Yesterday was a beautiful day. We enjoyed the hospitality of Ardarden Walled Garden Tearoom, and then went further down and walked along the Firth of Clyde for a while. The hazy Spring sunshine, crisply cold with enough of a breeze to need the thick fleece, and the play of light on water and mist, softened all the definitions of the further away scenery. The result was magical. Tried to capture some of the beauty and mystery in a few Haiku - but it's a bit like trying to describe a Turner seascape - using only one half of a keyboard! No substitute for seeing it. Going to have a special day in Edinburgh soon to see the new Turner and Italy Exhibition. In preparation I'm going to read some John Ruskin whose prose is as luminously vague and suggestively beautiful to read as the best of Turner's work (which he championed) is to behold.
Eye-watering light
forms colour, shape and shadow;
misty, mystic Clyde.
.....
Yellow, white, ecru;
watercolour masterpiece,
nature paints Turner.
.....
Horizonless view,
palimpsest of filtered rays,
coalesce in gold.
.....
In cold light of March,
promised warmth behind the haze,
nature's optimism.
.....
Opaque crystal glass
charged with amber liquid.
God toasts early Spring.
Oh, yes! And your blog looks great like this - I've been reading you on the feed-reader for a bit, so it came as a surprise.
Posted by: chris | March 21, 2009 at 09:37 PM
Thanks Chris. You didn't happen to take any pictures of that Turneresque river on Friday? Forgot to take my own camera and that kind of hazy light was too special to miss - except I did!
Posted by: Jim Gordon | March 22, 2009 at 09:56 PM