"The stone may have contempt
For too-familiar hands."
Or not . . .
From a post of Sunday, Dec. 19, 2004 —
Sunday Sermon
on Saturday’s Numbers
The "dots" of this post's title were subscribers to
a literary journal co-edited by poet Adrienne Rich.
The above image includes a July 9, 2014, file photo.
From this journal on that date —
“Be serious, because
The stone may have contempt
For too-familiar hands”
"The poem on its own is negligible,
instructing a human 'intelligence /
So late dredged up' to master
the primordial stone,
which 'may have contempt /
For too-familiar hands.'
The stone is language,
the diamond is a poem:
as in a model kit,
all the pieces come labelled
and the instructions are easy to follow."
Dan Chiasson in The New Yorker ,
issue dated June 20, 2016, on a
1955 Adrienne Rich poem,
"The Diamond Cutters"
The saying of poet Mary Karr that
"there is a body on the cross in my church,"
together with the crosses of the previous post,
suggests a synchronicity check of the
date discussed in that post —
“Be serious, because
The stone may have contempt
For too-familiar hands”
— Adrienne Rich in “The Diamond Cutters” (1955)
Blackboard Jungle , 1955 —
From Monday in this journal —
Related news this morning —
Anne Hollander, Scholar of Style, Dies at 83
By William Yardley in The New York Times ,
10:26 PM ET July 8, 2014
Anne Hollander, a historian who helped elevate
the study of art and dress by revealing the often striking
relationships between the two, died on Sunday at her home
in Manhattan. She was 83.
The cause was cancer, said her husband, the philosopher
Thomas Nagel.
. . . .
She received a degree in art history from Barnard College
in 1952. The next year she married the poet John Hollander.
Their marriage ended in divorce.
Related material from this journal last year —
"Be serious, because
The stone may have contempt
For too-familiar hands"
A search for "Dark Fields of the Republic,"
an F. Scott Fitzgerald phrase mentioned in
the previous post, yields a book by that title.
"When does a life bend toward freedom?
grasp its direction?"
— Adrienne Rich on page 275 of
Later Poems Selected and New: 1971-2012
The book's author, Adrienne Rich, died at 82 on
March 27, 2012. See that date in this journal.
See also the following:
The Diamond Cutters by Adrienne Rich (1955)
However legendary,
Now, you intelligence
Be serious, because
Be hard of heart, because
Be proud, when you have set |
Powered by WordPress