I felt my life with both my hands – Emily Dickinson
I felt my life with both my hands
To see if it was there –
I held my spirit to the Glass,
To prove it possibler –
I turned my Being round and round
And paused at every pound
To ask the Owner’s name –
For doubt, that I should know the sound –
I judged my features – jarred my hair –
I pushed my dimples by, and waited –
If they – twinkled back –
Conviction might, of me –
I told myself, “Take Courage, Friend –
That – was a former time –
But we might learn to like the Heaven,
As well as our Old Home”!
I will not argue who might be the best Canadian photographer still alive, but I can assert I am the best in the country with hands. It was my Rosemary who in the late 70s pointed out a little finger that was sticking out in portrait that I was going to take to the Vancouver Magazine, for art director Rick Staehling. I pooh-poohed her opinion. Shockingly, Staehling noticed, so from that point on I always made sure I noticed hands and fingers in my portraits. It helped that I shot many ballet and modern dancers.
In my memory, I know a man who had and probably has the best hands I ever saw in a man. His name is Jim Cummins and he is still known as I, Braineater from his 70s and 80s punk days.
I came up with the idea of taking his portrait at his studio that happened to have a white wall (or was it a black one?). I made an 11x14 inch print and then asked Cummins to do his then trademark art work on it. The photograph ran in Vancouver Magazine.
When Staehling returned the print, I had it framed. It is up in my guest room. My only concern is that the photographic paper, Ilford Ilfospeed is not archival. I may in a near future have it scanned and printed in archival inkjet paper.
One of the pleasures of writing my blogs,6031 including this one, is finding poems that go with my photographs. I have used at least 100 poems by Emily Dickinson. This one is one more. But in a past blog I used another Dickinson poem on a hand.
More Emily Dickinson
Rosemary white and a bit of yellow
November left then clambered up
You cannot make remembrance grow
November
the maple wears a gayer scarf
Just as green and as white
It's full as opera
I cannot dance upon my Toes
a door just opened on the street
Amber slips away
Sleep
When August burning low
Pink Small and punctual
A slash of blue
I cannot dance upon my toes
Ah little rose
For hold them, blue to blue
Linda Melsted - the music of the violin does not emerge alone
The Charm invests her face
A sepal, a petal and a thorn
The Savior must have been a docile Gentleman
T were blessed to have seen
There is no frigate like a book
I pay in satin cash
Water makes many beds
The viola da gamba
But sequence ravelled out of reach
A parasol is the umbrella's daughter
Without the power to die
Lessons on the piny
Ample make this bed
How happy is the little stone
The shutting of the eye
I dwell in possibility
when Sappho was a living girl
In a library
A light exists in spring
The lady dare not lift her veil
I took my power in my hand
I find my feet have further goals
I cannot dance upon my toes
The Music of the Violin does not emerge alone
Red Blaze
He touched me, so I live to know
Rear Window- The Entering Takes Away
Said Death to Passion
We Wear the Mask That Grins And Lies
It was not death for I stood alone
The Music in the Violin Does Not Emerge Alone
I tend my flowers for thee
Lavinia Norcross Dickinson
Pray gather me anemone!
Ample make her bed
His caravan of red
Me-come! My dazzled face
Develops pearl and weed
But peers beyond her mesh
Surgeons must be very careful
Water is taught by thirst
I could not prove that years had feet
April played her fiddle
A violin in Baize replaced
I think the longest hour
The spirit lasts
http://blog.alexwaterhousehayward.com/2014/03/i-left-them-in-ground-emily-dickinson.html
http://blog.alexwaterhousehayward.com/2014/01/i-felt-my-life-with-both-my-hands.html
http://blog.alexwaterhousehayward.com/2011/03/currer-bell-emily-dickinson-charlotte.html
http://blog.alexwaterhousehayward.com/2011/03/and-zero-at-bone-with-dirks-of-melody.html
http://blog.alexwaterhousehayward.com/2011/05/charm-invests-her-face.html
http://blog.alexwaterhousehayward.com/2011/06/i-could-not-see-to-see.html
http://blog.alexwaterhousehayward.com/2011/06/blonde-assasin-passes-on.html
http://blog.alexwaterhousehayward.com/2012/12/you-almost-bathed-your-tongue.html