Trucks, cars, highways, landscape, good writing. "You cannot travel on the path, before you have become the Path itself."
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Cold Bright November, late afternoon, Blue Hill Bay
Friday, November 29, 2013
Thanksgiving Week, Brooklin Boatyard, Center Harbor, Maine
There were a couple of snowy, sleety days but most of the week was like this: stiff cold breeze usually NW, sometimes gusts to 30-40 knots. The Reach looks green when it is whipped up by that sort of wind. Last Sunday, Nov 24, there were stranger gusts than anyone around here had seen in a long while. Waves dashing through Center Harbor and breaking over the shack on the Brooklin Boatyard dock. A very intense day. Very glad Scout was hauled a month ago. John White's lobster boat, Acadia, was being hauled at the boatyard.
Thursday, November 28, 2013
David Daniel Poem: Ornaments
Ornaments
Bring down your ornaments. Bring down the attic dust.
Bring down the leaves, the husks of
insects, the grease
From windows. Bring down the clothes, shovel them,
Shovel them over the bodies you
long ago brought down.
Bring down the silver, the
screaming, the cries of love:
Bring them down and beat them. Bring them down to the street,
Take a broom, and beat them: Let
the dust live in the sunshaft.
Bring down their tiny planets, beat
them, free them--
Those bodies. You wanted them once. You asked for them.
Now bring them down, bring down
everything you’ve wanted,
Shattered, or soiled--some flag,
some country you
Loved once, some child you
lost…. Bring them down and beat
them,
Down to your streets and beat
them: There is peace in it.
There is peace in the beating. And bring down the poems you wrote,
Those strong feelings, the voice
you had, so sweet,
That beauty too, its lies, those
centuries collapsed, of stoop, of musky stone:
There was such promise, then, such
future: Bring them down to your streets,
Take out a broom, and beat
them. The dust will catch fire in the
sunshaft,
It will light that light--it will
burn it. Bring down those angels of
glass,
That hell, those whispers in your
ear: they say bring down
The shame they died in, the
suicides’ longing, the bloody sheet,
The first hard cock, then the
mothers’ skittish love,
The hazel of her eyes, bring them
all down, bring them down
To your streets and beat them. Bring down your fathers too.
Bring down how they drank and
drank, how they beat you
With their drinking and the wars
they took you to, how you sat there
Cheering so long ago, centuries
now. Now you must take them out to the
street,
Drive them like mules to the street
and beat them, so you
Can take down the house itself, sweep
off its skin, its muscle,
To get to its galleried bone, to
its teeth, then tie a string to the doorknob,
Slam shut the door, and bring them
all down. Pull out the floor,
The windows, the walls, the twisted
nails, the light
That held them all, then finally
the door: Bring them all down
Into your streets, take out your
broom, and beat them: There is peace
There: When the dust rises in the
light of the sun, it will come alive,
It will take your shape, sparkling,
adorned; it will rise over streets now
Filled with you, over the villages,
the cities now filled with you.
Its eyes are your eyes and it
follows you in wonder:
It will bless you. It will look you in the eye and bless you.
1938 Ford and Mack B-46. Naskeag Road
Saw the 1938 Ford at Sean's shop, Affordable Performance, on the Naskeag Road. One of three '38 Fords he is restoring. The Mack was there too.
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
The Maine Biscayne: a 1958 Chevrolet (for sale)
I thought that Biscaynes were the low-end Chevy, but in 1958 that was the Delray. I've always thought the '58 a more handsome car than the ubiquitous Tri-Fives. Mr Pinkham has this one for sale at Moto-Car in Ellsworth, Maine. t 207 667 4592
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Cig Harvey, '61 Chevrolet, & Maine winter
On her way downeast today BB stopped to talk with the photographer Cig Harvey, one of the bright lights here on the coast of Maine. You'll find the animated version of the '61 Chevrolet (below), and more of Harvey's intriguing work, on her website.