Edward Hopper's Early Sunday Morning, Whitney Museum of American Art |
This is the third ekphrastic poem I've written on the work of Edward Hopper. This Miltonic (caudate) sonnet was published recently in Mezzo Cammin, Volume 11, Issue 2.
Bon dimanche!
Edward Hopper's Early Sunday Morning
In every work of genius we recognize our own
rejected thoughts;
they come back to us with a certain alienated
majesty. —Ralph Waldo Emerson
There’s
something comforting and intimate
about the line of small shops in the
glare
of Sunday morning. Something clean
and spare,
bounded, but suggesting infinite
extent.
Then all at once we take a hit
to the solar plexus— we become aware
of storefront windows whispering beware,
and that the quietude is
counterfeit.
The
atmosphere is placidly bereft,
devoid of movement or of mortal face;
the softened desolation of the
street
suggests
a hyper-emptiness, a trace
of absent presences, a bittersweet
tristesse, as though humanity's
been left
alone to
face the heft
of
enigmatic darkness to the right,
a
monolith that leads our line of sight—
through
Hopper's scumbled light—
away
from consolation to concern
as
we approach our point of no return.
-- Catherine Chandler (2016)
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