Zealotry of Guerin: Poetry and Fiction by Christopher Guerin
The sonnet sequence, "My Human Disguise," of 600 ekphrastic poems, was begun February 2011 and completed January 15, 2022. It can be found beginning with the January 20, 2022 post and working backwards. Going forward are 20 poems called "Terzata," beginning on January 27, 2022. Thirty more Terzata can be found among the links on the right. A new series of dramatic monologues follows on the blog roll, followed by a series of formal poems, each based on a single word.
Thursday, January 2, 2025
FOSSILS, A POEM IN VOICES
Thursday, December 26, 2024
Return 1 (Brice Marden), Sonnet #627
The structured residue of brilliance,
A layering of the lesser or least
Into a visual and mental feast,
Or, gestures, moveless, the dimliest dance —
Paint rules the kingdom it created,
The painter’s invisible intent, fingers
Drawing on experience that lingers,
Slowly diminished, subtly ablated,
Of null paintings seen or contemplated.
(Or call them conscious unconscious singers,
For all music without words is abstract,
The furthest thing from an idea or fact.)
The painter has brushes to think or say.
He motions — his eye makes or takes away.
Thanks to Jeffrey Strayer for posting the Marden painting
and for suggesting two lines of the sonnet.
Thursday, December 19, 2024
Mountain Brook (John Singer Sargent)
The brook ran through high mountain pasture
From failing glacier to pool to pond to lake,
Between banks limned with moss and aster
Rooted in cascades of shattered igneous flake.
I straddled the water running slow over stones,
My boots precariously gripping boulders
The water’s rilling shaped into hipbones.
Further up hunched matching shoulders.
I found a head and rolled it in, midstream.
The shallow, muttering water, unperturbed,
Flowed around and on like a vanquished dream.
Provoked, I left not a rock undisturbed
And rolled them in -- the addled stream burst
Banks and drowned the mountain pasture’s thirst.
Thursday, December 12, 2024
A Fable
I set a pebble on a table by a spoon
And tried to tell the difference between
My mind and the surface of the table.
Evening stole the light and soon
The rest of the rest of the room seemed
As far as the spoon was from the pebble.
It was not the pebble or the spoon
That took the center of the scene
But the impulse to discover this fable.
There is no finer thought than this:
All that might be is not what is.
Thursday, December 5, 2024
Of a Blackbird Looking at Thin Trees Sway (with apologies to Wallace Stevens)
1.
The trees move and I amNot moving.
2.
My eye is not the only eye.
There is one other.
3.
I fly between the branches
But do not find a perch--too many leaves falling.
4.
I am alone as a blind eye. I was once
Not alone. I have forgotten why.
5.
The wind whistles in the branches
And I whistle--the sounds exactly the same.
6.
Ice on the grass this morning. Soon the snow
Will catch my shadow as I pass from tree to tree.
I know exactly why I am here.
7.
I watch for the one with talons.
I cannot chase him like the little ones.
I think of him, at night, huddled on the opposite
Side of the black bole.
8.
I know all the inflections of birds and of branches.
They know
That I can sing louder than the moon.
9.
From above, the trees look like black suns
Against the dying grass. There is no
Perch at the center of a sun.
10.
My fellows cry out as they pass.
They see these trees with my eye
And do not want them for their own.
11.
I do not fear anything
And nothing fears me
Except the trees.
12.
I must be going soon--
Once the river and the trees
Stop moving.
13.
The dark grows long as day
And there are no more leaves.
The snow stings my eye.
I have already left
Before I fly.