Archive for the 'Mediterranean' Category

May6th

Heather Dubrow

Thursday, May 6th, 2010
Heather Dubrow

Heather Dubrow is John D. Boyd, SJ, Chair in the Poetic Imagination at Fordham University in New York City. Her work includes a forthcoming collection of poems Forms and Hollows (Word Press, scheduled for February 2011), two chapbooks of poetry, a play produced by a community theater, and poems in numerous journals; she is also the author of six scholarly books, a coedited collection of essays, a forthcoming edition of As You Like It, and many articles on early modern/Renaissance literature and on pedagogy.

 
Our Lady of Murano

Venice, 1993

The sexton admits us right before closing.
“One of the most influential instances
of fourteenth-century Byzantine art,”
I announce as we hurry in.
(Look carefully, she may be on the final.)
“Compare the Annunciation at the Victoria and Albert.”
(I have eleven typed five-by-eight index cards on her
and a new PowerPoint presentation
instead of all those slides.)

A mother in a womb of bright gold tiles,
a bubble that will never burst.
She is slender as smoke,
or my faith.
Powerful as her own.
Look carefully, she is the final.

I try to recite to myself the four principal characteristics
of the Byzantine Palaeologue Revival (1260-1450),
the mantra of an unbeliever,
the tiles that pave my mind.
But cannot remember,
or only broken fragments,
as she rises above me
in a sky of unbroken gold.

This is no country for art historians.

Previous published in the
January-February 1996
issue of Harvard Magazine.


All poems on this post: © Heather Dubrow
Published on mediterranean.nu with the permission of Heather Dubrow

Resize

  • Use Ctrl + / - to resize the text

Social bookmarking

    • Share/Bookmark

Recent Contributors

Contributor

Contributor

Contributor

Contributor

Contributor

Contributor

Contributor

Contributor

Contributor

Contributor

 

Contributors' Books