Up Close

You can probably tell that I’m enthralled with my new, spendy, close-up lens by now, but I find it fascinating to put it on the camera and go out and explore a whole new world.

Perhaps I’m merely indulging some childhood fantasies about becoming a biologist and spending my life studying plants. Perhaps I’m compensating for the fact that I never had access to one of those high-fangled electron microscopes that allow you to see the beauty at a microscopic level.

For whatever reason, I find being able to blow up a flower the size of my thumb into an 11 x 14 print enchanting, so I guess you’ll be seeing a few more of these for awhile, at least until I tire of my new toy.

Besides, I think it’s amazing how beautiful these plain-jane looking flowers are when examined closely, all the more remarkable when you consider how many of them there are.

Crash

I know a number of bloggers I read use Apple computers, so I thought I’d give a heads-up on a potential problem for those who use Techtools Pro, the program Apple includes with their extended warranty.

Since I had an unidentified squeak in my G5, I decided to run the program after checking to see whether there was a newer version available and being informed I had the latest version available, 3.03. Everything except the Volume Structure checked out fine. Since the program suggested I should fix the “problem,” I told it to go ahead and fix it.

Big mistake.

The System was shredded beyond repair. I had to use the Tiger disk to boot my computer, and, though I could then see the hard drive, nothing I owned could repair the system, though Techtool still said it was fine.

When I called Apple, they told me there were some known problems between Tiger (10.4) and Techtools Pro but their documents said that though Techtool would misdiagnose the problem, it wouldn’t hurt the drive to let Techtool try to fix it. I guess I was the exception. They told me I would have to erase the drive and start over.

To make a long story short, I’ve spent much of the last two days restoring the drive and redoing some things I did last month, like balance my checkbook.

I would have had much more fun walking through the woods, playing with Photoshop, or finishing reading Creeley’s poems.

Creeley’s “Myself”

When I suddenly find a number of poems I like clustered together after reading the previous hundred pages and scarcely finding one I liked, I wonder if it’s me or the poet that’s at fault. Have I been reading in some kind of mental daze, unable to recognize a masterpiece when I see it?

Generally, I end up dismissing such self-doubts because to admit them would require me to re-read far more than I have time to read. Instead, I surmise that, like me, poets sometimes discover the right vein and mine it for all it’s worth until it finally runs out.

Whatever accounts for such a phenomena, I suddenly found a dozen or so of Creeley’s poems that I like in the last 150 pages of his Selected Poems. Since I’d already typed “Myself” by the time I found the others, I’ll just pretend this is my favorite in this section:

MYSELF

What, younger, felt
was possible, now knows
is not – but still
not changed enough –

Walked by the sea,
unchanged in memory –
evening, as clouds
on the far-off rim

of water float,
pictures of time,
smoke, faintness –
still the dream.

I want, if older,
still to know
why, human, men
and women are

so torn, so lost,
why hopes cannot
find better world
than this.

Shelley is dead and gone,
who said,
“Taught them not this –
to know themselves;

their might could not repress
the mutiny within,
And for the morn
of truth they feigned,

deep night
Caught them ere evening . . .”

I must admit that the poem seems flawed because of, to me at least, an awkward opening stanza. While I like gnomic lines better than most, the stanza comes off like a badly-written telegram rather than a poem.

The poem is redeemed, though, by “I want, if older,/ still to know/ why, human, men/ and women are/ so torn, so lost,/ why hopes cannot/ find better world/ than this.” Who, in old age, and, youth, too, for that matter, has not felt “so torn, so lost” after such great hopes at the beginning, as if the beginning inevitably contains within itself seeds of despair that inevitably come to full bloom at their appointed time.

While it’s these middle stanzas that I like best, I’m also attracted to the final quotation from Shelley, a quotation from “The Triumph Of Life,”
the poem Shelley was working on at his death. The recognition that this same question has preoccupied past generations adds resonance to the feelings expressed here. We realize it is the human condition to fail and to despair in that failure unless in the end we are able to truly understand ourselves and our needs.