Jammu. Kashmir, India. A girl dressed as Hindu Goddess Durga searches for coins in the polluted water of the river Tawi during Navratri, a Hindu festival: photo by Jaipal Singh/EPA via The Guardian, 29 March 2015
I got me flowers to straw thy way;
I got me boughs off many a tree:
But thou wast up by break of day,
And brought’st thy sweets along with thee.
The Sunne arising in the East,
Though he give light, & th’ East perfume;
If they should offer to contest
With thy arising, they presume.
Can there be any day but this,
Though many sunnes to shine endeavour?
We count three hundred, but we misse:
There is but one, and that one ever.
George Herbert (1593-1533): I got me flowers, from The Temple, 1633
An Indian child searches for coins under the polluted waters of the river Tawi on the last day of Navratri, a Hindu festival in Jammu: photo by Jaipal Singh/EPA, 28 March 2015 via the Guardian, 5 April 2015
Allahabad, India. On Ashtami, the eighth day of the Hindu festival of Navratri, a young girl takes photos of her relatives on the banks of the river Ganges: photo by Rajesh Kumar Singh/AP via the Guardian 27 March 2015
Manila, Philippines. Children walking beside a river filled with rubbish in the capital: photo by Noel Celis/AFP via The Guardian, 27 January 2015
Cows and smoke. Ground zero in the war on nature –- cattle graze among the burning Amazon jungle in Brazil: photo by Daniel Beltra via The Guardian, 1 April 2015
Greenhouses grow greenhouses. As far as the eye can see, greenhouses cover the landscape in Almeria, Spain: photo by Yann Arthus Bertrand via The Guardian, 1 April 2015
British Columbia clear-cut. Sometimes called the Brazil of the North, Canada has not been kind to its native forests as seen by clear-cut logging on Vancouver Island: photo by Garth Lentz via The Guardian, 1 April 2015
Rectangular fields. No room for nature, the entire landscape is devoted to crop production in China: photo by Google Earth/2014 Digital Globe via The Guardian, 1 April 2015
Cypress Swamp, Alligator Bayou, Prairieville, Louisiana: photo by Richard Misrach, 1998
Clear-cut. Industrial forestry degrading public lands, Willamette National Forest in Oregon: photo by Daniel Dancer via The Guardian, 1 April 2015
Oil wells. Depleting oil fields are yet another symptom of ecological overshoot as seen at the Kern River Oil Field in California: photo by Mark Gamba/Corbis via The Guardian, 1 April 2015
Hill-side slum: Slum-dwelling residents of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, face bleak living conditions in the western hemisphere’s poorest country: photo by Google Earth/2014 Digital Globe via The Guardian, 1 April 2015
Buriganga River, Dhaka, Bangladesh. ‘As we celebrate 400 years of Dhaka City, the Buriganga river, which has played a vital role in its growth, is being choked to death. It is used by millions every day to transport goods –- but chemicals, sewage and industrial waste are also dumped in it. Nearly 700 brickfields on the riverside, dockyards and used engine oil from boats and steamers add to this pollution’: photo and caption by Rasel Chowdhury via Syngenta / The Guardian 18 November 2014
A forest destroyed by wildfires in the Tete province, central Mozambique. Many hectares of forest are lost each year due to the uncontrolled fires started by local communities with the aim of increasing agricultural fields, poaching and production of charcoal: photo by Carlos Litulo/Redux/Everydayclimatech
3 comments:
George Herbert: "I got me flowers": Ralph Vaughan Williams, from 5 Mystical Songs, performed by Michael Dallas
Enjoyed the Herbert poem and the youtube link, together with the accompanying pictures and I swear the two of us must be connected by some kind of psychic hyperlink, as I mentioned one of the photos you chose not to use from the Guardian’s series of April 1st—the beached albatross—in a poem on my blog the very same day you posted this one.
Vassilis,
That albatross, I dimly speculated, would, after being killed by human detritus, only have suffered further insult by becoming the object of the gaze of its murderers.
I don't know, it's just the feathers get me.
Once the feathers are gone, and it's down to the bare bones of the matter, I can look, though I don't like looking.
Albatross
Plastic will be the death of the oceans and all their complexity of life -- unless, that is, something else cheap and useless we've created (there are so many candidates) gets the job done first.
(When I say "we", of course, I mean good sound Germanic technical know-how -- to which we are all in debt not only for synthetics, but for so many other modern industrial abominations.)
As to the Herbert -- the pure clear stream of what the Hollow-Bottomed Grand Poobah dismisses as "lyric quietude" -- I couldn't help thinking that even were the god so lovingly and subtly evoked in the poem to have arisen again, in times like these, far from the pastoral English village countryside, he'd find the perfumes and sweets all chased off by the ambient stink of exhaust fumes.
That wonderful last vision at the end of the book and film 2001, in which, out there beyond Jupiter, it is revealed to David Bowman that there exist as possibility and promise, waiting in store, all these other worlds, is so beautiful, but now that we're down to it, I'm afraid it's the undeniable sad truth that this is the only planet, and therefore world, that will ever be given us, and we've fucked it up forever, not only for ourselves, which hardly matters, but for all other life.
And that did matter, kind of.
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