The influence on today’s poem that I knew at once was my visit yesterday with Tim and my sister, Karla, to the Minneapolis Institute of Art to see the annual extravaganza that is Art in Bloom. Previous posts have featured past years’ intersections between the art in the museum’s permanent collections and the creativity of the area’s floral artists.
The influence I only realized as I was preparing this post was my love of a poem by William Butler Yeats called “A Coat.” If you don’t know it, or if you want to reread it now, it is available on the Poetry Foundation website HERE.
Now I am intrigued by “Miss Lily Place.” “Prodigious shopper in the Suq”! Really, one cannot make these things–even these names–up!
People watching is as much fun–maybe more fun–than seeing the permanent art and the ephemeral floral creations inspired by it. My favorite image is the penultimate one!
Minneapolis Museum of Art–Art in Bloom–Spring 2014 (Photo: Leslie Schultz)
The fifth section of Geranium Lake is filled with a long, nine-part poem that took me more than twenty years to complete. “Lady Tashat’s Mystery” began as a response to exploring the permanent collections of the Minneapolis Museum of Art. It evolved into an inquiry about what we, individually and collectively, chose to preserve and display, what effects that has, what it says about us. Museums–temples to the Muses–are very important to me. During the pandemic, I missed their closure more than the closure of restaurants or other public spaces. I find museums lively and stimulating. At the same time, whenever I am in a museum, I am keenly aware of the presences of those long dead, and, in a way, of how culture depends upon conversations with those long departed, upon questions of why the dead did as they did and made what they made–and what we continue to make of it all.
This particular “exhibit” raised more questions than I can answer, even after I spoke with a curator and did as much reseach as a lay person could do. Though I continue to wonder and ponder, I think now that there is no answer or, rather, the answer is simply the mystery of existence.
Below are the first two sections of the poem, and a glimpse of part of my amassed background information.
Lady Tashat’s Mystery
for Leo Luke Marcello
That which is hidden might be preserved.
One day it will come to light.
I. Reading the Bones
Under the desert sand,
Under the rock.
Behind the false door,
Behind the true.
Beneath two heavy lids
And two painted smiles,
Beneath the linen tapes
Stiff with unguent.
I am revealed.
I can tell no more.
But if my riddle begins to tap
Like an ibis bill
Inside your head,
Then you already have the map,
And I, though chill,
Am not utterly dead.
II. The Museum-Goer
The snows of Minneapolis are white as marble dust
and cut the nostrils like fragments of bad dreams.
The Institute, too, is white:
stone, a slippery mountain, behind the delicate tepees
pitched on a frozen lawn. Inside, treasures of
six continents lie in cold cases, on view.
I have been here before
to see the quilts of dead women
and the brushed smoke and sunlight of dead men.
Each time, I circle the Poet's Mountain
hewn from a single piece of bluish jade.
To one who looks closely, it is possible to see
drunken men winding up the side of a glassy mountain,
tottering unaware near precipices, over slender bridges,
their thin beards quavering with excitement. They are part
of a world as fragile and polished as the road they tread.
From a distance the mountain
looks like a heavy cloud or a dragon's blue egg. Do you
suppose the poets know this?
Do they think that if they get their words
just right the mountain might split open
with a clap of thunder?
If so, would this be praise?
May this be a day when you, too, enjoy grappliing with an unanswerable question! LESLIE
Reseach into the mystery of Lady Tashat (Photo: Leslie Schultz)Lady Tashat Cartonnage (Photo: Leslie Schultz)