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Friday, May 9, 2008

Breughel and Williams and playgrounds


The paintings of Pieter Brueghel the Elder (Flemish, 1525-1569) were used as inspiration for a series of poems by by William Carlos Williams (American, 1883-1963), published in 1962, for which he was posthumously awarded the Pulitzer Prize.

This is "Children's Games"


I
This is a schoolyard
crowded
with children


of all ages near a village
on a small stream
meandering by


where some boys
are swimming
bare-ass


or climbing a tree in leaf
everything
is motion


elder women are looking
after the small
fry


a play wedding a
christening
nearby one leans


hollering
into
an empty hogshead


II
Little girls
whirling their skirts about
until they stand out flat


tops pinwheels
to run in the wind with
or a toy in 3 tiers to spin


with a piece
of twine to make it go
blindman's-buff follow the


leader stilts
high and low tipcat jacks
bowls hanging by the knees


standing on your head
run the gauntlet
a dozen on their backs


feet together kicking
through which a boy must pass
roll the hoop or a


construction
made of bricks
some mason has abandoned


III
The desperate toys
of children
their


imagination equilibrium
and rocks
which are to be


found
everywhere
and games to drag


the other down
blindfold
to make use of


a swinging
weight
with which


at random
to bash in the
heads about


them
Brueghel saw it all
and with his grim


humor faithfully
recorded
it

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