London, This Moment of May

London, This Moment of May I. London, this moment of May. High stately building, lower part in deep shade, upper part brightly lit, with red double-decker bus passing.A Grand Canyon in grey, imperceptibly turning to purple, with an orange glow on its battlements – but teeming in all its cracks, with foam of blossom and bird-flight, with currents of people and cars. Not a city, but a county, a country, a proud world in itself, the planet in a valley, an open oblong fruit, rich with glistening seeds, in the giant hand of clay hollowed out by the Thames.

Photograph: Christina Egan © 2016

II. It is not mine, this city: I borrowed it. I borrowed it for a home, for a while, I borrowed its language, for good. Or it borrowed me, it borrowed my eyes to mount this tall bus, it borrowed my mouth to sing this new song. I run through its veins of walls and windows, of trees and lanterns… A Grand Canyon in grey. Or it runs through my veins, a pale-purple stream, murmuring, glittering… London, this moment of May. Christina Egan © 2013
The title alludes to the famous line by Virginia Woolf: “… what she loved; life; London; this moment of June.” I happened to write my poem in May, on a red bus…
P.S.: A year later, the climate across Europe has slid further into resentment towards foreigners or strangers of any description, be they war refugees or your next-door neighbours. There is a lot of blind anger and fear of vague entities like ‘Europe’ or ‘Islam’. This is the road to racism and fascism. My essay about my identity as an immigrant to England stayed on the front page of trade union UNISON‘s website for weeks: I dream in English. I come from one country, live in another, and plan to move to a third; yet my main identity is European at any rate!
>>> These poems were published in the Haringey Community Press (circulation 15,000) in September 2022.

vermächtnis

vermächtnis

und wieder dünen. wieder hohes gras.
und meer und himmel hier mit urgewalt.
und wieder du in deiner wohlgestalt.
und mein verlangen sanft und ohne maß.

ich tauch in deine lichten augen ein…
das meer entweicht. es war nur wellenschaum.
der tag verbleicht. du warst ein sommertraum.
ich bin allein am strand. ich bin allein.

wie mars in seinem kupferfarbnen glanz
entsteigt dem wall des kiefernwalds dein bild.
die brandung klopft. und klopft. der boden quillt.
ich kröne dich mit meiner verse kranz.

Christina Egan © 2015

Golden dune, green grass and shrubs, deep-blue sky.

 

This is my poem of the year 2015! It is, as the title states, my Bequest.

Like many other poems, it was inspired by a holiday on the Darss.

 

“Dune in Nature reserve Darßer Ort, Baltic Sea”. Photograph: Andreas Tille via Wikimedia Commons.

A Faint Rainbow (Christmas Card)

A Faint Rainbow
(Christmas Card)

A faint rainbow maybe,
draped across a frozen market,
a filigree tree in the foreground,Old Dutch painting: lively scene of skaters between barren trees, steep gables and a pink manor house
some leisurely loops of skaters,
cloaked figures arranged like mute music –
that’ll do for a Christmas poem.

Good that my second-hand thoughts
and my second-rate verse
are still better than any in town
and almost as good as mulled wine…
And good that my real-life love
turns every single day into Christmas!

Christina Egan © 2012

These lines were inspired by this round painting :
A Winter Scene with Skaters near a Castle, ca. 1608-09,
by Hendrick Avercamp. — © National Gallery, London

Schöpfung (Darß)

Schöpfung
(Darß)

I.

schwebend zwischen ungeheuern
wassern und verwunschnen teichen
will die erde sich erneuern
wälder zeugen dünen häufen

II.

wird die see den see erwählen
kraft die ruhe salz die süße
muß sich blau dem grau vermählen
daß es ineinanderfließe

III.

wie die schaumgekrönte göttin
einst dem wilden meer entstieg
so dem bloßen sand die blüte
und dem wüsten schmerz das lied

Christina Egan © 2015


On the Darß (Darss), you can observe ‘Creation’ at work:
between ocean and ponds, between dunes and woods.

The last poem describes the ‘Creation’ of art as another
natural, elemental, process: beauty born out of pain.

You can read an English poem about the Darss at
Midsummernight Far North.

Parallel English and German poems about a similar
phenomenon on the German North Sea coast are at
Views of North Sea Islands.

Fresh & Bright

Fresh & Bright

My brain’s a tube called Fresh & Bright
which squeezes out, in green and white,
a train of thought for your delight
and your enlightenment alike.

My mouth releases bite by bite
its philosophic fluoride
to stimulate your fancy’s flight:
Take one by day and one by night.

Christina Egan © 2015

Portraits of Marble and Verse

silberblech

ich hämmere aus silberblech
aus makellosem mondenlicht
ein lebensvolles angesicht

ich bilde nach mit meiner glut
den sanften glanz den gott erschuf
dies sei mein einziger beruf

Christina Egan © 2015


 

Im Vorübergehn

II.

Es gibt von dir, mein Freund, kein Marmorbild,
in dem das Leben lautlos überquillt,
in dem ein andrer Mensch mit Meisterhand
in Stein das flüchtge Spiel der Züge bannt
und deine Stirn ins Licht des Südens taucht,–
nur Verse, im Vorübergehn gehaucht.

III.

Hinweg mit Ebenholz und Elfenbein,
hinweg mit Binnenreim und Gleichlautreim,–
kein Zeilensprung hält deine Schläfen und
kein Meißel schlägt aus Marmor deinen Mund!
Die sanfte Kraft der Adern übersteigt
ein jedes Bildwerk… bis es steht und schweigt.

Christina Egan © 2014


 

“I hammer from silver sheets”  claims that the foremost task of a sculptor – or any other artist – is to celebrate human beauty; and that he or she recreates the splendour of God’s creation.

“There is of you no marble image” suggests that the image of a person can be as full of life as the person itself; and that verse can make as good a classical monument as marble.

“Away with ebony and ivory” equates those materials with poetic devices – using them while naming them! – and concludes that human beauty, after all, surpasses any work of art.


 

CarlEchtermeyer

 

My ancestor Carl Echtermeier with the model of his last work in 1910.

 

Photograph: „CarlEchtermeyer“ von Unbekannt – Scan Illustrirte Zeitung, Nr. 3502, 11.August 1910. Lizenziert unter PD-alt-100 über Wikipedia –


Marmorrose

Auch dieses Gedicht,
knospengroß,
elfenbeinfarben,
morgenbetaut,

ist letzten Endes
gefrorener Atem,
eine Rose
aus Stein.

Mein eigenstes Eigentum
und deines
und das eines jeden,
mein geschenktes Geschenk.

Immerhin
eine Marmorrose,
dem Leben abgewonnen,
dem Tode abgerungen.

Christina Egan © 2014