Tuesday, 7 April 2026

Sullen

 April 7 Word of the Day: Sullen

 


Re-reading In my craft or sullen art the personal declaration doesn’t sound like a revolution, or even just a reason for writing words, perhaps because of sullen, a word meaning resentment, moody, bad-tempered, morose, uncommunicative, a word that sets the tone. And though uncommunicative, the art or craft is not still or too moody but Exercised in the still night, a time When only the moon rages, giving credence to the claim that he is exercised though everything else, bar the moon, is still. Except, either in his mind or to acknowledge their certain presence And the lovers lie abed, as night will have it, though unexpectedly not with ardour or passion or mutuality but With all their griefs in their arms. The words, having set out their condition, then turn to a series of opposing purposes for writing words: I labour by singing light. Does he even sing for his supper? Apparently Not for ambition or bread, even if he’s doing a good job of keeping our attention while staying alive; Or the strut and trade of charms, which discounts the theatre in one go; On the ivory stages, and likewise universities and award ceremonies. How sullen can one be forgoing all of those avenues, and prosceniums? Instead, he turns and admits working in his own craft or art But for the common wages Of their most secret heart, thereby raising the drama of who are these lovers and who is he to them; and what is most secret? But for them and their love only the words are made, Not for the proud man apart From the raging moon, giving the sense that he himself cannot live separate from this turmoil, this exercise and grief, unnamed though it be. He writes: I write On these spindrift pages, spindrift a word meaning the spray that blows off waves, and therefore fleeting, transient, the slightest momentary crest of something far deeper. Nor for the towering dead does he write, never mind how aware he is himself of their towering beingness, nor how sullen they leave him, With their nightingales and psalms and all of that great readerly backstory. No, by his own admission he writes But for the lovers, their arms Round the griefs of the ages, though one hopes there is more to love than grief. Even the grief that is most secret cause of so much sullenness, cause of the words. These loves Who pay no praise or wages, any more than anyone else, it seems, Nor heed my craft or art. Thus leaving the maker of words alone in his sullen state, wrestling with pride and fame and loss, which he cares to share with us, not the lovers, the patrimony of twenty lines signed by a Welshman famous for writing the same twenty lines. 

Monday, 6 April 2026

Northland

 April 6 Word of the Day: Northland

 


Exiting cinema into daylight

Thick thud of Action in our heads

One question looms and envelopes:

Is Northland Smaug’s Lair

Or Smaug’s Lair Northland?

 

Jewellery strewn about, gems in profusion,

In corridor after corridor,

Coins in thousands shine,

Close to touch, impossible to take:

Mountains of slippery valuables.

 

And a dragon’s eyes follow us,

Closed circuit cameras

Ready should we think of lifting

The Arkenstone from its $2 Shop,

Prompting fiery wrath on us all.

 

Bell Street should be easier

But for these newfangled Euro cars

Death in their headlights

Orcs, Shelobs and the like

Charging across bedraggled vision

.

True, wizard carers are out there

And I am not telling you

The secret I carry on my person,

But is home home

Or another Lake-town of Unpredictables?

 

[February 2014, retrieved and reworked April 2026]

 

Sunday, 5 April 2026

Fifteener

 April 5 Word of the Day: Fifteener

 


In hospital in May 2022, I received a book gift from Lenore Stephens, the last poetry of her schoolfriend Jordie Albiston entitled ‘Fifteeners’. Today I retrieved two pages of Notes written into my phone at the time while resting in bed, and never returned to.   

 Fifteeners 1, written in the Austin Hospital: “First, these poems are not sonnets, not just because they are not 14 lines but because JA is not using the 8-6 argument and counter-argument of a sonnet. She has in most of them gone consciously tripartite 5-5-5, itself a useful thing to be aware of when reading the poems as that’s the turn JA is playing with, three main connected thoughts or feelings in careful sequence. Like a sonneteer she reels them off. They are not a sonnet + 1 line, rather the sonnet looms in the background of her practice as model of a short turning poem. I think JA has a tragic view of existence. Even her humour and comedy is frequently coming from that vision of things. I remember reading her say somewhere that life is full of sadness, fragile and in a state of loss. Her Red Dirt Hymn ‘Gone’, for example. Her alphabetic series ‘Omegabet’ rides on just this transience, cannot be understood without this edge of near permanent despair. Sometimes she writes lines that do pushback from the prevailing mood, bringing with them beauty and respite and consolation even. I pay close attention to these small advances. She seems haunted in a present tense where memory is telling her it’s all over. More anon.”

Fifteeners 2, written in Donvale Rehabilitation Hospital after the operation: “Her use of the Cloud of Unknowing as a model, I suppose you’d say, for the Poem (i.e. that explains everything), is she simply forwarding an elegy for language, or promoting the Poem as a means to speaking of God? Maybe JA holds a Romantic view of the Poem, which she presents here in a mock medieval style, one that is rigorous and humorous at the same time. I am left pondering the game she has played with the ancient text. Her game playing with old works goes up a notch in The Five Wits, as she turns them into little Shakespeare acts of querulous tragi-comedy. Dickinson’s mode and internal argument is on fervent show in this set of marvels, as she turns mere philosophical terms into the combustible realities they would so calmly define.”