canyon De Chelly

for my bones

but for now

I cannot talk to snakes

and my manicure must be perfect

and my hair must hide the silk strand of white at the temples

with gold

But one day I will be old

and I will be happy

in my big skirts

and my wrinkled skin

rattling bones

image

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Copyright 2012 by Victoria Selene Skye-Deme; Images: The Nude Snake Charmer by Paul Desiré Trouillebert circa 1880; Detail of Snake Women by Boris Vallejo.

Filed under selene skye desert rattlenakes poems poem poets surreal age women abuse healing lit illustrated poems

61 notes &

Isla de Pasqua by Barbary Chaapel

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The choir of women
Turned to stone
For they believed

In the power of silence,
In the powerful silence
Of their own stillness.

Sculpted heads,
Eyes carved with obsidian hand tools,
Swallowed-tongue women
On that island called Easter.

Cipher the message:
Wind in the trees, raindrops
Speak for me, their sister:
I am stillness.

Before the sharp tongue of my love
My power, too, lies
In words unspoken.

So impassioned,
Sometimes
He calls me stone.

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Ann says:  Yep, some of those Easter Island statues (formerly thought to be male) were discovered to have breasts!

Barbary Chaapel’s books can be purchased here on Amazon.  Her newest book, Bog Woman: A Mythic Journey, is available by emailing: barbaryandbill@gmail.com.

Copyright 2011 by Barbary Chaapel.

Filed under barbary chaapel poem poems poetry sculpture stone submission women easter island moa lit illustrated poems

44 notes &

Maiden, Mother, Crone: The Writing of Corinna Parr and Barbary Chaapel

Corinna Parr, Imagist

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When I read fiction, be it prose or poetry, I want pictures in my mind, and no one creates mental pictures better than Corinna Parr.

This young author’s work is akin to that of the Imagists, a 19th-century group of writers containing many women. Like the Imagist’s work, Corinna’s writing features clear visuals, precise language, and mythological themes.

As her charming essay Memory of Magic reveals, Corinna is a born poet. At the age of five, while playing with other kids in a sprinkler, she saw spontaneous circles of children shift into a variety of geometric shapes.  Corinna was carried away by the beauty of the impromptu dance: I’ve remembered it, and in remembering have caught glimpses of the pattern of magic elsewhere.”

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This childhood experience seems to inform the poetry Corinna writes today.  You can see it in her magic-laden prose-poem Maiden Mother Crone in which a daughter of Epona (a horse-goddess) emerges from the earth and has only three days in which to live a full woman’s life.  The story’s climax is a three-circled dance ceremony.

What this young poet celebrates most, however, is sex and the complementarity of men and women.  She often writes of a frustrated yearning to merge with her lover, to feel and understand his maleness.  From Ode to Happy Man:

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…Oh, if I could
press you
into myself and
drink the masculinity
of you, become one
with it and
truly know what it is
to be a happy man,
I would.
For me, it is only ever
the imperfect joining,
the spill of fluids
and your ragged breath
caught in the cup of my
mouth.

Corinna walks the fine edge of erotica, writing sensual poems that stop just short of being explicit.  But sometimes she delves deeper, exploring the ways in which submission flows naturally from her femininity.  Corinna is not afraid to cross lines, and the short story Captivity (written in collaboration with James Ciriaco), set in colonial America, is both terrifyingly violent and psychologically astute.  For BDSM fans, this is the most natural, least forced piece of that genre I have read.

Corinna’s muse embraces motherhood as enthusiastically as she embraces sex. The Butterfly Shirt speaks of a three year-old who’s precociously gallant, and Corinna beautifully unveils the tensions between mother and son.  The short sentences of this poem hold the reader in a tight mother’s squeeze until gravity takes over at the end:

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If you knew,
little man,
what you do
to my heart
when you tell
me to wear
the butterfly shirt
because it makes
me beautiful,
you would then
understand
why I cry
and hug you
until you complain,
“Mama, put me 
down!”

Corinna is not shy about pondering her own mortality.  In The Universe is Bloodless she expands her poetic reach, reflecting on the fact that it’s not flesh and blood but star-stuff that composes the universe, and this is a form to which our bodies will one day return:

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Stroke your arm and think:
The universe is bloodless,
Not I; this body
of flesh, veins, soft pulsing heart,
made to spill, to break;
Life, to the beat of mad drums,
or hands on my skin.
The universe is bloodless;
Not I, this body of flesh.

The narrator draws a sharp contrast between her youthful zeal and the cold indifference of inert matter.  Though she makes life seem exceedingly fragile, faith shines through her words. In asserting that she is not her body, Corinna also asserts that some part of her will survive death.  Her writing will stand the test of time because Corinna Parr’s passion for life is infectious.  As her profile says:

“Breathe, cry out, sing, or don’t write at all.”

 

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Barbary Chaapel Weds Water and Land

Barbary Chaapel excels at capturing sensory impressions and weaving them into universal themes. Her beautiful Quartet of Seasons takes us through a symbolic year of life in her Appalachian home, seamlessly mixing rhythms of nature, people, and ghosts. Here is Spring:

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Alive, the mountains,

The rills and runs,


Light spilling over new green.

Look beyond the tulip tree buds:

Wood smoke, elixir

From a chimney in the clearing,

Where every April, my flower bed

Gives up a marble, a shooter -


Imagine marble-clicking sounds -

Lost to the earth by long-ago farm children…

Although she was born in rural West Virginia and grew up in the Great Lakes region, Barbary spent seven years sailing the Caribbean with her husband.  This voyage yielded her first two books, The Journey of The Snow Goose (prose)and No Name Harbo(poetry).

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In he recent poetry collection EstuaryBarbary contemplates the opposing forces of her life, symbolically joining her earthly roots with her seafaring adventures:

“The estuary inside me, a confluence, words of earth and fire from mountain to sea.”

But Barbary’s work isn’t predictable.  She blew me away with her unconventional poem Simulation, in which she once again touches on a journey from water to land.

In it Barbary writes of  an abnormal pregnancy (fetus in fetu) in which a smaller, partially-developed fetus grows on a normal one.  The larger fetus, soon to give up her watery life for one on land, narrates the poem with loving acceptance of her little stow-away:

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We turn in on each other

In those first months of sacred knowing.

I am sweet fruit. She swims naked in

The red-black juice of a pomegranate…

 

I signal baby kisses

To my little aril other,

Her tiny foot and leg tilt in my round pan

Of a brain. I become the boat,

She, the norish voyageur,

Fetus in fetu.

But I think this is more than a poem about a stowaway, a parasite, or a haunting. This is about the growing realization that one carries something that has been there all along and requires nurturing: a soul.  For even the “monster-born” are children of God.

Like Corinna Parr, Barbary Chaapel has written a poem (Maiden, Mother, Crone) about the three stages of a woman’s life. Although Corinna looks at a woman’s life from a broad mythological perspective, Barbary ties her reflections to a specific place and time:

On tiptoe at lamplighted cottage window,

She peers into the corners of her kitchen life

Sacred sentinels…

Iron skillet, greenglass juicer, apron strings:

Her life as a woman,

New moon, full moon, nearly dark moon.

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Notice how carefully Barbary has placed objects in the kitchen of her life— a skillet (masculine imagery), a juicer for extracting essence, and apron strings for children to cling to.  What more could a woman want?

Barbary’s current project is a charming book of poems called A Child’s Calender of Verse.  Here’s a sneak preview for you: When the 11th Month Comes:

The fishes sleep

their long winter sleep.

They doze under a skim of November ice.

A slow-motion video swims behind their round

fishy eyes…worms, wriggling provocatively.

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Reading the work of these two gifted women makes me wish I were a poet.  But not being one seems less important knowing that I have Corinna Parr and Barbary Chaapel to speak for me.

 

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Corinna Parr’s web site.

Barbary Chaapel’s web site.

Copyright 2013 by Ann Marcaida.

All images are stocks from Google Image

Filed under barbary chaapel corinna parr critique imagists james ciriaco jessica phare litertaure maiden mother crone modern poetry painting poem poems poetess poetry poets reading poetry women words essay literature lit