[Video: opening of Qui êtes vous, Polly Maggoo? (Who Are You, Polly Magoo?) — as Wikipedia says, “a 1966 French film directed by William Klein… a satirical art house movie spoofing the fashion world and its excesses.” The fashion show in this scene reminded me of the one in David Byrne’s True Stories.]
From whiskey river:
A New Poet
Finding a new poet
is like finding a new wildflower
out in the woods. You don’t seeits name in the flower books, and
nobody you tell believes
in its odd color or the wayits leaves grow in splayed rows
down the whole length of the page. In fact
the very page smells of spilledred wine and the mustiness of the sea
on a foggy day — the odor of truth
and of lying.And the words are so familiar,
so strangely new, words
you almost wrote yourself, if onlyin your dreams there had been a pencil
or a pen or even a paintbrush,
if only there had been a flower.
(Linda Pastan [source])
…and:
The Continuous Life
What of the neighborhood homes awash
In a silver light, of children hunched in the bushes,
Watching the grown-ups for signs of surrender,
Signs that the irregular pleasures of moving
From day to day, of being adrift on the swell of duty,
Have run their course? O parents, confess
To your little ones the night is a long way off
And your taste for the mundane grows; tell them
Your worship of household chores has barely begun;
Describe the beauty of shovels and rakes, brooms and mops;
Say there will always be cooking and cleaning to do,
That one thing leads to another, which leads to another;
Explain that you live between two great darks, the first
With an ending, the second without one, that the luckiest
Thing is having been born, that you live in a blur
Of hours and days, months and years, and believe
It has meaning, despite the occasional fear
You are slipping away with nothing completed, nothing
To prove you existed. Tell the children to come inside,
That your search goes on for something you lost — a name,
A family album that fell from its own small matter
Into another, a piece of the dark that might have been yours,
You don’t really know. Say that each of you tries
To keep busy, learning to lean down close and hear
The careless breathing of earth and feel its available
Languor come over you, wave after wave, sending
Small tremors of love through your brief,
Undeniable selves, into your days, and beyond.
(Mark Strand, New & Selected Poems)