View Full Version : The sun, that peppercorn
PrinceMyshkin
11-22-2010, 10:20 AM
The sun, that peppercorn,
shines as if it were
the naked face of God.
Beneath it, we huddle
in the sanctuaries - Khartoum, Edinburgh, Mumbai
- we have sketched,
we here, others there.
Underneath that, the lesser peppercorns
scatter on their apparently
aimless way...
hillwalker
11-22-2010, 10:47 AM
One of the eternal questions... I was intrigued as to why Edinburgh figures in the company of two such exotic cities (unless it signifies Protestantism - linked with two other centres of faith?).....
However, I'm not overly fond of that final line and feel the poem can survive without such a conclusion. It reminds me of a duck-billed platitude.....
H
PrinceMyshkin
11-22-2010, 12:11 PM
One of the eternal questions... I was intrigued as to why Edinburgh figures in the company of two such exotic cities (unless it signifies Protestantism - linked with two other centres of faith?).....
However, I'm not overly fond of that final line and feel the poem can survive without such a conclusion. It reminds me of a duck-billed platitude.....
H
Edinburgh is there, intuitively, just to provide a combination of the exotic and the familiar or well-established. As to the "duck-billed platitude," a phrase I'd never heard before but that I found hilarious, I plead only that the poem as a whole went through so many different, variously unsatisfying versions, hat I may have given in to simple exhaustion at that point. If I had to defend it, I'd say that its homeliness is meant to undercut the capricious or mischievous image of the opening line.
Jerrybaldy
11-22-2010, 06:29 PM
I would love to be able to write in this way.
JerryB
PrinceMyshkin
11-22-2010, 07:53 PM
I would love to be able to write in this way.
JerryB
Not a problem, Guv. Here's what you do:
1) Key in the following:
The sun, that peppercorn,
then report back to me here for the next step.
Delta40
11-22-2010, 07:55 PM
aren't peppercorns black? I had difficulty linking this to the sun
Jerrybaldy
11-22-2010, 08:29 PM
The whole world hates a smart arse prince :P
luckily I abide you :D
_Shannon_
11-22-2010, 09:08 PM
peppercorn twice in a poem so small....I am not sure it's import, and I think I don't understand the connection between that word and the sun and the huddling< how can one see the sun inside a sanctuary??
PrinceMyshkin
11-23-2010, 08:54 AM
peppercorn twice in a poem so small....I am not sure it's import, and I think I don't understand the connection between that word and the sun and the huddling< how can one see the sun inside a sanctuary??
I don't subscribe to the notion that one should not use a word twice in a poem, whatever the length, so long as one isn't expecting it to have the same force each time. As to what the thing means as a whole: no more than a vivid, overtly incomprehensible dream.
_Shannon_
11-23-2010, 10:22 AM
I don't subscribe to the notion that one should not use a word twice in a poem, whatever the length, so long as one isn't expecting it to have the same force each time. As to what the thing means as a whole: no more than a vivid, overtly incomprehensible dream.
LOL! It's the editor in me.....lol! :seeya:
Haunted
11-23-2010, 11:54 AM
Edinburgh is there, intuitively, just to provide a combination of the exotic and the familiar or well-established. As to the "duck-billed platitude," a phrase I'd never heard before but that I found hilarious, I plead only that the poem as a whole went through so many different, variously unsatisfying versions, hat I may have given in to simple exhaustion at that point. If I had to defend it, I'd say that its homeliness is meant to undercut the capricious or mischievous image of the opening line.
I particularly adore the first stanza but I bet there are versions you casted aside that are just as satisfying if not more.
PrinceMyshkin
11-23-2010, 12:44 PM
LOL! It's the editor in me.....lol! :seeya:
What is that saying: "Editor, edit thyself!"
PrinceMyshkin
11-23-2010, 01:43 PM
Delta: Peppercorns can be white, pink or even (I think) red; but yes, this peppercorn, as I imagined it, was black - and of course a virtual infinity smaller than the sun. Hence, what it meant to me - as far as I could get - was the amazing difference between how things might appear to us and how they might be in some other context: e.g., the largest object in our galaxy seen against the vastness of the known or conjectured multiverse, in which the sun might be no more than a peppercorn is to us.
I particularly adore the first stanza but I bet there are versions you casted aside that are just as satisfying if not more.
You're being discreet about the earlier version that I showed you, which you were enthusiastic about, which I appreciated. All I can add is that the first line was one of those that just popped up out of the murk, and I never figured out to my satisfaction what to do with it.
I do grieve over the loss of the something more this poem might have been.
Delta40
11-23-2010, 05:29 PM
oh. I get it now. sometimes I need stuff spelled out to me!
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