Saturday, July 06, 2019

Poem for Saturday and Maryland Zoo African Animals

Incomplete Lioness
By Linda Bierds

—National Gallery, London

Or lion. Too little marble left for certainty:
affixed to a bone-like armature, just a flank
and scored shoulder, and far down the missing,
crouching shape, a single, splay-toed paw.
The companion, or mate, is better formed
and offers a template to trace a bit, image to absence
to memory, until the lioness fills.

The exhibit is Fragments and Dislocations:
Sight and Sightlessness. Across the room
in Renaissance, the painter, retinas tattered
as a saint’s hem, might have filled a lioness
differently: absence first, then memory,
and then the lines around his own vision, its crags

and wilderness. His century failed him,
a placard says. Just eye-lid balms
and powdered rhubarb. What retina remained
must have caught his subject’s chosen states—penitence
and ecstasy—nearsightedly, which would explain
the perfect stones, less perfect trees. Or perhaps
his partial sightlessness was corneal, and thus

the painting’s mood, front-lit through gauze.
In either case, what the painter knew—that his saint
and tiny crucifix would not adorn an altarpiece—
comes to us more slowly. Wood grains,
punch patterns, and the small keyhole
beneath a varnished leaf, suggest a sacristy cupboard,

not worship’s place, but preservation’s.
Chosen states, the placard said.
Vacancy and memory. Ecstasy and penitence.
And then, His partial vision of the whole
produced a partial masterpiece:
a saint—Jerome—and grizzled robe, flawless
in its dust. The rest is incomplete, but zero-mass

radiography, its lights and darks reversed,
reveals a shape beneath the scene:
Jerome as just two simple lines, white arc
across white axis—before they both were white-
washed over, and the saint began,
and umber brought the lion to him.

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I had a fairly quiet July 5th because I was trying to finish a Shutterfly book of Iceland photos while I had both a free book coupon and unlimited free pages. So I got absolutely nothing else accomplished on Friday, but my 56-page book cost less than $10 (and that was entirely for shipping and tax), so that was a great success! Adam went shopping for a bed for his new apartment with my parents, then to a movie marathon since his high school friends with whom he's been doing those for nearly a decade are home this week.

Paul and I had dinner with my parents, came home for Agents of SHIELD which has been really strange this season though it is, at least, holding my interest, then we caught up on the Blood and Treasure we missed (a guilty pleasure but I see it has been renewed for next season, so yay!). Then we watched the end of the Nationals miserable 11-inning loss and put on the Dodgers game right after the earthquake. Here are some of the Maryland Zoo's African animals, whom we had practically to ourselves in the rain:

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