Poem 111 by Leonard Cohen from ‘The Energy of Slaves’













Recently in Canada we had a minor brouhaha in Parliament. A satirical magazine depicted the former Leader of the Opposition wearing a neck brace with his caucus in body casts, wheelchairs, etc…

I cropped the photo in a circle & added text to make my own satirical statement. No. I decided. Something else. So I began to manipulate the images. Emerging psychedelic shapes with the politician becoming 19th century-like wearing a clerical or clown collar.

Shapes emerged as I worked intuitively with Photoshop.

A symbol began to emerge. Or something that looked like it wanted to be a symbol.


Recently my investigations have led me (in books & online) to India where the Celtic God Cernunnos is preceded by a similarly depicted figure revealed by artifacts from the Indus Valley.

The similarities of the visual language are striking. Mythologies are a bit like dreams, arising from the same ‘bedrock’ of consciousness. Or from somewhere beneath the bedrock.

Jokes also lead to interesting places. And who might be both psychedelic and from an earlier century while wearing a clerical – clown collar. The depictor. Or the depicted. Or someone else entirely. And where is the poem in that?



Original photo credit: The Beaverton

I never planned

To add

Paul is dead

To the conspiracies

Swimming in my head.

But as they say

Never say never.



& When you think of who you are,

The deep waters rising about you, within you,


& Within you, who you are, symbols embedded within & upon a book of code,




Like a stamp or seal upon a document, & you swim through the hollow and the false,


Bearing metaphorical code,

& When you think of who you are and what you have delivered, you realize


The brave are still within us,

& Your metaphor is reality, holding fast to your sense of balance, carrying out your mission,


& You never venture from your footing upon this precipice,

& your children walk upon dry land.



U.S. Naval Archives Photo # 80-G-238786: USS San Jacinto steaming with USS Lexington in the Mariana (Islands) area, 13 June 1944.

My father was on active duty aboard the San Jacinto (foreground aircraft carrier) when this photo was taken. I remember him as a young man, remembering also transferred memories… physical and emotional, memories flowing like water. I was thinking about DNA as well as the memory within, and of, water. In the back of my mind I was thinking about Berta Cáceres. The work she did with water. Her radiant identification with Mother Earth, the Mothership, and the water running through Her veins.





I knew it was over

When she came home

From work

And said

There’s a spoon

In the sink.

Images: Photographic still from director Nicholas Rays They Live By Night (1949), starring Farley Granger and Cathy ODonnell and a detail from Piet Mondrian’s (1943) Broadway Boogie Woogie.


Morning morning
Feel so lonesome in the morning
Morning morning
Morning brings me grief

Sunshine and the sunshine
Sunshine laughs upon my face
& the glory of the growing
Puts me in my rotting place

Evening evening
Feel so lonesome in the evening
Evening evening
Evening brings me grief

Moon shine moon shine
Moon shine drugs the hills with grace
& the secret of the shining
Seeks to break my simple face

Nighttime nighttime
Kills the blood upon my cheek
Nighttime nighttime
Does not bring me to relief

Starshine and the starshine
Feel so loving in the starshine
Starshine starshine
Darling kiss me as I weep

Morning Morning written by Tuli Kuferberg & recorded by The Fugs on their album The Fugs.

The Fugs (1966) is the second album from The Fugs.

http://www.thefugs.com/history2.html

The link above will take you to the song.

I make no claim whatsoever to these lyrics, whose copyright, I assume, remains with the author & Fugs founding member, the late Tuli Kupferberg. I simply wish to share these beautiful words & music.

Lyrics found at Lyrics.com as submitted by jinny.





“I have no right to call myself one who knows.

I was one who seeks,

and I still am,

but I no longer seek in the stars or in books;

I’m beginning to hear the teachings of my blood pulsing within me.

My story isn’t pleasant,

it’s not sweet and harmonious like the invented stories;

it tastes of folly and bewilderment,

of madness and dream,

like the life of all people who no longer want to lie to themselves.”


― Hermann Hesse, Demian: Die Geschichte von Emil Sinclairs Jugend

I digitally reconfigured Syrian street photos (from happier times) for non-commercial artistic purposes, photographed by Vatse: http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?s=62af56d2f3036c7b81759a06c26b1f1d&t=993201



One might intuitively connect seemingly disparate elements, only later discovering threads of DNA sound (or something) opening further into a parallel, related world. For example, Hesse & Syria:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermann_Gundert

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malayalam_literature

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Thomas_Christians

