.
Woman's fancy manta, Navajo, c. 1850-1865: image by PDTillman, 2009 (Arizona State Museum)
Whatever man makes and makes it live
lives because of the life put into it.
A yard of India muslin is alive with Hindu life.
And a Navajo woman, weaving her rug in the pattern of her dream
must run the pattern out in a little break at the end
so that her soul can come out, back to her.
But in the odd pattern, like snake marks on the sand
it leaves its trail.
lives because of the life put into it.
A yard of India muslin is alive with Hindu life.
And a Navajo woman, weaving her rug in the pattern of her dream
must run the pattern out in a little break at the end
so that her soul can come out, back to her.
But in the odd pattern, like snake marks on the sand
it leaves its trail.
Transitional Navajo blanket, c. 1880-1895: photo by Arizona State Museum
Historic Navajo chief's style blanket, c. 1870-1880: photo by The Textile Museum, 1976
D.H. Lawrence: Whatever Man Makes, from Pansies, 1929
2 comments:
I'm enjoying spending time with this, the poem and the two images in their horizontal, then vertical arrangement. I've always thought that colors tend to look so "untrue" and quite often ugly on the internet, but that isn't the case on Beyond The Pale. I'm not sure how you do it, but it's a real achievement.
You have a great eye, Curtis, so I am honoured; especially so, as this post is a design upon a poem about design.
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