Musings on Ultimate Reality, ethics, religion, social history, literature, media, and art
Showing posts with label word play. Show all posts
Showing posts with label word play. Show all posts
Monday, July 25, 2016
Playing with Words
Montana’s History Lesson
Bulky Pompei’s Pillar
Towers over Yellowstone's Rivering,
A rugged brown bluff
Engraved with historic graffiti
With Clark’s signatur'd
Declaration still writ large
Behind Plexiglas for us to gawk,
But Lewis ended it all;
Still the icy water courses on
Toward our Big Muddy
Finally down to the Gulf,
Each of us a brief tag
In this
Muddled flow of history.
-Daniel Wilcox
First pub. in Lunarosity
"...history provides much evidence to show that the minds of poets have functioned like antennae."
"Poets express the beliefs, hopes, and ambitions that are eventually recognized by everyone. Ultimately, these values become part of a nation’s sense of identity."
"We learn what common experiences unite their people. We learn what they cherish from the past and what they aspire to in the future.
The practical language of the elected legislator [and the historian] supplies the record; the imaginative language of the [poet and novelist] gives that record both its meaning and its spiritual dimensions."
"But no matter how seriously we take these discussions of poetry, we must remember that poetry is also a form of playing...
with words, rhymes, and rhythms...by using their imaginations...the play of meanings...
the simplest kind of play with meanings is punning.
"The Elements of Poetry"
John Malcom Brinnin
Here is a playful rendition to nature, history, and human wording by a former teaching colleague
of ours at Perris High School in California:
Perris Valley
by Larry Yohn*
Join me now in seeing the beautiful playing of beings all around us,
Expressively sharing the biosphere of earth with us.
Dolphins frolicking, dashing spray at sea,
Squirrels with their tails flowing, leaping tree to tree,
An elk stag bugling, sounding his love call,
Peregrine falcons mating in free fall;
A timber wolf cocking her head quizzically,
Tiger cubs cuffing, sprawling clumsily;
Penguins popping up on the ice flow,
Humming birds hovering, darting to and fro;
--
A big dog bounding high to catch a Frisbee,
Kittens with their tiny claws having an unquilting bee;
Thoroughbreds at the gate, tossing their heads a prancing,
Elephants trumpeting, in the jungle dancing;
Otters sliding down the mud slide,
A white whale sounding, breaching high an’ wide.
CHORUS
All kinds of play are found round the world,
From chess in the Ukraine to bull fights in Spain,
From Olympic Games with banners furled,
To Death Games amid sand grains at El Alamein,
Yes, play is a word we use every which way,
From gun play to sword play to word play to foreplay,
From gamboling lambs in a meadow in May
Or a gambling man in old Santa Fe,
One space to play in,
One place to fly free south of L.A.
And in from the sea, diving away from the D.C.3,
High in the wind over Perris Valley, valley, valleeee, Perris Valleeee.
I close my eyes and see people at play,
Age in the night to this day:
A batter swinging in the box,
A climber reaching on the rocks,
A skier swooshing by on skis,
A glider gliding in the breeze,
A biker pumping by on a bike,
A tyke pedaling on a trike,
A bird watcher watching birds,
A poet stringing together words,
A caver torching in a cave,
A surfer riding on a wave,
A marathoner running the race,
A poker player playing an ace,
--
A gambler rolling on the table two dice,
A skater twirling on the ice,
A soap box speaker being verbose,
A late night comic being gross,
--
A gymnast swinging on the rings,
A guitarist playing on the strings,
Skydivers swooping to the formation,
[A band playing the National Anthem]
Chuck Anderson- yellow, Al Krueger - orange, Tom Henley - blue, Larry Yohn - black.
Photo by Carl Boenish
*From AP Wire:
"NOVEMBER 14, 1999
POMONA, Calif. (AP) - A parachutist died after crash landing into a guard
wall of a race track during opening ceremonies Sunday for the...NHRA Finals."
"Lawrence Yohn, 59...was part of a four-person team that
parachuted onto the Pomona Raceway as part of pre-race ceremonies...
The national anthem was playing while Yohn made his
jump onto the track."
"Yohn was a skydiving instructor at Perris Airport Sport Parachuting Center
and an Aztec Sky Diving Team member. He had jumped more than 2,500 times...
a 1-legged jumper who taught high school, and was an avid reader. Yohn lost his
leg in India on a motor scooter 30 years ago."
--
Under the Sky World
Under the sky world
Below the sloshing white caps,
Liquid life undulates down through
The watery sphere’s domain;
Deep down under
A soft brilliance of rays from
Above strike silver lines down
Through the deepening green
While strange denizens move in
Rhythmic concertos;
Deep down under
A great turtle flippers alone, dull-jade submarine;
Then sheened orchestras of under creatures
Tuna, halibut, and cod their way
In a Strauss waltz west with the current;
Deep down under
Snorkeling deeper,
Finned life multiplies to the seventh
Wide oceans crowded round,
Translucent, entrailed, scaled and numinous;
Scuttling down to endless flips of tail
Iridescent, orange, purple, yellow;
Deep down under
Suddenly spades-black ink billows out
Deep in the guts of the world’s water
To the side of the neon coral,
So mused reefs,
Expanding, darkening the undermost
Deep down under
Arms, arms, arms, and arms—
Many a league,
The fabled
One
--Daniel Wilcox
First pub. in The Greensilk Journal
--
Art Clasps
A Monet moment
splashes in vibrancy--
yellow-orangish irises
rise from blue and green
130 years after the paint.
Below the beauty
But the impractical clasping
of the momentary irises
by impressed paintbrush strokes,
Hold
scintillating eye glances
and shimmering lights up for us to see,
saved from
the oblivion of another time and place.
Likewise a fellow traveler, I clasp words
to this sheet, my own flat canvas--irised memories
For new eyes
down
through
future
landscaped
time
-Daniel Wilcox
First pub. in Mississippi Crow Magazine
In the Light,
Daniel Wilcox
Labels:
art,
dolphins,
falcons,
games,
Greensilk Journal,
imagination,
Larry Yohn,
meaning,
nature,
octopus,
Olympic Games,
otters,
painting,
parachuting,
Perris Valley,
poetry,
pun,
skydiving,
theme,
word play
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
"Fox digged out of his Burrows" and other C.Q.H.;-) Fractured As Usual
A city Quaker from an Evangelical Friends church was talking with a Quaker from a Friends meeting in the country. "You are in violation of our Faith and Practice!"
"On the contrary, dear Friend, maybe it would be good if you re-read the words of the son of man. It's in Luke 12:14, "But he said to him, 'Man, who appointed me a judge or arbitrator over you? Beware, and be on your guard against every form of creed;
for not even when one has an abundance does his life consist of his propositions.'”
"What?! I don't remember Jesus saying anything like that in Matthew." The Evangelical grabbed up his Bible and began leafing through the pages.
"Look it up, City Friend. You may think we liberals are country heretics, a bunch of Hicks, but we seek the Light." Then the Friendly farmer walked away smiling.
--
At the Underground Railroad history museum, the guide, a descendant of Levi Coffin, held up a wooden bowl and spoke to a junior high group of teenagers, “This is the very bowl that Levi Coffin’s wife used to feed runaway slaves hidden in a secret compartment in their house.”
Several students, murmured, “Wow,” a few looked bored, and someone loudly whispered, “If only I had my cell phone! I wish--”
“To uh-bowl-ish slavery with that very dish!” interrupted a bright kid in the back.
Some of the teens broke into laughter, and so did the guide.
--
Do you know why the Quaker sailors on Nantucket Island could get their ships cleaned up fast?
They had plenty of mussels.
--
One Quaker student to another:
“Consider how many women among Friends worked for women’s rights based on spiritual truth. For instance, do you remember reading about Susan B. ‘At-the-knee’?" asked the girl in a North Face hiking vest, smiling.
"Sure," said the petite girl next to her, missing the friendly pun.
"She must have kneeled to pray all the time," the North Face girl added, snickering. “Furthermore, think how far we women have progressed since. Why we even have a ‘Hillary’ who is seeking the ‘ever-most’ peak of her career, trying to set a new ‘precedent.’”
“Wait a minute, Hilary’s not a Quaker; she’s a Methodist!”
“Ah, there is madness in my method-dist thee not see;-)?” and the first girl broke out laughing.
--
Did you see the dog kennel in Quakertown, Pennsylvania? The large sign outside proclaims, “There is that of dog in everyone.”
--
"If you don't listen to or play gangsta rap or hip hop, what music do you Friends listen to, then?' asked the skinny teen, tapping time to his I-Pod."
The student from Friends School in North Carolina said, “Oh, Quake and Roll, Quaky Tonk, Quakeabilly, Quakem and Blues, Rapt.”
"Stupid! But I get yer lame jokes, even 'rapt' for 'rap,' except what does 'rapt' have to do with Quakers?
"You need to read The Journal of George Fox or John Woolman and listen to the spiritual songs of Jon Watts! We're talking spiritual rapture, man. Like the dictionary says, 'transported by spiritual feeling'."
--
But sometimes word-play humor in history became mean-spirited. There was a long-titled book ridiculing Quakers by punning their leaders’ names, George Fox and Edward Burroughs.
George Fox digged out of his Burrowes… published in 1676 by Roger Williams
“The old Fox thought it best to run for it, and leave the work to his…” page 5
Burroughs had already died in prison at the age of 29 in 1663. He had been jailed for holding a Quaker meeting. Such religious events were banned by the British government in 1662.
Then the Quakers responded with this long-titled book against Roger Williams:
“A New-England-fire-brand quenched being something in answer unto a lying, slanderous book, entituled, George Fox digged out of his burrows, &c. printed at Boston in the year 1676, of one Roger Williams of Providence in New-England ... : of a dispute upon XIV, of his proposals held and debated betwixt him, the said Roger Williams, on the one part, and John Stubs, William Edmundson, and John Burnyeat on the other at Providence and Newport in Rode-Island, in the year 1672 where his proposals are turn'd upon his own head, and there and here he was and is sufficiently confuted : in two parts : as also, something in answer to R.W.'s Appendix, &c. with a post-script confuting his blasphemous assertions ... : also, the letters of W. Coddington of Rode-Island, and R. Scot of Providence in New-England concerning R.W. and lastly, some testimonies of ancient & modern authors concerning the light, Scriptures, rule & the soul of men / by George Fox and John Burnyeat. [London: s.n.] 1678.”
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo/A40216.0001.001/1:4?rgn=div1;view=toc
--
In the 'Lightening' Flash of Punness,
Daniel Wilcox
Labels:
abolition,
Act of Uniformity 1662,
corny Quaker humor #6,
dog,
Edward Burroughs,
George Fox,
Hilary,
Jon Watts,
kneel,
Methodist,
pray,
pun,
Quaker,
rap,
rapt,
rockabilly,
Susan B.,
Woolman,
word play
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