* layers via michael s. harper & basho

 


Village Blues – Michael S. Harper


The birds flit

in the blue palms,

the can workers wait,

the man hangs

twenty feet above;

he must come down;

they wait for the priest.

The flies ride on the carcass,

which sways like a cork in a circle.

The easter light pulls hims west.

The priest comes, a man

sunken with rum,

his face sandpapered

into a rough of split

and broken capillaries.

His duty is cutting

down the fruit

of this quiet village

and he staggers slowly, coming.


12th_century_Greek_Warrior_Fustanella


Sgraffito, I learned recently, is a technique used in both wall decor and ceramics in which contrasting colors are layered across a surface, only to be then scratched into so as to reveal parts of the underlying layer. The result is an image made of a specific depth and texture.


This week’s poem – “Village Blues” by Michael S. Harper – performs via language in a way similar to sgraffito. Harper writes of a hanged man’s body by choosing to write about the life going on around it. In describing the birds, workers, even the flies at the scene, Harper layers the daily lives of the village over the dead body, and thus makes the presence of the lost life all the more felt. The description of the priest, too, as he “staggers slowly, coming” to the body, becomes imbued with the unspoken. Through indirect association, everything in the village “sways” along to the village’s “blues.”


These thoughts also bring to mind the following haiku by Basho, where the layered images give way to something deeper:


On the white poppy,

a butterfly’s torn wing

is a keepsake


*


Happy winging!


José


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Published on March 25, 2016 05:22
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