Security personnel have lunch at the Auto China 2018 motor show in Beijing. Photo Jason Lee: image via Reuters Pictures @reutersiuctures, 26 April 2018
The disappearing jobs of yesterday: In Argentina, an umbrella fixer Photo @chatoeitan #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Bulgaria, Vessela Draganova, a camera repairwoman Photo @dilkoff #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In India, Daya Shankar, a typist who types up legal documents Photo @sanjaykaojia07 #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Bangladesh, Mohammad Joynal, an ear cleaner Photo @uz_munir #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Costa Rica, a shoe maker Jesus Lopez Photo Ezequiel Becerra @chatoeitan #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Bulgaria, a bookbinder Kalin Daskalov, aka Stopan Photo @dilkoff #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In India, Syed Zafar Shah runs a gramophone repair operatior Photo @sajjadkmr #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Egypt, a darkroom technician Mohamed el-Maymony Photo @amakar #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Colombia, Street clerks are experts in filling out forms, documents and even in typing letters, to help their clients with paperwork Photo @laacostacastro #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Uruguay, a clockkeeper Abdel Ghaffar Photo @pdporciuncula #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
William Carlos Williams: Porous: Six Poems, 1921-1941
The disappearing jobs of yesterday: In Argentina, an umbrella fixer Photo @chatoeitan #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Bulgaria, Vessela Draganova, a camera repairwoman Photo @dilkoff #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In India, Daya Shankar, a typist who types up legal documents Photo @sanjaykaojia07 #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Bangladesh, Mohammad Joynal, an ear cleaner Photo @uz_munir #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Costa Rica, a shoe maker Jesus Lopez Photo Ezequiel Becerra @chatoeitan #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Bulgaria, a bookbinder Kalin Daskalov, aka Stopan Photo @dilkoff #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In India, Syed Zafar Shah runs a gramophone repair operatior Photo @sajjadkmr #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Egypt, a darkroom technician Mohamed el-Maymony Photo @amakar #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Colombia, Street clerks are experts in filling out forms, documents and even in typing letters, to help their clients with paperwork Photo @laacostacastro #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
In Uruguay, a clockkeeper Abdel Ghaffar Photo @pdporciuncula #AFP: image via AFP Photo @AFPphoto, 26 April 2018
William Carlos Williams: Porous: Six Poems, 1921-1941
Group of automobile crankshafts in junkyard, near Abbeville, Louisiana: photo by Russell Lee, November 1938 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)
Automobile parts at junkyard, near Abbeville, Louisiana: photo by Russell Lee, November 1938 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)
William Carlos Williams: Sketch for a Portrait of Henry Ford, 1939
Scrap and salvage depot, Butte, Montana (detail): photo by Russell Lee, October 1942 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)
A tin bucket
full of small used parts
nuts and short bolts
slowly draining onto
the dented bottom --
forming a heavy sludge
of oil -- depositing
in its turn steel grit
Hangs on an arm
that whirls it at increasing
velocity around
a central pivot --
suddenly the handle gives
way and the bucket
is propelled through
space . . . . .
William Carlos Williams (1883-1963): Sketch for a Portrait of Henry Ford, 1939, from Matrix (November-December 1940), in Poems 1939-1944 (1944)
nuts and short bolts
slowly draining onto
the dented bottom --
forming a heavy sludge
of oil -- depositing
in its turn steel grit
Hangs on an arm
that whirls it at increasing
velocity around
a central pivot --
suddenly the handle gives
way and the bucket
is propelled through
space . . . . .
William Carlos Williams (1883-1963): Sketch for a Portrait of Henry Ford, 1939, from Matrix (November-December 1940), in Poems 1939-1944 (1944)
Scrap and salvage depot, Butte, Montana: photo by Russell Lee, October 1942 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)
Scrap and salvage depot, Butte, Montana (detail): photo by Russell Lee, October 1942 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)
Great Depression: unemployed, destitute man leaning against vacant store, San Francisco: Dorothea Lange, 1935 (Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum)
and apparent bulk
Great Depression: man dressed in worn coat lying down on pier, New York City docks: photo by Lewis W. Hine, 1935 (Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum)
The car plummeted off the road into a black abyss.: image by Fiction Illustrated, c. 1953
William Carlos Williams: The Term, 1937
A rumpled sheet
of brown paper
about the length
of brown paper
about the length
and apparent bulk
of a man was
rolling with the
wind slowly over
and over in
the street as
a car drove down
upon it and
crushed it to
the ground. Unlike
a man it rose
again rolling
with the wind over
and over to be as
it was before.
Great Depression: man dressed in worn coat lying down on pier, New York City docks: photo by Lewis W. Hine, 1935 (Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum)
William Carlos Williams (1883-1963): The Term, 1937, from Poems 1936-1939 (1939)
William Carlos Williams: Porous, 1938
William Carlos Williams: Porous, 1938
San Francisco Social Security Office: photo by Dorothea Lange, 1937 (Dorothea Lange Collection, Oakland Museum of California)
Cattail fluff
blows in
at the bank door,
and on wings
of chance
the money floats out,
lighter than a dream,
through the heavy walls
and vanishes.
blows in
at the bank door,
and on wings
of chance
the money floats out,
lighter than a dream,
through the heavy walls
and vanishes.
Thirteen Million Unemployed Fill the Cities (Unemployed men, San Francisco): photo by Dorothea Lange, 1937 (Dorothea Lange Collection, Oakland Museum of California)
William Carlos Williams: two from Sour Grapes
Field of daisies and orange flowers, possibly hawkweed, Vermont: photo by John Collier, June 1943 (Library of Congress)
- The dayseye hugging the earth
- in August, ha! Spring is
- gone down in purple,
- weeds stand high in the corn,
- the rainbeaten furrow
- is clotted with sorrel
- and crabgrass, the
- branch is black under
- the heavy mass of the leaves --
- The sun is upon a
- slender green stem
- ribbed lengthwise.
- He lies on his back --
- it is a woman also --
- he regards his former
- majesty and
- round the yellow center,
- split and creviced and done into
- minute flowerheads, he sends out
- his twenty rays -- a little
- and the wind is among them
- to grow cool there!
- One turns the thing over
- in his hand and looks
- at it from the rear: brownedged,
- green and pointed scales
- armor his yellow.
- But turn and turn,
- the crisp petals remain
- brief, translucent, greenfastened,
- barely touching at the edges:
- blades of limpid seashell.
William Carlos Williams: Arrival, 1921
East Side Interior: Edward Hopper, etching, 1922; image by Thomas Shahan 3, 20 August 2011 (Whitney Museum of American Art)
And yet one arrives somehow,
finds himself loosening the hooks of
her dress
in a strange bedroom --
feels the autumn
dropping its silk and linen leaves
about her ankles.
The tawdry veined body emerges
twisted upon itself
like a winter wind . . . !
finds himself loosening the hooks of
her dress
in a strange bedroom --
feels the autumn
dropping its silk and linen leaves
about her ankles.
The tawdry veined body emerges
twisted upon itself
like a winter wind . . . !
Evening Wind: Edward Hopper, etching, 1921; image by Thomas Shahan 3, 30 November 2011 (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York)
William Carlos Williams (1883-1963): Arrival, from Sour Grapes (1921)
Student life in Radcliffe dormitory: photo by Lynn Miller, n.d., c. 1960s (Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America)
Each time it rings
I think it is for
me but it is
not for me nor for
anyone it merely
rings and we
serve it bitterly
together, they and I
William Carlos Williams (1983-1963): The Thing, from The Clouds (1948)
I think it is for
me but it is
not for me nor for
anyone it merely
rings and we
serve it bitterly
together, they and I
William Carlos Williams (1983-1963): The Thing, from The Clouds (1948)
Bell Telephone System advertisement for telephone service: Better Homes and Gardens, 1 October 1930 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
Bell Telephone System advertisement for telephone systems: Life, 12 December 1936 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
Bell Telephone System advertisement for telephone service: Time, 15 June 1942 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
Bench, Austin, Texas: photo by Gary Gumanow, May 2012, posted 6 February 2013
Bell Telephone System advertisement for telephone service: Coronet, 1 August 1954 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
Bell Telephone System advertisement for telephone service: Coronet, 1 August 1954 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
William Carlos Williams: The Petunia, 1941
Purple petunia: photo by Zirguezi, 2008
Purple!
for months unknown
but for the barren sky.
A purple trumpet fragile
as our hopes from the very
sand saluting us.
for months unknown
but for the barren sky.
A purple trumpet fragile
as our hopes from the very
sand saluting us.
Petunia hybrid ("Sweet Sunshine"): photo by Mira, 2008
Petunia hybrid ("Sweet Sunshine"): photo by 3268zauber, 2009
Petunia hybrid ("Sweet Sunshine"): photo by 3268zauber, 2009
William Carlos Williams (1883-1963): The Petunia, from Poems 1941 (1941)
Bill Cosby accusers (L-R) Caroline Heldman, Lili Bernard and Victoria Valentino react after the verdict. 'I feel like my faith in humanity is restored,' Bernard told reporters. Photo @mark_makela: image via Reuters Pictures @reuterspictures, 26 April 2018
#UK Lookalikes of Britain's Prince William, Britain's Prince Harry and Britain's Prince Charles, Prince of Wales pose for a picture in a hot-tub on the Thames to celebrate the forthcoming marriage of Britain's Prince Harry and Meghan Markel in London. Photo @lealolivas #AFP: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 26 April 2018
#India Models wait for their turn to walk out on the ramp during a fashion show at the Shazada Nand College in Amritsar. Photo @nanuworld #AFP: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 26 April 2018
#Myanmar View of ferries travelling from capital Sittwe river port in Rakhine state near Bangladesh border. Photo @ye_aung_thu #AFP: image via Frédérique Geffard @fgeffardAFP, 26 April 2018
The Wreck of the American Star
Wreck of the American Star (formerly SS America), seen from the land side, Fuerteventura, Canary Islands: photo by Wollex, 2 July 2004
In abjection after all those variously profitable for various operators years fallen into hands of Greek
investors brokedown N Atlantic sprinter w/High Am-Imperial art deco bar and smoking room thorobred now forced much as balky work horse
onto storm wracked
course in red
weather. Second
attempt at
passage back
out into Atlantic
interrupted -- propeller screw
shot, captain restive. The driven
hulk brought
near the parlous
shore. Abrupt uplift
coming aground
on the sandbar.
The pounding relentless
waves, the ship breaking
imminent, futility
of whole enterprise apparent
now toward end
of one-hundred-day tow, crew
choppered
out, Ukraine
tug detached from tow
line; nature
left to recover its own
rusting
rejectamenta, gull
perched on remnant
of funnel uninterestedly looking on.
Hull of the SS America under construction at Newport News, Virginia: photographer unknown, 1938 (US Maritime Commission / Library of Congress)
Shipbuilding. Newport News, Virginia. A small section of the shipyard, showing an overhead travelling ("Gantry") crane in the foreground. There are two lanes on which ships are being built visible in the picture. The ship at far background is the S.S. America: photo by Alfred T. Palmer, October 1941 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)
Newport News, Virginia. General view of the fitting and repair slips at Newport News, Virginia. The S.S. America can be seen in the background. The ship in the adjacent slip is a tanker: photo by Alfred T. Palmer, October 1941 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)
S.S. America, United States Lines, Ballroom I: Eggers & Higgins, architect, Smyth, Urquhart & Marckwald, decorator (the New York modernist interior decorating firm of Miriam Smyth, Anne Urquhart and Dorothey Marckwald were the first female interior designers of an ocean liner): photo by Gottscho-Schleissner, Inc. (Samuel Gottscho/William Schleissner), 3 August 1940 (Gottscho-Schleissner Collection, Library of Congress)
S.S. America, United States Lines, Barroom I: Eggers & Higgins, architect, Smyth, Urquhart & Marckwald, decorator: photo by Gottscho-Schleissner, Inc., 3 August 1940 (Gottscho-Schleissner Collection, Library of Congress)
S.S. America, United States Lines, Barroom II: Eggers & Higgins, architect, Smyth, Urquhart & Marckwald, decorator: photo by Gottscho-Schleissner, Inc., 3 August 1940 (Gottscho-Schleissner Collection, Library of Congress)
S.S. America, United States Lines, Smoking room, looking to bar: Eggers & Higgins, architect, Smyth, Urquhart & Marckwald, decorator: photo by Gottscho-Schleissner, Inc., 3 August 1940 (Gottscho-Schleissner Collection, Library of Congress)
S.S. America, United States Lines, Smoking room, looking to mural: Eggers & Higgins, architect, Smyth, Urquhart & Marckwald, decorator: photo by Gottscho-Schleissner, Inc., 3 August 1940 (Gottscho-Schleissner Collection, Library of Congress)
S.S. America, United States Lines, Smoking room, end detail: Eggers & Higgins, architect, Smyth, Urquhart & Marckwald, decorator: photo by Gottscho-Schleissner, Inc., 3 August 1940 (Gottscho-Schleissner Collection, Library of Congress)
S.S. America, United States Lines, Swimming pool: Eggers & Higgins, architect, Smyth, Urquhart & Marckwald, decorator: photo by Gottscho-Schleissner, Inc., 3 August 1940 (Gottscho-Schleissner Collection, Library of Congress)
S.S. America, United States Lines, Shopping centre I: Eggers & Higgins, architect, Smyth, Urquhart & Marckwald, decorator: photo by Gottscho-Schleissner, Inc., 3 August 1940 (Gottscho-Schleissner Collection, Library of Congress)
S.S. America, United States Lines, Desk detail, Suite U49: Eggers & Higgins, architect, Smyth, Urquhart & Marckwald, decorator: photo by Gottscho-Schleissner, Inc., 3 August 1940 (Gottscho-Schleissner Collection, Library of Congress)
United States Lines advertisement: Time, 17 August 1953 (via Gallery of Graphic Design)
Returned to the United States Lines and converted back to civilian service on 31 August 1946, the America continued to carry passengers between New York and Europe into October 1964, when, with the advent of stiffer international competition in the transoceanic shipping business and the success of the larger, more luxurious United States, she was sold to the Chandris Line, a Greek firm, renamed Australis and operated as a passenger ship on cruises to the Far East and South Pacific into 1977. Between 1978 and 1994 the ship's condition deteriorated as she changed ownership several times. In 1993 she was renamed American Star and on New Years Eve left Greece for the last time, under tow by a Ukrainian tugboat and bound for Thailand where she was to be refitted as a five-star luxury hotel ship. Heavy North Atlantic thunderstorms broke the tow lines; the American Star was abandoned and left adrift, with the forward part of the ship aground on a sandbar; under the assault of heavy surf, within 48 hours she had broken in two just past the second funnel. Her fate entangled in negotiations between owners, towing firm and insurance companies, she was now in the hands of nature. On 6 July 1994 she was declared a total loss. In 1996 her stern section collapsed completely to port side and sank, with the bow continuing to remain intact. In November 2005 the port side of the bow section collapsed. With the remains of the ship now listing sharply, her remaining funnel detached and fell into the ocean. The hull now began to break up; by October 2006 the wreck had collapsed almost completely onto its port side. In April 2007 the starboard side collapsed, the wreck broke in half and fell into the sea, with the remains slowly disappearing beneath the waves. As of February 2012, only a few feet of the once proud liner remained above water line.
Wreck of SS American Star (formerly SS America), grounded at Fuerteventura, Canary Islands: photo by Pindakas, December 2003
Wreck of the American Star (formerly SS America), front view (cropped): photo by Wollex, 2 July 2004
Wreck of the American Star (formerly SS America), seen from middle distance, Fuerteventura, Canary Islands: photo by Wollex, 2 July 2004
The former SS America, now beached and disintegrating on the island of Fuerteventura: photo by Ian Pullen, September 2006
Shipbreaking in progress: wreck of the SS American Star: photo by Michael Wunsch, 9 August 2007
Front section of the wrecked and sunken American Star: the last visible part of a grand old lady of the world's oceans: photo by Thomas Fietzek, September 2009
4 comments:
Tom,
Enjoyed these poems from William Carlos Williams. I couldn't help reflecting on the correspondence between his poem, "Porous" and the prayers of Adam and Eve in Paradise Lost that pass "Dimensionless through Heavenly doors" to be reformed "Before the Father's throne" in (XI.14-20). The money just goes away. Hope all's well.
Best,
Bowie
Thank you Bowie. Bill was perhaps anticipating a cashless economy - those lovely, if deceptive "wings of chance". But of course any Vegas lifer will tell you there is no such thing as chance, at least 81% of the time. On the related interesting issue of Divine Providence (is there or isn't there?), JM's troika choice option always seemed to apply, Fixed Fate, Absolute Foreknowledge, and ... that third one tends to stick in the works a bit, where is the WD-40?... can't keep from lurching back into archeology... let's see... there was the 4-F Club... not so much with the Divine, there, though...
Not so hard to figure out how we tumbled out of Paradise, really.
But maybe the Wayback machine is fooling us on that one too I hope!!
Oh, Freedom. Right.
Like recalling alphabet but forgetting the "A".
Ha. D minus.
(Not forgetting the school where A minus was considered an insult, so the over-under always had to start at A+/-, with heavy lean toward the even.)
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