It comes from a poem I wrote in my youth, entitled Wind Woman, in which the wind is a woman sending breezes to tease, lift skirts, tousle hair, all sorts of frisky things. I lost that poem for several decades, but a friend found it and sent me a copy. I tried to update it, but failed. It was the power of the wind in this instance that spoke of enragement.
Published in the following literary/art journals: PRISM International, pseudonym: 422-902-510; IMPULSE, pseudonym: Peoples Republic of Poetry; WAVES, pseudonym: 422-902-510; The FIDDLEHEAD, pseudonym: 422-902-510; DESCANT, pseudonym: 422-902-510; OPEN LETTER, pseudonym: Peoples Republic of Poetry; RAMPIKE, pseudonym: Peoples Republic of Poetry; OTHER VOICES, pseudonym: 422-902-510; WEST COAST REVIEW, pseudonym: 422-902-510; MACLEANS, pseudonym: Peoples Republic of Poetry; CAROUSEL & MISUNDERSTANDINGS as Wally Keeler;
WALKING ON THE GREENHOUSE ROOF, published by Delta Canada, Montreal, 1969;
1ST INTERIM REPORT OF THE COMMISSION ON THE CAUSES AND MANIFESTATIONS OF DIVERGENT THINK PROCEDURE CONCERING THE FIRST TEN YEARS OF THE HISTORY OF THE PEOPLES REPUBLIC OF POETRY, Samizdata Publications, Toronto, 1981
3 comments:
What a fabulously beautiful shot! Interesting it isn't 'old man wind' but 'ENRAGED WIND WOMAN'. Hmmm.
GailM
It comes from a poem I wrote in my youth, entitled Wind Woman, in which the wind is a woman sending breezes to tease, lift skirts, tousle hair, all sorts of frisky things. I lost that poem for several decades, but a friend found it and sent me a copy. I tried to update it, but failed. It was the power of the wind in this instance that spoke of enragement.
WILD WIND WOMAN to Dillon's Blowing in the Wind is hypnotising, replayed it several times.
Claudette1
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