Ending of Claire Denis' "Beau Travail" (don't watch if you plan to watch the film!)
In the context of the whole film, one of the most surprising and oddly moving endings I’ve ever seen…
Henry Ossawa Tanner - "The Annunciation" (1898)
To the Moon
After I thumbed a ride I saw you
in the passenger window, more
than a crescent, almost half.
It was getting dark, and a voice
on the car radio was reporting
that Neil Armstrong had stepped
onto the Sea of Tranquility.
He was walking there in the dust.
Five times more, men visited,
two at a time. Some of them
lowered moon buggies out of a bay
in the side of the lander. These
they unfolded and took for a spin.
Flower children of my generation
thought that the men were middle-aged,
and they were, but they were children too.
They left moon buggies in your lap.
I wanted to tell you last year,
when I saw you in the bare limbs
at your narrowest crescent
next to the morning star,
and just this fall when you were large
and bright as I had ever seen:
to consider you in the night sky is
to release the mind more deeply into itself.
If Earth is alive, you were alive
when these men lived on you.
When they left you died,
and they plunged living into the sea.
- Brooks Haxton
Marcia Marcus - "Self Portrait in White Dress"
Augustus Saint-Gaudens - "The Angel of Purity"
Thomas Eakins - "Study of a Young Woman" (c. 1868)
Capitolo Playground, Philadelphia
Capitolo Playground, Philadelphia
From "*"
“…Syracuse, our bodies are holy
and not separate, our bodies pulled
through a knot of snow squalls, the boats
of Onondaga Lake….”
- Jessica Scicchitano, from “*”
Four from Pietro Marcello’s “Martin Eden” (2020)
“Those who build prisons don’t express themselves as well as those who build freedom.”
Vows
You said I want to be married.
You said I want to be married
to you. You said We were children
together. Who better?
You said I moved for you once
already. You said I need this.
You said It will be quick.
Backyard. July. My mother
will cook, my brother will DJ.
Here’s the date. Here’s the phone.
You said There is so much
to do: spray the bushes
with repellent, bind
these sunflowers with twine.
Hack this stump down
to a hollow, fill it with stone.
Here. Standing in July,
in the backyard, reciting the words
you wrote in ballpoint
on a scrap of ruled paper. Here
I am. And slowly, as if
emerging from a long sleep,
and looking around,
and confusing myself
for the cufflinks, the hushed
crowd, the white tent
billowing like a sail – I take
your hand. I start to speak.
- Edgar Kunz, from “Tap Out”