Super Moon over Danbury, Connecticut, 06 May, 2012 (That's a tree leaf on the bottom.)

09 May, 2012

Poem on Blindness


This week's Poetry Jam has the concept of blindness as its theme. Below is a poem I've revised several times. I took the photograph whilst driving south of Dublin, lost and 'blind' to the correct pathway to I.A.D.T. in Dun Laoghaire. Thank you, gentlemen at Dunphey's Pub, for your fine directions and hand-drawn map!


Blind
A blinding
moves her
to close the blind
shielding her
from brilliance

Outside-
the hour of dusk
palpitates
with a creative verve
releasing gold

Within-
a beam expands
that cannot blind
for Memory
sustains the weakest eye.

Jeanne I. Lakatos

Dandelion Wine Recipe



Yes, 2012 is shaping to be an excellent year for the dandelion crop. Below is a recipe for dandelion wine I copied from my mother's recipe box many many years ago, but I've no idea of the origin of this recipe: 

Dandelion Wine Recipe
1 quart dandelion blossoms- packed solidly
1 gallon water-boil water for 10 minutes
Add blossoms to water and cook for 10 more minutes. 
After cooking, strain off the blossoms
Add 3 1/2 lbs. sugar to juice and 2 packets of dried yeast
Add about 4 oranges whole and 5 lemons whole
Add 1/2 lb. raisons
Soak one week with raisons. 
Stir well at least once a day while soaking during the 2 weeks.

30 April, 2012

Sydney Owenson (Lady Morgan): Revolutionary



Sydney Owenson sheds light on the status of the common man and woman in mid-nineteenth century Ireland and incorporates semiotic structures within her works to communicate with her readers the various discrepancies in legislation, particularly the Act of Union 1801, decades after its enactment. Although inequity in governmental legislation exists internationally, by 1825, the imbalance within the legislative structures is unacceptable to intelligent women associated with the British or the Irish aristocracy along with the increasing numbers of female writers and readers.

For example, in the preface of her essay entitled, Absenteeism, she highlights the need for both the English and the Irish to be mindful of their patriotic responsibilities:

Notwithstanding the intense interest which is felt throughout all England concerning Ireland and Irish affairs, notwithstanding the frequent debates in parliament, and more frequent pamphlets and volumes published on points of Irish politics and oeconomy, the prevailing ignorance on these subjects still operates powerfully in maintaining prejudices the most unfounded and the most fatal, and in retarding those measures of wisdom and of justice without which Ireland can never be happy; or the British Empire secure. [1]


In this statement, Owenson demonstrates commonality between the authority, England, and the respective community of Ireland, as she begins with the phrase, ‘notwithstanding the intense interest which is felt…’ Thus, she engages in the use of negative phraseology linked with passive voice to unite the divergent intentions of England and Ireland.


[1] Sydney Owenson (Lady Morgan), Absenteeism, (London: Henry Colburn, 1825) pp. ix and x. For future reference within this study, the work will be cited as Abs.

26 March, 2012

Ode to Skunk Cabbage

This week's (or was it last week's?) Poetry Jam prompt deals with connections. We've had such an unusually warm winter here in the United States that it seems Spring has sprung early from coast to coast. Having recently returned from beautiful New Orleans, where the azaleas and magnolias are in full bloom, I just had to submit this little ode to one of the harbingers of Spring, the Skunk Cabbage as my illustration of the connection between artist and nature. (This IS a repeat for some of you who have been on board the Poetry Bus, too.)

photo of skunk cabbage from Google Images
                   
Ode to Skunk Cabbage
Bursting forth from its ruddy milieu,      
it erects from its hooded spathe.
This courageous prophet boldly faces
the chilly air with unique confidence, 
guided by a mighty force.
Radiating silently, as if to say,
“Come to me, for I offer
the nourishment you need now,”
his sweetness within calls upon
the daring creature to receive its warmth.
And she responds, and she comes:
the beetle, the spider, the queen bee,
warmed by the generosity 
of Spring’s first.
Odoriferous, proud, protective,
he inspires the fragrant flora
to engender beauty.
Now, Spring has arrived
with the burgeoning
of the exceptional skunk cabbage.

Jeanne I. Lakatos 2011

01 March, 2012

Poetry Jam: Anaphora Poetry

Our challenge is to write in the Anaphora poetic format.
Click here: Poetry Jam to view some wonderful poetry from the other "Jammers."


For Giveness
Given 
from the heart,
given with humility,
given freely,
this gift of joy
is a given 
that another will 
give.

Jeanne I. Lakatos

14 February, 2012

Heart and Consciousness: Happy Valentine's Day!


In her book, Patriotic Sketches of Ireland, Sydney Owenson observes:
 Political philosophy is an extension of the mind’s eye to the whole great scale of civil society, and demonstrating the close-linked dependencies of its remotest parts, affords to the benevolence of the human heart, and the comprehension of the human understanding, a social system, gratifying to the feelings of the one, and ennobling to the faculties of the other. (33)

The human heart and 'comprehension of understanding,' which I will identify as consciousness, are two distinct entities, for the heart, aside from its organic characteristics, contains the essence of human emotions. On the other hand, comprehension of understanding involves the assimilation of intelligence and critical analysis as they interact with the psycho-physiological structure in a wondrous flow of human experience. I reflect on this concept in the following poem:

Flow I
Passion creates verve
whose song desires voice;
now boldly sing
radiate stillness
encircle fear: enflame!
This fervor flows
with molten resonance
angled benevolence
evolution through revolution,
illumined by the intricacy
of simplicity adorned
transformed
with interlacing
flow.

Jeanne I. Lakatos 


27 January, 2012

Poetry Jam: Sensuality

This week, our Poetry Jam has us thinking sensually. Below, is a nineteenth century painting entitled, The Five Senses, by Austrian artist, Hans Makart. I have presented below this sensuous painting an excerpt from my operetta, Luminescence, which hopefully will elicit a feeling of sensuality.  
The Five Senses
by Austrian artist, Hans Makart (1840-1884)

Morning Recitative
(from my operetta, Luminescence)


Enlighten
Lush overgrowth 
forms an inspiring, prolific canopy
Tender petals compete
for limited radiance
of the morning’s brilliance.
Abandoned
by inheritors of this fertile land,
the garden flourishes independently 
in floral splendour.

Bathe
A cooling brook meanders
through the twisted, scented undergrowth,
creating a reflective ribbon,
adorning this Eden 
with bubbling ballads.
Elegant, colourful bouquets embellish
fertile banks with a natural brilliance.
Soothing resonance honours the presence
of infinite intelligence.


Live
Flowers open their petals,
attracting the arrival of winged courtiers,
who pollinate their yearning pistils.
They clamour close to the wall,
reflecting wisdom of the struggle
to remain vibrant in this forgotten place.
Their beauty blends resplendent
colour with fragrance,
giving the garden vitality,
as one more day brings sensual lustre
into the chaos of the untamed garden.

Jeanne I. Lakatos  © 2005