Monday 4 March 2024

Life

Life = a Restitution for Wasted Time
Catherine Eisner

Photo credit: Stasis and Motion by Rachel Tanugi Ribas

 
or. . .
 
Reality is that which everything is an instance of.
 
Eli Siegel

One cannot emulate, of course, the sheer undeniability of this Aesthetic Realist poet’s elegant relativist axiom,
but one can die trying.
 
       For example . . .
 
Lifelike is an impossible state;
a wholly inadequate descriptor.
 
Catherine Eisner
 

Afterthought: The mood of these thoughts is also echoed in poet Vernon Scannell’s resonant phrase ‘The wounded music of what might have been.’ (See page 2, Too Late Again from Ambit 184, Spring 2006.)
 

Thursday 29 February 2024

“More Out-takes from Ol’ Ameriky” (The Uncollected Songbook Part One.) I know this girl is lyin’

I know this girl is lyin’ man
we know each other well
I know this girl is lyin’ man
she’s lyin’ in her throat

that’s right! 
Lord you so right!
that’s right!
that’s right Lord!

men don’t trust the women man
WOMEN don’t trust the women 
man

NO ONE trusts a woman man
’cos women never tell the truth

NEVER man?
no never!
that’s right!
that’s right!
they NEVER tell the truth! 

praise the Lord!
amen

and women man

 
(Composed on Sunday 26 April 2009 after listening to the outpourings of Pastor Jones’s
healing and deliverance ministry over the airwaves of world band radio, which warn
of Satan’s traps. ‘This is how we Holy roll,’ says Pastor Jones, the broadcaster,
followed by popular Heavens Best Gospel Rap Music program.) 
 
See also, There’s a Train Acomin’

Sunday 25 February 2024

The Utility of Art as a Social Function according to Heinrich Böll

Or should that be The Utility of Art at a Social Function?


I think I’ve written all I want to say on the topic of the Non-Utility of Art,
see Schoolboy’s Mock-Heroic Epic:
 
‘That art is non-utile is a self-conscious truism voiced oftenest by post-Marxian cynics. 

‘As Oscar Wilde, a socialist manqué, makes clear: All art is quite useless. 

‘This banality is no more absurdly pointed up than in the verses of a lofty poet who compares himself with his father digging the family cabbage patch – a spade wielded with evident utility – yet who claims a special dispensation for his own artist’s pen . . . “I’ll dig with it.” (Pause for involuntary cringe.)

‘Anthony Blunt – tarnished knight of the realm, professed communist, and Keeper of the Queen’s Pictures – was unequivocal when a young man in expressing his utopian sympathy for the cultural worthiness of Social Realism: “The culture of the revolution will be evolved by the proletariat to produce its own culture . . . If an art is not contributing to the common good, it is bad art.” ’

Yet, I now must acknowledge I’m a positive infant in my understanding of this sociocultural conundrum since reacquainting myself recently with the works of that West German champion of dissident literature, Heinrich Böll (1917-1985), staunch enemy of  Consumerist Materialism and scourge of its correlative, News Media Corruption . . .  
 
. . . specifically, the closing passages of Böll’s excoriating polemical novel, The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum, or, How Violence Develops and Where It Can Lead
 
A Specimen of Instant Art.
Well, if we are to be honest we have regretfully to report that at this moment Blorna did punch Straubleder in the jaw. Without further ado, so that it may be forgotten without further ado: blood flowed, from Straubleder's nose; according to private estimates, some four to seven drops but, what was worse: although Straubleder backed away he did say: “I forgive you, I forgive you everything — considering your emotional state.” And so it was that this remark apparently maddened Blorna, provoking something described by witnesses as a “scuffle,” and, as is usually the case when the Straubleders and Blornas of this world show themselves in public, a News photographer  . . . was present, and we can hardly be shocked at the News (its nature being now known) for publishing the photograph of this scuffle under the heading: “Conservative politician assaulted by Leftist attorney.” . . .   
 
At the exhibition there was furthermore a confrontation between Maud Straubleder and Trude Blorna . . .  in which Trude B. hinted at Straubleder's numerous advances to her . . . 
 
End of a Long Friendship.
. . . At this point the squabbling ladies were parted by Frederick Le Boche [artist] , who with great presence of mind had seized upon the chance to catch Straubleder’s blood on a piece of blotting paper and had converted it into what he called “a specimen of instant art.” This he entitled “End of a Long Friendship,” signed, and gave not to Straubleder but to Blorna, saying: “Here's something you can peddle to help you out of a hole.” From this occurrence plus the preceding acts of violence it should be possible to deduce that Art still has a social function. 

Friday 23 February 2024

Moon. Mirror. Moon.

                She woke, was told: ‘Admit a path remote

                from grief and trace the moon’s bright shaft which cleaves

                the curtain’s arrow-slit to find your throat.

                This moonlight is a snake that undeceives.’

 
                Heart-gripped, she wept, led from her bed to draw

                apart the folds; beheld the moon, half-hewn,

                yet burdened, too, in growth; salvation saw

                in her dark mirror, a phantom waning moon;

 
                a moon reshapen in the looking glass,

                whereas the gibbous moon’s a maiden’s shame

                that waxes to its gravid burdensomeness.

                Moonlight beckons: ‘Now pinch the candle flame.’

 
                The steep banks of the millrace told their tale.

                She plunges into floodtide, gasps for breath.

                The mill stood like a church till its great wheel

                grants at last that immemorial death.

 
                In her deserted room the mirror shows

                decrescent moon in fullness grows,

                avowal of a circumstantial lie.

                Affinities the glass does not deny.

                                                                                                                   Catherine Eisner


Photo credit: Alexandra Georgieva

Sunday 7 January 2024

An Émigré Childhood. Opus 42. Southern England 1942.

          There was a time when skies made shadows of
          those great wings that cursed our house a midday dark,               where echoes hid a mute Heil Ludendorff!
          and La Vie Parisienne by Offenbach.
          Always the notes of Chopin’s Waltz impend. 
          Father playing, but never to the end. 
 

The dancer stumbles.

A minute later I lifted the lid to the keyboard and adjusted my piano stool.

            I have since read that seers believe that to dream of playing a piano is a favourable omen and means the discovery of something of great value in a surprising place; so I resolved to realise my dream of the night before.

            I experienced a feeling of equipoise I had not known since I last rode Dinah ... a balanced seat, hands-free, independent of the reins.

            In my opinion it is actually more difficult to run into bar 210 of Valse in A-flat Opus 42 where the waltz ‘stumbles’ than emerge from it – one runs the risk of sounding as if one has simply walked into a wall, rather than suspending the breath for a moment – hence, this artifice of ineptitude is not easy to achieve and, even though Chopin intended to simulate a clumsy dancer’s imbalance before her lost rhythm is regained, the player’s assumed clumsiness must be diligently practiced over and over again.

            So, creating this suspension requires exceptional finesse in timing and shades of dynamics and balance, which, to my way of thinking, is the more difficult task.

            In my father’s case, alas, the task was performed never with consummate success, as though the passage was a nagging regret and he had to return again and again to pick a sore.  (Father would tune his piano himself by feeding a reference note into an oscilloscope an army pal of his had once used for reading radar; he’d then retune the fifths until they were slightly flat. Those dancing waveforms on a monitor screen, as I told the doctors, I always associate with Chopin’s waltzes.)

            For my own part, my effortless arpeggiation on the evening I returned from Boy’s funeral, and my faultless span at bar 255 – which had once made such demands on the extensive stretch of my Father’s left hand – meant I rode the home-straight cooly through the flurry of that passionate coda, and reached the winning post at last, luckily without a fall ... until pent up grief all at once welled up and burst my heart.

Extract from Dispossession       

Part 11 of Sister Morphine (Salt 2008)       

 

 

For particularly recherché (even prophetic) examples of la poésie concrète likewise revealng my father’s ‘deep continent’ brand of polymathy, see The Eleven Surviving Works of L v. K. and . . .
https://catherineeisnerfrance.blogspot.com/2016/04/circo-perfuso-fato-sanguinis.html
 
The Eleven Surviving Works of L v. K are exhibited at the Arts Council Poetry Collection website administered by the Poetry Library at Royal Festival Hall in London’s Southbank Centre . . .

The Eleven Surviving Works of L v. K 
(1902-1939)

A Memoir of a Numeromaniacal Futurist