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Sketchbook

a journal for eastern and western forms

 

An Ekphrastic Poem

Bernard Gieske, US

 

 

 

Free Verse

 

An Ekphrastic Poem

 

The Girl with the Pearl Earring

(Painting by Johannes Vermeer) *

(Novel by Tracy Chavalier)

 

She chops the cabbage, leeks, and carrots,
forming circles of red, of white, and green.
An exercise in colors he will notice when he comes.

She cuts and files his nails
hiding souvenirs of blue
from his work with tiles in Delft.

An exercise of love while holding her father’s hands.
She drains the yellows and browns from the bed pans
into the gray flowing waters of the canal.

A worker shouts hello from a passing barge.
An exercise of surprise that he would notice her.
She boils and hangs the sheets, and napkins, and underwear

billowing white in the breeze of the sunlight.
An exercise of labor earning stuivers for her family.
She walks the cobbled stones to the butcher’s stall in the market square.

The butcher’s son quickly chances glances hearing her voice
selecting fish or choice red meats,
eager to fill her orders with extra smiles.

An exercise or chore or maybe more
She strolls with him on Sunday afternoons
down the lane along the tulip fields,

hand in hand, in conversations, planning, promising,
sharing warm places and picnicking in the green.
An exercise exploring a blooming love affair.

She sits plainly seen in the sun’s morning pallette,
a lemon-blue turban hugging her head
a wisp of hair, just a curl, above her ear and the Pearl .

An exercise posing just for him.
She sits turning her head until her eyes
are watching him, Johannes Vermeer

exercising his artistry, secretly painting her,

Girl with a Pearl Earring by Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675)
This picture is in the public domain.

An Ekphrasic poem is a writing, a poem,  that comments upon another art form, for instance a poem about a photograph, a film or a painting.

 

 

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