Time’s Wan Wave

Lucia Joyce (Photo by Berenice Abbott, 1928)

A Flower Given to My Daughter

Frail the white rose and frail are
Her hands that gave
Whose soul is sere and paler
Than time’s wan wave.

Rosefrail and fair — yet frailest
A wonder wild
In gentle eyes thou veilest,
My blueveined child.

James Joyce

Lucia Joyce (Wikipedia)

The lost story of James Joyce’s daughter as a Parisian dancer

Rosefrail and Fair” — Lucia Joyce, Dancer Daughter of James Joyce

How James Joyce’s Daughter, Lucia, Was Treated for Schizophrenia by Carl Jung

James Joyce publishes a special edition of Pomes Penyeach illustrated by Lucia Joyce

Facsimile of the special edition

Innocence in the Eyes

To a Child Dancing in the Wind

Dance there upon the shore;	 
What need have you to care	 
For wind or water’s roar?	 
And tumble out your hair	 
That the salt drops have wet;
Being young you have not known	 
The fool’s triumph, nor yet	 
Love lost as soon as won,	 
Nor the best labourer dead	 
And all the sheaves to bind.
What need have you to dread	 
The monstrous crying of wind?

William Butler Yeats (1865–1939)
Brutal

I want it to be, like, messy

I'm so insecure, I think
That I'll die before I drink
And I'm so caught up in the news
Of who likes me and who hates you
And I'm so tired that I might
Quit my job, start a new life
And they'd all be so disappointed
'Cause who am I, if not exploited?

And I'm so sick of 17
Where's my fucking teenage dream?
If someone tells me one more time
"Enjoy your youth, " I'm gonna cry
And I don't stick up for myself
I'm anxious and nothing can help
And I wish I'd done this before
And I wish people liked me more

All I did was try my best
This the kind of thanks I get?
Unrelentlessly upset (ah, ah, ah)
They say these are the golden years
But I wish I could disappear
Ego crush is so severe
God, it's brutal out here
(Yeah!)

I feel like no one wants me
And I hate the way I'm perceived
I only have two real friends
And lately, I'm a nervous wreck
'Cause I love people I don't like
And I hate every song I write
And I'm not cool and I'm not smart
And I can't even parallel park

All I did was try my best
This the kind of thanks I get?
Unrelentlessly upset (ah, ah, ah)
They say these are the golden years
But I wish I could disappear
Ego crush is so severe
God, it's brutal out here
(Yeah! Just having a really good time)

Got a broken ego, broken heart (it's brutal out here, it's brutal out here)
And God, I don't even know where to start

Olivia Rodrigo (2021)

Wandering far from Home

Anna Alma-Tadema (1865-1943) – Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema’s Study at Townshend House, 1884.

This lovely watercolor by a 19-year-old girl shows her artist father’s study, and it appealed to me as a place where I could peacefully spend a lot of time, reluctantly leaving, and happily returning. It doesn’t resemble any place I’ve ever lived. It’s painted with such grace in such a gentle style, you can tell how fond Ms. Alma-Tadema was of this room, and of the memories it held for her.

But when I went searching through the Web for more about her, as so often happens, I wandered far, far afield, from link to link. It seems that Anna had a sister named Laurence who was a writer in many genres, and one of her poems, “If No One Ever Marries Me,” was set to music and eventually included on a double album of children’s songs sung by Natalie Merchant, an alternative rock singer-songwriter who rose to fame in the 1980s as a member of the band 10,000 Maniacs. Far afield.

The tracklist for this album, “Leave Your Sleep,” reads like a who’s who of poets writing in English from the Victorian to the Modern Period, and it intrigued me no end… So I had to go looking for some of the songs and the poems they came from. The first one I found was “The Peppery Man” (video link), a cool, bluesy interpretation of a poem by Arthur Macy about a mean old man. It’s the kind of thing children used to love, because they all knew men like this.

The Peppery Man
 
 The Peppery Man was cross and thin;
 He scolded out and scolded in;
 He shook his fist, his hair he tore;
 He stamped his feet and slammed the door.

 Heigh ho, the Peppery Man,
 The rabid, crabbed Peppery Man!
 Oh, never since the world began
 Was anyone like the Peppery Man.

 His ugly temper was so sour
 He often scolded for an hour;
 He gnashed his teeth and stormed and scowled,
 He snapped and snarled and yelled and howled.

 He wore a fierce and savage frown;
 He scolded up and scolded down;
 He scolded over field and glen,
 And then he scolded back again.

 His neighbors, when they heard his roars,
 Closed their blinds and locked their doors,
 Shut their windows, sought their beds,
 Stopped their ears and covered their heads.

 He fretted, chafed, and boiled and fumed;
 With fiery rage he was consumed,
 And no one knew, when he was vexed,
 What in the world would happen next.

 Heigh ho, the Peppery Man,
 The rabid, crabbed Peppery Man!
 Oh, never since the world began
 Was anyone like the Peppery Man.

Arthur Macy

So of course then I had to go looking for more Arthur Macy, and there’s a lot of wonderful stuff there… and that’s how far I’ve gotten down this rabbit hole.

The look of the cozy, pleasant room in the painting by Alma-Tadema; and the kind of gentle armchair journey far afield that I took while reclining on my couch became so much more appealing in the days of lockdown pre-vaccine. It all makes me feel right at home.