Please note that the poems and essays on this site are copyright and may not be reproduced without the author's permission.


Thursday 29 March 2012

Show Your Stripes!


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FORD AUTOMOBILES
LIFE
05/19/1967
p. 55

 
Ford Motor Company advertisement for Ford automobiles: Life, 19 May 1967 (Gallery of Graphic Design)


BUICK AUTOMOBILES
TIME
05/03/1963
p. 7


General Motors advertisement for Buick automobiles
: Time, 3 May 1963 (Gallery of Graphic Design)


CADILLAC AUTOMOBILES
TIME
12/06/1963
p. 7


General Motors advertisement for Cadillac automobiles: Time, 6 December 1963 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
 

CADILLAC AUTOMOBILES
TIME
03/11/1966
p. 47


General Motors advertisement for Cadillac automobiles: Time, 11 March 1966 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
 

LINCOLN AUTOMOBILES
TIME
03/11/1966
p. 6


Ford Motor Company advertisement for Lincoln automobiles: Time, 3 March 1966 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
 

FORD AUTOMOBILES
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED
05/11/1959

 
Ford Motor Company advertisement for Ford automobiles: Sports Illustrated, 11 May 1959 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
 

LINCOLN AUTOMOBILES
TIME
12/07/1962
p. 55


Ford Motor Company advertisement for Lincoln automobiles: Time, 7 December 1962 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
 

FORD AUTOMOBILES
TIME
11/17/1961


Ford Motor Company advertisement for Lincoln automobiles: Time, 17 November 1961 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
 

CHEVROLET AUTOMOBILES
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED
05/25/1959
p. 10


General Motors advertisement for Chevrolet automobiles: Time, 25 May 1959 (Gallery of Graphic Design)


CHEVROLET AUTOMOBILES
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED
05/11/1959
p. 46


General Motors advertisement for Chevrolet automobiles: Sports Illustrated, 11 May 1959 (Gallery of Graphic Design)


LINCOLN AUTOMOBILES
TIME
09/15/1958
INSIDE FRONT


Ford Motor Company advertisement for Lincoln automobiles: Time, 15 September 1958 (Gallery of Graphic Design)


OLDSMOBILE AUTOMOBILES
LIFE
04/08/1957
p. 99

 
General Motors advertisement for Oldsmobile automobiles: Life, 8 April 1957 (Gallery of Graphic Design)


BUICK AUTOMOBILES
TIME
12/07/1962
p. 36


General Motors advertisement for Buick automobiles
: Time, 7 December 1962 (Gallery of Graphic Design)


CADILLAC AUTOMOBILES
LIFE
02/02/1959
p. 46


General Motors advertisement for Cadillac automobiles
Life, 2 February 1959 (Gallery of Graphic Design)


CADILLAC AUTOMOBILES
SATURDAY EVENING POST
04/09/1955


General Motors advertisement for Cadillac automobiles
: Saturday Evening Post, 9 May 1955 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

CADILLAC AUTOMOBILES
LIFE
04/01/1957
p. 88

General Motors advertisement for Cadillac automobiles: Life, 1 April 1957 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

CADILLAC AUTOMOBILES
LIFE
09/09/1957
p. 82


General Motors advertisement for Cadillac automobiles
: Life, 9 September 1957 (Gallery of Graphic Design)


CADILLAC AUTOMOBILES
TIME
09/17/1956
p. 37


General Motors advertisement for Cadillac automobiles
: Time, 17 September 1956 (Gallery of Graphic Design)


CONTINENTAL AUTOMOBILES
SATURDAY EVENING POST
12/10/1955
p. 53


Ford Motor Company advertisement for Continental automobiles
: Saturday Evening Post, 10 December 1955 (Gallery of Graphic Design)



MUSTANG AUTOMOBILES
TIME
04/21/1967
p. 74


Ford Motor Company advertisement for Ford automobiles
: Time, 21 April 1967 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

Monday 26 March 2012

A Western

.

Canyon of the Colorado River near the mouth of the San Juan River in Arizona. Photo by T.H. O'Sullivan.U.S. Geographical Surveys West of the One Hundredth Meridian (Wheeler Survey, 1873 Expedition).

Canyon of the Colorado River near the mouth of the San Juan River in Arizona




The walls of stone shrinking a little more every living
night, and when voices then begin to murmur in the dark
once again, in broken tones, it's difficult to understand
the stage directions, if that's what they're meant to be,
through the background hallooing of the wind
around this large theatrical canyon, where the tall hats
tell a tale of five cowboys, positioned in a perfect line
against the eyepopping symmetry of the landform,
erect, stiff in the saddle, kabuki-like
in their frozen mechanical formality. The signs
which have been unclear up to now start to suggest
that this is no common dream; the hollow clip
clop of the hooves across the baked-earth canyon floor
beneath the escarpment makes you wonder if the stage
carrying the mail-order bride from the East might not
be running more than merely a little late, and whether the sage
for that matter might turn out to be not really purple after all
but dyed a strange ashen-ember hue; and whether, too,
these mechanical varmints costumed as ordinary people
are not trying to clamber into the picture
merely to let the audience know they are here, trying to be trying,
and if the stage never arrives, will she still remember you?




Canyon De Chelly in Arizona. Walls of the Grand Canyon are about 1200 feet high. Photo by T.H. O'Sullivan.U.S. Geographical Surveys West of the One Hundredth Meridian (Wheeler Survey, 1873 Expedition).

Canyon De Chelly in Arizona. Walls of the Grand Canyon are about 1200 feet high

Photos by Timothy H. O'Sullivan (1840-1882), from U.S. Geographical Surveys West of the One Hundredth Meridian under Lieutenant George M. Wheeler, 1871 Expedition (U. S. Geological Survey Photographic Library)

Sunday 25 March 2012

William Empson: Aubade

.
Mitate rajōmon

Mitate rajōmon / Correspondence of Rajōmon: a man departing, holding a closed umbrella over his right shoulder, looking back at a young woman standing on a veranda, leaning against a post: Suzuki Harunobu (1725?-1770) (Irving H. Olds Collection, Japanese Prints and Drawings, Library of Congress)




Hours before dawn we were woken by the quake.
My house was on a cliff. The thing could take
Bookloads off shelves, break bottles in a row.
Then the long pause and then the bigger shake.
It seemed the best thing to be up and go.

And far too large for my feet to step by.
I hoped that various buildings were brought low.
The heart of standing is you cannot fly.

It seemed quite safe till she got up and dressed.
The guarded tourist makes the guide the test.
Then I said The Garden? Laughing she said No.
Taxi for her and for me healthy rest.
It seemed the best thing to be up and go.

The language problem but you have to try.
Some solid ground for lying could she show?
The heart of standing is you cannot fly.

None of these deaths were her point at all.
The thing was that being woken he would bawl
And finding her not in earshot he would know.
I tried saying Half an Hour to pay this call.
It seemed the best thing to be up and go.

I slept, and blank as that I would yet lie.
Till you have seen what a threat holds below,
The heart of standing is you cannot fly.

Tell me again about Europe and her pains,
Who’s tortured by the drought, who by the rains.
Glut me with floods where only the swine can row
Who cuts his throat and let him count his gains.
It seemed the best thing to be up and go.

A bedshift flight to a Far Eastern sky.
Only the same war on a stronger toe.
The heart of standing is you cannot fly.

Tell me more quickly what I lost by this,
Or tell me with less drama what they miss
Who call no die for a god for a throw,
Who says after two aliens had one kiss
It seemed the best thing to be up and go.

But as to risings, I can tell you why.
It is on contradiction that they grow.
It seemed the best thing to be up and go.
Up was the heartening and the strong reply.
The heart of standing is we cannot fly.



File:Mukden 1931 japan shenyang.jpg

Japanese troops entering Mukden (Shenyang) during the Mukden Incident, aka the Manchurian Incident, a staged event devised by Japanese military as pretext for invading northern China: photographer unknown, September 1931; image by Shizhao, 3 April 2006

File:Kamaishi Bay after 1933 tsunami.jpg

Kamaishi Bay, Iwate, Japan, after 1933 Sanriku earthquake and tsunami: photographer unknown, 1933; image by MChew, 28 October 2008 (Iwate Prefectural Government)

Tsuchiyama

Tsuchiyama: travelers travelers crossing a bridge spanning a raging river, during a rain storm near the Tsuchiyama station on the Tōkaidō Road: Andō Hiroshige (1797-1858), from the series: Tōkaidō gojūsantsugi no uchi: 53 stations of the Tōkaidō Road, between 1833 and 1836 (Irving H. Olds Collection, Japanese Prints and Drawings, Library of Congress)


http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/jpd/00100/00169v.jpg

Evening rain at Azuma Shrine
: Andō Hiroshige
(1797-1858), from the series Eight views in the environs of Edo, between 1827-1840 (Japanese Prints and Drawings, Library of Congress)


William Empson (1906-1984): Aubade, 1933, written in Tokyo, where the poet was at the time professor of English at the National University; first published in an early version (with eight additional lines, personalizing the relationship -- "I do not know what forces made it die" -- and the leavetaking situation, and with "we" in the final line given as "you") in Life and Letters 17, Winter 1937; first published in this version in The Gathering Storm, 1940.

___

Empson's note on line 31:

'The same war' in Tokyo then was the Manchurian incident.

___

When I was in Japan, from 1931 to 1934, it was usual for the old hand in the English colony to warn the young man: don’t you go and marry a Japanese because we’re going to be at war with Japan within ten years; you'll have awful trouble if you marry a Japanese; and this is what the poem is about.

Empson on Aubade, from William Empson in Conversation with Christopher Ricks, in The Review, June 1963

Saturday 24 March 2012

A Basket of Snakes

.

Snake charmer, Varanasi, India: photo by fredcan, 2006



Beyond the shadow of the ship
..I I watch'd the water-snakes...


When Coleridge "saw" the water snakes

was he having

"The Horrors"? Poisonous coils

of those

notoriously assail


"Poets in their Youth". Later

Despondency

and Madness

allow so much less

free time.






Bapuji & his daughter, Varanasi. India. This sadhu is a Khareshwari Sita Ram Baba (Vishnu devotee) who has already been doing tapasya for over 10 years, that is making a vow to keep standing for 20 years, a mortification of the body to concentrate on the mind: photo by fredcan, 2007

Friday 23 March 2012

Samuel Taylor Coleridge: The Sea Snakes

.


Sea Snakes, Ang Thong, Gulf of Siam, Thailand
: photo by Steve Jurvetson, 27 December 2007



Beyond the shadow of the ship
..I watch'd the water-snakes:
They mov'd in tracks of shining white;
And when they rear'd, the elfish light
..Fell off in hoary flakes.

Within the shadow of the ship
..I watch'd their rich attire:
Blue, glossy green, and velvet black
They coil'd and swam; and every track
..Was a flash of golden fire.

O happy living things! no tongue
..Their beauty might declare:
A spring of love gusht from my heart,
..And I bless'd them unaware!
Sure my kind saint took pity on me,
..And I bless'd them unaware.






Yellow-bellied Sea Snake (Pelamis platurus): photo by Heather E. Harlow, 14 January 2011

File:Pelamis platurus.png

Yellow-bellied Sea Snake (Pelamis platurus): photo by Eugene van der Pijil, 10 September, 2006; image by Ilmari Karonen, 24 October 2007 (USGS/US Dept. of Interior)

photo

Yellow-lipped Sea Krait (Laticauda colubrina), Wakatobi, Indonesia: photo by Craig D, 9 September 2009



Sea Snake, Guindulman, Central Visayas, Philippines: photo by tim2k, 14 June 2006

File:Banded Sea Snake-jonhanson.jpg

Blue-lipped Sea Krait (Laticauda laticaudata), Anemone Reef, Thailand: photo by Jon Hanson, 29 November 2005

Banded Sea Snake, Tingloy, Mariacaban Island, Philippines: photo by Raymonddy, 3 August 2007

File:Aipysurus laevis.jpg

Olive Sea Snake (Aipysurus laevis). Lighthouse, Ribbon Reefs, Great Barrier Reef: photo by Richard Ling, 17 December 2006

From The Rime of the Ancyent Marinere, in Seven Parts (Part IV, ll. 272-287): Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 1797-1798; first published anonymously in Lyrical Ballads (original ed. 1798), with text as here given containing deliberate archaisms of spelling and syntax, intended by the author to allow the poem to be received as a work of unknown age, discovered in manuscript

Thursday 22 March 2012

Aditya Bahl: When I went to buy ENO for Ashish at 7:30

.

Burning in Manikarnika. Varanasi, India. Manikarnika Ghat, on the banks of the sacred Ganges is the main burning ghat in Varanasi (Benares). It is said that this ghat symbolises the principles of both creation and destruction, which are inseparable. This is certainly the most auspicious place for a Hindu to be cremated, as it is believed that dying in Kashi (the city of light) and being cremated here brings Moksha (liberation), thus breaking the cycle of births and deaths. Some also say that Lord Shiva himself whispers the mantra of liberation in the ear of the deceased. Dead bodies are carried here on bamboo stretchers through the alleyways of the old city, and are doused in the Ganges before being cremated. The pyres are then handled by a group of outcasts known as doms, until the whole burning process is over: photo by fredcan, 5 June 2008




bones
left
on our doormat
by an invisible dog

in the gali
a dead cat

old man raising the shutter of his shop

an autorickshaw
filled
with school children

two coins
& then everything

slips
thru
the hole
in my pocket

the dead cat again




Aditya Bahl: When I went to buy ENO for Ashish at 7:30, from dipping butterflies, 15 January 2012




Gali, India. Religious images are a common sight in Varanasi (Benares), the holy city of Hindus, as seen here with these two popular wall paintings of Lord Shiva, known as Mahadev in Varanasi, and Ganesha: photo by fredcan, March 2008




The lady & the dog.
Life on the ghats in Varanasi (Benares): photo by fredcan, 29 October 2007



Beggars, Varanasi ghats: photo by fredcan, March 2008


With gratitude to fredcan for opening these worlds to us through his lens and to the poet aditya for bringing the work to our eyes

Wednesday 21 March 2012

Philip Larkin: Coming

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http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/23/Zoothera_naevia_31224.JPG

Varied Thrush (Zoothera naevia) (male), Skagit Wildlife Area: photo by Walter Siegmund, 15 January 2007




On longer evenings,
Light, chill and yellow,
Bathes the serene
Foreheads of houses.
A thrush sings,
Laurel-surrounded
In the deep bare garden,
Its fresh-peeled voice
Astonishing the brickwork.
It will be spring soon,
It will be spring soon --
And I, whose childhood
Is a forgotten boredom,
Feel like a child
Who comes on a scene
Of adult reconciling,
And can understand nothing
But the unusual laughter,
And starts to be happy.



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Varied Thrush (Zoothera naevia) (male), Black Creek, Northern Vancouver Island, British Columbia: photo by Elaine R. Wilson, 2011

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Varied Thrush (Zoothera naevia) (male), Black Creek, Northern Vancouver Island, British Columbia: photo by Elaine R. Wilson, 2011

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Varied Thrush (male), Black Creek, Northern Vancouver Island, British Columbia: photo by Elaine R. Wilson, 2011

Varied Thrush (Ixoreus naevius) - Wiki; DISPLAY FULL IMAGE.

Varied Thrush (Zoothera naevia) (male), Skagit Wildlife Area: photo by Walter Siegmund, 2006

Philip Larkin: Coming, 25 February 1950, from XX Poems, 1951

Tuesday 20 March 2012

Beat the Clock

.





Portrait of Dr. Johannes Cuspinian (detail): Lucas Cranach the Elder, c. 1502 (Oskar Reinhart Collection, Winterthur)



Listen Fates, who sit nearest of gods to the throne of Zeus, and weave with shuttles of adamant, inescapable devices for councels of every kind beyond counting, Aisa, Clotho and Lachesis, fine-armed daughters of Night, hearken to our prayers, all-terrible goddesses, of sky and earth.

Pindar: Fragmenta Chorica Adespota, 5

Now if it is not the causal connections which we are concerned with, then the activities of the mind lie open before us. And when we are worried about the nature of thinking, the puzzlement which we wrongly interpret to be one about the nature of a medium is a puzzlement caused by the mystifying use of our language. This kind of mistake recurs again and again in philosophy; e.g. when we are puzzled about the nature of time, when time seems to us a queer thing
. We are most strongly tempted to think that here are things hidden, something we can see from the outside but which we can't look into. And yet nothing of the sort is the case. It is not new facts about time which we want to know. All the facts that concern us lie open before us. But it is the use of the substantive "time" which mystifies us. If we look into the grammar of that word, we shall feel that it is no less astounding that man should have conceived of a deity of time than it would be to conceive of a deity of negation or disjunction.

Ludwig Wittgenstein: from The Blue Book (1930s Cambridge lecture notes as circulated by students), 1958

Can mercy be found in the heart of her who was born of the stone?
Were she not merciless, would she kick the breast of her lord?
Men call you merciful, but there is no trace of mercy in you, Mother.
You have cut off the heads of the children of others, and these you wear as a garland around your neck.
It matters not how much I call you "Mother, Mother." You hear me, but you will not listen.

Rāmprasād Sen (1718-1785), in David R. Kinsley: Hindu Goddesses: Visions of the Divine Feminine in the Hindu Religions, 1988

If thou openest not the gate to let me enter,
I will break the door, I will wrench the lock,
I will smash the door-posts, I will force the doors.
I will bring up the dead to eat the living.
And the dead will outnumber the living.

"Descent of the Goddess Ishtar into the Lower World", in Morris Jastrow, The Civilization of Babylonia and Assyria, 1915


Death is not an event in life: we do not live to experience death.
If we take eternity to mean not infinite temporal duration but timelessness, then eternal life belongs to those who live in the present.
Our life has no end in just the way our visual field has no limits.
 
Ludwig Wittgenstein: from Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, 1921

Time is not, Time is the evil, beloved.

Ezra Pound: Canto LXXIV, from The Pisan Cantos, 1948

"All the time -- I feel the hands of the clock -- moving."
 
Ezra Pound: from The Paris Review interview, 1960
...................................
 ...........................Time, space,
.......................................
neither life nor death is the answer.

 
Ezra Pound: Canto CXV, from Drafts and Fragments of Cantos CX-CXVII, 1969


Fate 
When people talked about the inevitable
Design of a mortal span,
what was always meant
The earliest words for it are transparent
Metaphors, moira, aisa
Denoting share or portion, those distinctive
Events of a person's life which carry
Change like the scar of a laser
A talisman stamped into the
Chain
A knot
Complication
A
Tropos
No turning
It's like listening to the radio at night
In a heavy storm
Interference line noise
Static
Her messages
Get lost
In silence
The frequencies can no longer be sorted out
A kink or tangle in the thread
Scissors
In the hand of nature
One can't argue with this any more
Than a bell with its flaw









Atropos (The Fates): Francisco de Goya y Lucientes, 1821-1823, oil on plaster mounted on canvas (Museo del Prado, Madrid)




The Three Fates, called by Hesiod the Daughters of the Night. Atropos or Aisa (left) was the oldest of the Three Fates, and was known as the "inflexible" or "inevitable." It was Atropos who chose the mechanism of death and ended the life of each mortal by cutting their thread with her "abhorred shears." She worked along with her two sisters, Clotho, who spun the thread, and Lachesis, who measured the length
: Cecchino del Salviati, 1550 (Galleria Palatino, Pizzi Palace, Florence)
 



Atropos (Ἄτροπος, "inexorable" or "inevitable", literally "unturning, without turn"), in Greek myth one of the three Moirai, goddesses of Fate: Asmus Jacob Carsten (model), 1794 (Städelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt)


File:The Triumph of Death, or The Three Fates.jpg

The Triumph of Death, or The Three Fates. The Three Fates, Clotho (right), Lachesis (centre) and Atropos (left), who spin, draw out and snip the thread of Life, represent Death, triumphing over the fallen body of Chastity, in this tapestry illustrating the third subject in Petrarch's poem The Triumphs (first, Love triumphs; then Love is overcome by Chastity, Chastity by Death, Death by Fame, Fame by Time and Time by Eternity): Flemish tapestry, probably Brussels, c. 1510-1520; image by Wilhem Meis, 5 December 2004

File:Atropos.jpg

Bas relief of Atropos cutting the thread of life: photo by Tom Oates, 18 June 2008


File:Schadow Grabmal Alexander 2.jpg

The Three Moirai (Greek "apportioners", l. to r. Clotho, Atropos, Lachesis), tomb of Prince Alexander von Mark
: Johann Gottfried Schaddow, 1788-1789); image by Andreas Praefcke, February 2006 (Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin)

File:British Museum Queen of the Night.jpg

Ishtar, Queen of Night: Old Babylonian period baked clay relief panel; image by BabelStone, 24 June 2010 (British Museum)

File:Ishtar vase Louvre AO17000-detail.jpg

Representation of the goddess Ishtar, Queen of Night (Inana/Inanna), winged and wearing a version of the horned cap of divinity: detail of ancient Mesopotamian so-called "Ishtar Vase" (vase d'Ishtar), terracotta with cut, moulded, and painted decoration, from Larsa, early 2nd millennium BC.; image by Jastrow, 2009 (Department of Near Eastern Antiquities, Musée du Louvre, Paris)

File:Ishtar Eshnunna Louvre AO12456.jpg

Ishtar, Queen of Night, holding her weapon: terracotta relief, early 2nd millennium BC. From Eshnunna; image by Marie-Lan Nguyen, 14 January 2009 (Department of Near Eastern Antiquities, Musée du Louvre, Paris)

 
File:Kali Devi.jpg

Triumph of Kali Devi (Hindu Goddess Kali): Richard B. Godfrey, 1770 (South and Southeast Asian Art Department, Los Angeles County Museum of Art)


File:Goddes Kali01.jpg

Hindu Time Goddess Kali: South Indian bronze, 12th century; image by Miya.m, 14 June 2009 (National Museum of India)



File:InsideQuartzCrystal.jpg


Inside construction of typical HC49 case quartz crystal: photo by Altzone, 2006

File:World line.svg

Visualization of the past light cone, the present and the future light cone, in 2D space: image by K. Aainsqatsi, 2007


File:Kali, Hammer u. Sichel.jpg

Hindu Time Goddess Kali with inscription (invitation for kalipuja -- festival), near Kolkata (to left, election mural of the Indian Communist Party of India): photo by Christine Kundu, 2005

Melted clock, Cass Technical High School

Melted clock, Cass Technical High School
: photo by Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre, from The Ruins of Detroit (Steidl), 2010


File:Horloge-republicaine1.jpg

Horloge republicaine: metric clock dial of the French Revolution, from The Republican Calendar, late 18th c.: image by Kama, 2005

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/39/Santiago_Catedral.Reloxo_da_Berenguela_613.jpg/1024px-Santiago_Catedral.Reloxo_da_Berenguela_613.jpg

Clock of the Berenguela tower, Santiago de Compostela Cathedral, Galicia, Spain
: photo by Luis Miguel Bugallo Sánchez, 1 April 2006


File:Bristol Bus Station  clocks.jpg

Bristol bus station clocks: photo by Rob Brewer, 2005

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1b/Greenwich_clock.jpg

Shepherd Gate Clock, Royal Observatory, Greenwich, UK: photo by Alvesgaspar, 2007


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/76/Al-jazari_elephant_clock.png


The Elephant Clock: Leaf from The Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices by al-Jazari: Abu'l Izz Ismacil al-Jazari (1136-1206 AD), author; Farkh ibn cAbd al-Latif, copyist; detached folio from an illustrated manuscript, Mamluk, Syrian (?), 1315 AD (Cora Timken Burnett Collection of Persian Miniatures and Other Persian Art Objects, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York)

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/db/SuSongClock1.JPG

Su Song's water-powered astronomical clock (scaled model). The original clock tower designed by Su Song (1020-1021 AD) was three storeys tall (c. 35 feet), with an armillary sphere on the roof, and a celestial globe on the third storey. From an exhibition at Chabot Space & Science Center in Oakland, California
: photo by Kowloonese, 12 July 2004

File:Clock Tower from Su Song's Book.JPG

Chinese mechanical and horological engineering from the Song Dynasty; this diagram provides an overall general view of the inner workings and armillary sphere of Su Song's clocktower built in Kaifeng. The drawn illustration comes from Su Song's book Xin Yi Xiang Fa Yao published in the year 1092. On the right is the upper reservoir tank with the 'constant-level tank' beneath it. In the center foreground is the 'earth horizon' box in which the celestial globe was mounted. Below that are the time keeping shaft and wheels supported by a mortar-shaped end-bearing. Behind this is the main driving wheel with its spokes and scoops. Above that are the left and right upper locks with an upper balancing lever and upper link
: Joseph Needham, in Science and Civilization in China: Volume 4, Part 2, Mechanical Engineering; image by PericlesofAthens, 14 August 2007

File:Henlein Taschenuhr.jpg

The "Nuremberg Egg", one of the earliest pocket watches
: attributed to Peter Henlein, c. 1510; image by Pirkheimer, 8 May 2011 (Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg)


File:Liesing Quando est hora ultima 23052007 01.jpg

Sundial on steeple of parish church, Liesing, Carinthia, Austria: photo by Johann Jaritz, 2007


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ad/Du320.gif

Early cuckoo clock, Black Forest, 1760-1780: (photo by Deutsches Uhrenmuseum, Furtwangen)



One night as he sat at his table head on hands he saw himself rise and go. One night or day. For when his own light went out he was not left in the dark. Light of a kind came then from the one high window. Under it still the stool on which till he could or would no more he used to mount to see the sky. Why he did not crane out to see what lay beneath was perhaps because the window was not made to open or because he could or would not open it. Perhaps he knew only too well what lay beneath and did not wish to see it again. So he would simply stand there high above the earth and see through the clouded pane the cloudless sky. Its faint unchanging light unlike any light he could remember from the days and nights when day followed hard on night and night on day. This outer light then when his own went out became his only light till it in its turn went out and left him in the dark. Till it in its turn went out.

Samuel Beckett: from Stirrings Still, 1988