Thursday, May 19, 2011

Katherine Mansfield, "Revelation"




Katherine Mansfield, "Revelation"

All through the Winter afternoon
We sat together, he and I…
Down in the garden every tree
Seemed frozen to the sky

Yes, every twisted tree that bared
Its naked limbs for sacrifice
Was patterned like a monstrous weed
Upon a lake of ice.

It was as though the pallid world
Was gripped in the embrace of Death
He wrapt the garden in his shroud
He killed it with his breath.

So through the Winter afternoon
We sat together by the fire
And in its heart strange magic worlds
Would build, would flame, expire

In an intensity of flame -
Our books were heaped upon the floor
Fantastic chronicles of men
Of cities seen no more

Of countries buried by the sea
Of people who had laughed and cried
And madly suffered - who had held
The World — and then, had died.

A faded pageant of the past
Trooped by us in the gathering gloom
And we could hear strange, muffled cries
Like voices from the tomb.

And sometimes as we turned a page
We heard the shivering sound of rain
It trickled down the window glass
Like tears upon the pane.

We two, it seemed, were shut apart
Were fire bound from the Winter world
And all the secrets of the past
Lay, like a scroll unfurled.

As through the Winter afternoon
We dreaming, read of many lands
And woke…to find the Book of Life
Spread open in our hands.

Saturday, May 7, 2011

William Henry Raworth

William Henry Raworth
artist

born 1821 Nottingham, England
arrived Lyttelton on the "Sir George Seymour", 17 December 1850 with his wife Elizabeth Raworth.

died 11 August 1904, "Wyoming", Bishopscourt, Randwick, NSW, Australia.

Mt Cook Glacier
attributed to William Henry Raworth
Photographer unknown

He exhibited his work in Christchurch on several occasions during the late 1860s and early 1870s. After returning to England in the early 1870s, he settled in Australia, returning to New Zealand occasionally.

Early on Thursday morning Mr, W. H. Raworth, the well-known artist, died at his residence, Wyoming, Bishopscourt, Randwick. Mr. Raworth was born at Nottingham, England in 1821, and his long life of over 83 years was devoted to his brush. He was both nephew and son-in-law of the famous English artist, John Linnell, having married his cousin, Miss Linnell, whose death occurred some 24 years ago. Mr. Raworth's second marriage was with the youngest daughter of the late Captin (sic) J. S. Lovett, harbourmaster at Newcastle, N S.W. The collection of paintings he has left in the possession of his widow represents not only the charming lake scenery of England, Scotland, and Wales, but a rare and historic collection of sea and landscapes painted here, in the neighbouring States, and in New Zealand from the time of his first visit in the early fifties till the present day. His brush was laid aside a day only before his death.
The Sydney Morning Herald, Friday 12 August 1904

THE LATE ARTIST RAWORTH'S WORKS.
Her Excellency Lady Northcote has purchased two historical views of Sydney - water colour paintings of "Captain Cook's Landing Place" and "The Gap," by the late Mr. W. H. Haworth. Her Excellency has signified her intention of purchasing others of the beautiful collection that still remain of this artist's works, upon her return to Sydney.
Clarence and Richmond Examiner (Grafton, NSW) Teusday 11 October 1904