Sunday 18 July 2010

Kingfishers


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File:Brown-headed Paradise-Kingfisher.jpg

Brown-headed Paradise Kingfisher (Tanysiptera danae): photo by markaharper1, 2008



Quarrels with the inevitable futility of words in a harum-scarum world, the neverquiterightness
of any of them, are just not worth the effort. Simply getting through the night, not to mention
from one day to to the next, sans so many of the necessary toadstool virtues,
grows now an ever taller order. Requiring a longer drink of water. Gary Cooper. A silent man

would have been more likely to prove equal to the test. Summer's half over
before you'd even noticed it had begun. Equal and unequal alike,
in the endless march through the mind of the dissimilars and similars, shall die into the imagination
as the bright Paradise Kingfisher fades back into the forest.

Those souls who had returned belatedly to Earth when the traffic ceased on St. John's Eve returned
only in the mind of one who had belatedly solicited them --
no, more beautiful than souls, the small brilliant magicians,
the revenant ones from the night forest. They were always going to be disappointed by the blue ...tablets,

your star reckonings, to which their names, like water colors
applied to glass transparencies of the heavens, could never have adhered. Quarrels with the inevitable ...futility of words
in a harum-scarum world always seem to end this way, in a vanishing, as the peoples
believed those who had glimpsed Ceyx erithaca in the forest would never be seen again on this Earth.




File:Ceyx erithaca.JPG

Black-backed Kingfisher (Ceyx erithaca): photo by Pkhun, 2009

19 comments:

  1. AHHHHHHHHHHH!
    SO t h a t is a Kingfisher!

    my first ever view of (an image) of one.

    One of the Greatest pieces
    EVER written Olson's:
    The Kingfishers

    as I re:call it is in his
    In Cold Hell In Thicket



    IF I had to choose one poem/ one book that
    changed my direction

    it would have to be The Kingfishers AND In Cold Hell In Thicket

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  2. Ed,

    I feared that the title of the poem might give some readers to think it has something to do with Olson's poem. It does not.

    The beauty of these birds' plumage has created a deserving place for them in human culture, going back as far as can be known. Their veneration in Polynesian tradition is long and deep.

    The two individuals pictured in this post come from New Guinea and Thailand, respectively.

    The very beautiful Ceyx erithaca, seen in the lower image (it is called Black-backed, or alternately, Oriental Dwarf), is thought by the people of the Dusun tribe of Borneo to be an omen bird. A warrior on his way to battle should avert his eyes from the spots where such birds are known to appear, and should he have the bad luck to see one, his chances in the battle won't be good.

    But, again, the poem is not about that.

    It is pretty much a personal poetic document, and just as Kingfishers are generally shy birds, so too am I, when it comes to explaining such things.

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  3. Tom,

    Ah yes, the futility of words (to 'be' what they're about) and summer already half done (almost before it seems to have begun). We looked for the kingfisher standing on a stretch of telephone wire above the lagoon every day last winter, driving Johnny to school and back) and he would often be there, in the same spot, looking out over the water, looking for something to dive for (once I ever saw him dive, how exciting!). And then, as if all of a sudden, he wasn't there anymore, and we thought he's gone away (vanished) until next season (fall? winter?). . . .

    7.18

    grey whiteness of fog against invisible
    ridge, blue jay standing on pine branch
    in foreground, sound of wave in channel

    that thing to be experienced,
    a manner of concealment

    as interpretation, has to do
    with movement, “you see”

    grey-white of fog against top of ridge,
    wingspan of pelican flapping toward it

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  4. no... not at all Ol-sonic!

    and, I apologize for linking to'it

    recently thinking.... birds are sacred beings

    just, myself did a "bird" piece/image of

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  5. Ed,

    No problema, Olson will be relieved to have slipped the onus.


    Steve,

    Thank you for being there to answer the eternal Motown question, Can I Get a Witness?

    reminding us

    that thing to be experienced,
    has to do
    with movement, “you see”

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  6. A pair of them live in my yard. They are most remarkable with their dry trilling and absences and returns. They excite my cat beyond imagination. I think he is in love with them as he loves the neighbor's chickens. He knows they are beyond his flight ability. He watches but does not ever drool or show his tongue or kikikiki. Thank you for these gorgeous shots.

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  7. That is a beautiful poem, Tom.

    "Quarrels with the inevitable futility of words in a harum-scarum world, the neverquiterightness
    of any of them, are just not worth the effort."

    The least of what we have to accomplish before we go is perfection.

    And I do NOT believe a silent man would have proven more equal to the task. Nothing "adheres" except in the mind, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't mention it.

    I'm glad for this poem. To quote Muddy Waters instead of Motown, "You move me ..."

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  8. John,

    Thank you. For a long time my favourite Muddy Waters recording was a Chess B-side, I Got My Bird's Nest on the Ground.

    Ovid's halcyon bird was probably a near relative. To the Kingfisher, that is, not to Muddy Waters. Though that too may be a possibility, given a metamorphic view of the universe.


    Rebecca,

    Lucky you, the thrill of the trill, the flash of the feathers, too divine for mere palabras, in your own back yard.

    Here's a Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfisher in a tropical thunderstorm.

    The tail is a lovely balance rudder, twitching in the rain. If Orlando is one of those video watching felines, he might like to clamp his glims on it.

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  9. Tom, that's a gorgeous poem; it moved me a lot. I love those creatures.

    Moreover, I'm slowly getting the feel of where you're at these days. And just wanted to say that you've always been one of the essentials for me.

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  10. Tom, your words about the futility of words are not futile. Thanks for the kingfishers and the meandering poem.
    Although I live by a river where (European) kingfishers are said to fly, I have only once in eight years seen what I thought was a glittering hallucination there. But last year, I visited a friend in Donegal, who had a little dirty river outside his door, with a supermarket trolley half-submerged, and three kingfishers fussed up and down looking gorgeous and tarty and common as muck. Seeing is relieving.

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  11. Curtis Roberts19 July 2010 at 04:11

    I think you got the "neverquiterightness" exactly right throughout this poem and it's a great thing to wake up to on this midsummer (calculated relative to one thing or another) morning.

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  12. our world is not that world of a-few-writers-with-lots-of-readers...
    everything changes!

    now the words of writers and poets may affect just a few... or just one... or just themselves...

    makes no difference...

    i believe in domino effect...

    not a single word is futile!


    for you:

    http://dearteachercrow.blogspot.com/2010/07/twenty-eight.html

    ReplyDelete
  13. Tom,

    Yes (again) "the neverquiterightness of any of them," as in these (here, again) ---





    7.19

    first grey light in fog against invisible
    ridge, shadowed blackness of pine branch
    in foreground, wave sounding in channel

    equivalence, also considered
    as system at rest which

    has gone, conveyed therefore
    to increase mass, merge

    grey-white of fog against top of ridge,
    pelican gliding to the right toward it

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  14. Thanks everyone, Curtis, Joe,

    Hb I am honoured and have been off to your place to tell you so,

    ... and Freep, it's great to hear from you. Meandering is certainly the word. A while back I searched Geograph for the full stretch of the River Wharfe. There went six loopy hours. The poem I suppose is like that.

    My amateur archeologist's instincts are always excited by the mere thought of the diverse ecologies of submerged
    and half-submerged shopping trolleys.

    (Speaking of common as muck... And for that matter one wonders whether the kingfishers are in any way aware of their extreme beauty; I have often wondered, from a distance, about how it must feel to be a very beautiful thing. Perhaps less extraordinary, if most others of your kind are approximately as beauteous?)

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  15. Really really enjoyed this Tom. A sense of transience, both long and short, and the beauty of both.

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  16. I had been just waiting for you to write some thing like this.

    Quarrels with the inevitable futility of words

    Poised just perfect. A slight breeze of a poet's affinity for the neverquiterightness of words used, might just have pushed the beginning in to an inevitable futility of perfection.

    Your personal poetic document is a piece of pure poetic instinct delivered in the manner beauty delivers itself.

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  17. Thank you, Leigh and Aditya.

    The facts of life (transience) and the facts of language use (neverquiterightness): poets make good witnesses in both these areas.

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  18. just a point about BEYOND THE
    PALE...recently I skimmed Pound's
    Guide to Culture and I compared it
    to TC's blog which I frequent almost daily...It is nearly a
    century later but if I were young
    which I am not and I wanted a guide
    to culture in the same way that
    Basil Bunting and Louis Zukovsky
    perhaps did, as Pound's Guide was
    dedicated to them, and I wanted
    to be a poet which is in its true
    form a hazardous profession,I would
    read this blog as a Guide to Culture, early 21st century style,
    for poets.

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  19. Thanks from the heart, Elmo.

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