Hotel Cozumel
Von: R Ayala (ra7682@gmail.com) [Profil]
Datum: 13.07.2009 20:32
Message-ID: <8d22a8ce-33c8-4836-9c66-6463b7eef0fd@d36g2000prb.googlegroups.com>
Newsgroup: uk.media
Datum: 13.07.2009 20:32
Message-ID: <8d22a8ce-33c8-4836-9c66-6463b7eef0fd@d36g2000prb.googlegroups.com>
Newsgroup: uk.media
By rayala This Summer I have been commenting on the Collections of Noble Bandit. What started as a small curiosity has turned into a fascination for me. In this meeting, I wanted to know how much of the poet's work was factually-based and did her imagination alter these experiences? During our interview, we discussed "Brand New Day" which she wrote in March of this year. She described it to be an abstraction of an event that had true meaning. She explains, "it was love at first dive." Brand New Day I sensed a change was on the way When you visited me yesterday Fair-haired Super Hero version Boundless on the ocean barren ...Hm...yes, supernatural The whole of him so visible - Tell me, Sir... Without a word In any incarnation Completely away from anyone - Don't try to keep me To put it more strongly A certain unease Such lines as these I didn't object Broken gasps, and yet What else could I do? Heavenly vision That was it, it seems He walked along the beach By the setting sun He stared back again 'Till only a shaft of light Keep thinking all night Oh perfect creature, gallant lad That's all. He had been a God She tells of a visit with an 'ocean gentleman' who had returned from half way around the world and imagines herself together with him in this exotic ocean paradise. She's enraptured with this young man who spends his days in the watery underworld descending into dark caves and caverns...hundreds of bubbles boiling to the surface. Jagged rocks and harrowing moments two hundred feet below.... In this work, she's visualizing the mental landscape, the emotion into the dark...but the crystal clear waters above bring her to self and sensibility. Her associations, are at the same time, personal and conscious. S. L. Newman's interest in 'waters' and the 'supernatural' shows she wrote "Brand New Day" with much more in mind than a single event. Her dreams, her thoughts, come into focus when she, the speaker, states in the sixth line, "the whole of him so visible." Following this, the poem tries to sort out, is this man real or imaginary? "Don't try to keep me" gives it away. As the speaker studies this, it becomes clear, he is just imaginary. (Perhaps, in reality, he was real, but just for a night. She's angered and hurt by this and so categorizes him as imaginary.) In newer works, S. L. Newman continues recollecting and connecting with the real and imaginary and asks the reader to observe. Can you envision something? She has written two collections, thus far, and is now working on her third.[ Auf dieses Posting antworten ]
Antworten
- Trev (13.07.2009 21:36)
