Tuesday, June 30, 2009

And the Mask


Reveal, I hear this night command
Cloak not the quiver of shadow close at hand
Remove pretense and the mask donned to conceal
The TRUTH, the deep knowing, this while knowing real
Confront and resolve, the petition summons a call
Beyond all consideration, TRUTH to lay bear ALL
To the plea of this petition I do heed
And TRUTH be ever my rightful creed.

Rose Marie Raccioppi



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venetian_mask
http://joolyone.blogspot.com/2008/06/venetian-mask-carnival-of-venice.html


Monday, June 29, 2009

Bulbous Clouds - A New York City Moment


The feel and sound of wind now known
Papers loose upon streets
Against towering buildings blown
Voices in awe, humming motors,
Sounding horns,
Sirens screaming, an ambient array
As twilight and bulbous clouds
Betake moments this day
Such wondrous wile
These moments of sky
What forces pray tell
Be present on high
No answer to my query
Yet there be found
'Tis in nature's secret
These moments resound.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


Bulbous Clouds, NYC, 06/28/09, Photograph, Collectible Clicks©Rose Marie Raccioppi.

take a look at this
http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/offbeat/2009/06/29/moos.freaky.clouds.cnn



The pulsing passion of the Creator's Way
Brought to us this very day
In the moving sky above to see
Joyful wonder, our moment to BE
One with SELF, an embracing love
The WORD in glory shown above
The splendor of this sky we all hail
And blessed as ONE we shall prevail.


Sunday, June 28, 2009

The Wind and The Willow


Review of
Rose Marie Raccioppi’s
The Wind and the Willow

“Are these assumptions of reality/The shackles that need to be broken[?]”queries Rose Marie Raccioppi in “Possibility,” from The Wind and the Willow, her first collection of verse. The line is emblematic of her core pursuit to pierce beyond the illusory veils of the material world while paradoxically being dependent upon reality for drawing imagery to provide intimations of the “Beyond.”

A non-denominational devotional poet with fervent pantheistic longings, Raccioppi’s metaphors and unpretentious affirmations appeal directly to the heart. In this volume she creates a metaphysical poetry and is content to take her simple Shelleyan imagery wherever she finds it within nature’s bounty.

The Wind and the Willow consists mostly of brief meditations and what Raccioppi calls “mindscapes” which constantly seek calming epiphanies of self-recognition in the fleeting moments, even in the midst of turbulent and painful experience. At her best, in works such as “This Night Knows No Sleep,” “This a Winter’s Night,” “Away You Fly,” “Descent No More,” “But Can I Share,” “The Wind and the Willow,” “Swaddling Divine,” and “Now and Ever Blessed,” Raccioppi attains perceptual clarity and an incantatory music that might remind readers, by turns, of Henry Vaughan’s devotional lyrics, Walt Whitman’s celebrations of the unbridled Self, the near-improvisatory freshness of D.H. Lawrence’s “Pansies,” and William Blake’s “Songs of Innocence.” This is poetry that is designed to reach a broad audience.

John Ballard

Available at Barnes and Noble and online booksellers nationally and internationally.
Pub. Date: June 2008
ISBN-13: 9781604744545

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The Wind
all pervading
free
one with all direction
The Willow
rooted ever in search
branch and leaf so humbly bend
holding to the wind
the light
and the unseen Presence
Wind and Willow, so I am
thought, mind and spirit
all pervading
free
one with all direction
holding to the unseen Presence.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


And now it is late afternoon this very day

Perceived joy in this moment real
A sense of oneness I shall not conceal
The lilting exuberance, the embracing calm
Life in all its blossoming, its abundance, its wondrous charm
This moment barren of loss, fear, regret or sorrow
Holds the promise of BEING, this moment, this hour, this day, a tomorrow
This spirit, this soul, this life bequeathed to me
Ever was, ever is and ever shall BE.

Rose Marie Raccioppi

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Sweeping Tides


Waves of thought within my heart
Visions from which to start
A world where love and grace are known
Where God's WORD in deed be shown
An understanding of TRUTH and care
A world of peace, praise and prayer
A world that lives within my soul
A knowing that sounds its toll
The gifts of life, earth and time
Embrace the glory of the sublime
In the sweeping tides of heavens vast
Hear my PRAISE now and ever cast.

Rose Marie Raccioppi



Ascension, Watercolor, Rose Marie Raccioppi, http://www.apogeeart.com



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Friday, June 26, 2009

A NOW


A shifting
A change
A felt clarity
Constraints freed
Shackles shed
A sense of deep purpose
Time, space, form
Thoughts,
Sensibilities,
Spirit awakened anew
A NOW in fulfillment.

Rose Marie Raccioppi



M42: A Mosaic of Orion's Great Nebula, Credit: C. O'Dell and S. Wong (Rice U.), NASA
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap970511.html




Special Announcement:
THE WIND AND THE WILLOW
Now available in hardcover and softcover directly from Publish America.
Click on title, place title in search bar of Publish America Entry Page.
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ENJOY!


Thursday, June 25, 2009

Frames of Mind, Opus 10

Lilting hues of heaven's light
Songbirds at nest, songbirds at flight
Your music once heard
Known be the call of Spirit's word
Song to capture the wind, the light, the soul
And ever sweetened is life's present toll.

Rose Marie Raccioppi



Frames of Mind, Opus 10, Watercolor, Rose Marie Raccioppi, http://www.apogeeart.com


Special Announcement:
THE WIND AND THE WILLOW
Now available in hardcover and softcover directly from Publish America.
Click on title, place title in search bar of Publish America Entry Page.
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ENJOY!


Wednesday, June 24, 2009

All Known


In this late afternoon summer day sun
towering above this old oak tree
sunlight upon rustling leaves
and so the sway of shadow and light
Trunk bold and erect
giving to branches high and wide
this mighty oak of many a year
A palette of glistening and deep green
hues above me
and to the West
a sky of clear blue
All known to time and beauty
And to this late afternoon summer day sun.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


All Known, Oak Tree Canopy Photograph, Collectible Clicks©Rose Marie Raccioppi, 2009

All Known, Rose Marie Raccioppi, THE WIND AND THE WILLOW, Publish America, June, 2008.


Special Announcement:
THE WIND AND THE WILLOW
Now available in hardcover and softcover directly from Publish America.
Click on title, place title in search bar of Publish America Entry Page.
Thank you for your order.
ENJOY!


Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Who But God


Who but yourself and God really know
What is in heart despite what you show
Who but God is ever a listening ear
Providing the love to banish each fear
Who but God gives to Kings and Queens and onto you
The selfsame sky be it cloudy, stormed or blue
Who but God in a knowing light and love
Creates all earth's offerings and the heavens above
Who but God in my last moments of call
Knows this heart, this soul, ever questing love among all.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


Saint Luke, Oil on canvas, about 1615, Guercino (Giovanni Francesco Barbieri), Italian Baroque painter, 1591-1666, Credits: J. Paul Getty Museum.


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Monday, June 22, 2009

Silent Night Rhythm


Silent Night Rhythm
Wavering across this celestial sea
A fervent hush.

Rose Marie Raccioppi



Silent Night Rhythm, Watercolor, Rose Marie Raccioppi, http://www.apogeeart.com


Special Announcement:
THE WIND AND THE WILLOW
Now available in hardcover and softcover directly from Publish America.
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ENJOY!


Sunday, June 21, 2009

Heaven and Earth


Images, vistas of Heaven and Earth in majestic array
Lakes, streams. rivers, oceans, wondrous water way
Rising and setting sun, colors emerge and blanketed they be
In the coming of night, held by the open sea
Mountains, plains, valleys, such splendor to behold
Each with a story past, present and yet to be told
Earth in its grandeur gifts of grace and light
So blessed be this day, so blessed be this night.
Font size
Rose Marie Raccioppi


In Dedication
A Most Happy and Blessed Father's Day


Kitaro - Heaven and Earth


Original Poetry Sunday Bloggers
Do visit:

Amazing Voyages of the Turtle
Apogee Poet
Poetikat's Invisible Keepsakes
Premium T.
Robert Frost's Banjo
Secret Poems from the Times Literary Supplement
Yes is Red


Special Announcement:
THE WIND AND THE WILLOW
Now available in hardcover and softcover directly from Publish America.
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ENJOY!



Photograph: Courtesy of http://pixdaus.com

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Frivolity


In the darkest hour before dawn
Awaken I to feathered voices
Sweet flirtations to court the new day
Heard be the fluttering of wings
Robins red breasted
Frivolity fills my chambers
And blushed be the hour.

Rose Marie Raccioppi



Frivolity, Watercolor, Rose Marie Raccioppi, http://www.apogeeart.com


Special Announcement:
THE WIND AND THE WILLOW
Now available in hardcover and softcover directly from Publish America.
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ENJOY!


Friday, June 19, 2009

Awakened


Swaddled
in the warmth
of summer night
Crickets calling
to the silence
Stars
and wisps of white
don the sky
The light
of the crescent moon
dispels the darkness
And I
awakened to behold.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


Night Journey, Watercolor, Rose Marie Raccioppi, http://www.apogeeart.com


Special Announcement:

THE WIND AND THE WILLOW
Now available in hardcover and softcover directly from Publish America.
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ENJOY!

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Past and Present Tides


Moving water, this mighty flow
Billowing sea of celestial light
Many a story be here heard
Echoing from its dark depths
The call of past and present tides
Moving water, this mighty flow.

Rose Marie Raccioppi



Ulysses deriding Polyphemus - Homer's Odyssey, 1829, Oil on canvas, Joseph Mallord William Turner, British, 1775-1851, copyright National Gallery London.



Special Announcement:

THE WIND AND THE WILLOW
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ENJOY!


Wednesday, June 17, 2009

I Drum


I drum.

It is my heartbeat in celebration.
I chant.
It is my spirit in glory.
I am.
It is my soul in gratitude.

Drums sounding the pulse of the earth
Wild and passion filled waves of motion
Brush strokes holding to the moment
Color deep, vibrant, flaring free
A cadence divine
Held I willingly in its seize
Color and capture orchestrated
Frames of Mind, Opus 6.

Rose Marie Raccioppi



Frames of Mind, Opus 6, Watercolor, Rose Marie Raccioppi, http://www.apogeeart.com

Special Announcement:
Now available in hardcover and softcover directly from Publish America.
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Tuesday, June 16, 2009

The Inquest


Witness the inquest
A trial proceeding
the heart longing
the mind reflecting
the spirit searching
the soul awakened
And so life speaks
to itself and hungers
to be heard
What reverie shall we reveal
What lament shall we cry
What affirmation shall we hail
Witness the inquest
A trial proceeding.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


The Crystal Ball, 1902, Oil on canvas, John William Waterhouse, 1849–1917.


THE WIND AND THE WILLOW

Monday, June 15, 2009

Firmament


In the touch of the wind
In the grace of the light
A sweeping lilt of peace
There is another
and another
and another.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


Firmament, Watercolor, Rose Marie Raccioppi, http://www.apogeeart.com

THE WIND AND THE WILLOW


Sunday, June 14, 2009

Inspired Need, Flag Day 2009


Beyond the wrath
of injustice
discrimination
recrimination
Beyond the cry
of pain
prejudice
desolation
Is the life
spirit
and soul
in celebration
Beyond the dark shadows
of doubt and fear
Beyond the hurt and woeful tear
Is the flow of joy
in God’s grace near
Inspired need calls
within the silence of our souls
Inspired need whispers
within the chambers of our heart
Inspired need echoes
upon the path of our way
Inspired need sings
in freedom lived this day.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


In the United States, Flag Day , celebrated on June 14th commemorates the adoption of the flag of the United States, which happened that day by resolution of the Second Continental Congress in 1777.

The presentation by Betsy Ross of the first American flag to George Washington.

The Birth of Old Glory, c1917, Edward Percy Moran, 1862-1935.

Inspired Need, Rose Marie Raccioppi, THE WIND AND THE WILLOW, Publish America, June 2008.



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Secret Poems from the Times Literary Supplement
Yes is Red


Saturday, June 13, 2009

So Brief


So brief and yet eternal
The sun that rises and sets
The tides that ebb and flow
The sands that shift
The moon that waxes and wanes
The winds across the sea
The life that once was
So brief and yet eternal.

Rose Marie Raccioppi




Fishermen at Sea, Oil on canvas, Exhibited 1796, Joseph Mallord William Turner, British, 1775-1851, ©Tate, London National Gallery of Art.


Friday, June 12, 2009

Heard in the Winds

This hankering of heart
This searching of soul
Prods of passion
The incessant quest abounds
Present seeking its domain
Heard in the winds
Yet silent
Yet silent.


Rose Marie Raccioppi


Woman in the Wind, Ventose, Art Nouveau Print, Treadway/Toomey Galleries.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

This June Night


I hear the frenetic dance of the tree branches
The chilling wind of this night howls
Chimes resounding laud the wind in song
I look to the darkened sky
'Tis alight with hues of soft violet
Before me a gossamer veil of mist
Hold I in heart a celestial Presence
This June night.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


The Night, Watercolor, Rose Marie Raccioppi, http://www.apogeeart.com

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

This Night That Knows No Sleep


Held within the deep darkness
Cast of black stroked by magenta
Touched by the warm and wet air
The breadth of silence in hushed refrain
Suspended in the eternal womb of time
This night that knows no sleep
Within the black shadows of the trees
Below the darkened magenta sky
Grass wet cool green new below my feet
The feel of the warm whispering stillness
This night that knows no sleep.

Rose Marie Raccioppi



Vespertine, Watercolor, Rose Marie Raccioppi, http://www.apogeeart.com


This Night That Knows No Sleep, THE WIND AND THE WILLOW, Publish America, June, 2008.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Heed the Hour


What allows us to endure such pain
How do we survive the bonds of the inane
What absence of what we were and are
Leads us astray and from faith afar
Blinders cast upon our heart and soul
Distant we become from our purpose and goal
Heed the hour present to amend
With the dawning from dark shall we ascend.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


Beata Beatrix, 1872, Oil on canvas, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1828-1882, Tate Gallery, London, UK

Monday, June 8, 2009

World Ocean Day


Oceans wide the earth so blessed
Land touched by your caress
Lakes and streams and rivers flow
Into your embrace ever they go
Cresting waves a resounding plea
Guard well, Guard well, waters of the sea.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


World Ocean Day
Declared by the United Nations
June 8, 2009

http://www.theoceanproject.org/

On the wings of cyberspace I have been taken to new shores, to new depths of the sea, to creatures beautiful and mysterious, to that place within your heart that sings with the ocean winds, all this in celebration of
World Ocean Day.
Thank you Cris and all who ride these tides today.
To join the sea faring ventures do set your anchor at

http://www.crazycrishereandthere.blogspot.com
for travel posts.


The Fighting Temeraire, 1839, London, National Gallery, Oil on canvas, Joseph Mallord William Turner, British, 1775–1851.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Upon My Paper


Warming sun and soft winds upon my face

The sky above in eternal splendor and infinite grace
Hues of primrose enfold luminous waves of light
Strokes of color lambent upon my paper fill the night.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


Winds of Summer, Watercolor, 2003, Rose Marie Raccioppi, http://www.apogeeart.com


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Sunday Bloggers

Amazing Voyages of the Turtle
Apogee Poet
Poetikat's Invisible Keepsakes
Premium T.
Robert Frost's Banjo
Secret Poems from the Times Literary Supplement
Yes is Red

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Habanera


Brush strokes of fervor and desire
Colors imbued with spirit's fire
Seduction and passion's plea
Longing and rapture in reverie.

Rose Marie Raccioppi

Poetessa
Sandro Russo Pianista



These moments of musing listening to
Sorabji Pastiche no.2 on the Habanera from Bizet's Carmen

Sandro Russo
Concert Pianist


http://www.sandrorussopianist.com
Source: www.youtube.com
"Live" Performance by Sandro Russo www.sandrorussopianist.com


Rapture, Watercolor, Rose Marie Raccioppi, http://www.apogeeart.com


Friday, June 5, 2009

'Tis Resolve


’Tis Resolve you do hail
And lifted is Doubt’s darkening veil
To Despair no bond shall you hold
Within is an unfinished story told
A vision, a being known divine
No longer betrayed by haunts of past time
Resolve and Freedom’s quest held anew
Beauty, Love and Truth your rightful due.


Rose Marie Raccioppi


To An Artist


Carina Nebula Panorama from Hubble

Credit: NASA, ESA, N. Smith (U. California, Berkeley) et al., and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA) http://www.antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap090524.html


Thursday, June 4, 2009

TRUTH Prevails


Pink, red and white, three roses for me to receive
Gentleness, love, truth, I did perceive
Each a bloom as days gone by
Gentleness and love flower and die
Truth prevails in bloom array
A bud within holds this very day
Its message I heed in delight
TRUTH, the bringer of gentleness, love and light.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


Abstraction White Rose, 1927, oil on canvas, Georgia O'Keeffe, 1887-1986.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Moment of Freedom


The shedding of shackles and confine
This quest of spirit and mind
The moment of birthing freedom sought
Beyond the illusion suppression has taught
The reach to the God within
To vanquish each false sin
With brush and paint I to proclaim
This Moment of Freedom in Truth's name
Peaks and flames of passion and desire
The light and glory of Spirit's known fire.


Rose Marie Raccioppi



Moment of Freedom,
2002, Watercolor, Rose Marie Raccioppi, http://www.apogeeart.com

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Ophelia


Ophelia embraced by a swaddling divine
Within folds cradled beauty sublime
In hues of lambent blue, gray and white
Is seen the grace of spirit, a questing light
Hers be a fate, a story fraught with pain
Love and loss, loss and love bear her name
Each shed tear now aflow in waters be
Her spirit and beauty cresting in waves of the sea.

Rose Marie Raccioppi


Ophelia, David Goteiner, DDS, www.artofperio.com


Monday, June 1, 2009

Ugolino and His Sons


This poet's plea, a pulsing pain
The sorrow, the anguish, the inane
Man in freedom so born is he
Yet shackled he sets himself to be
Sacrifice of spirits young and grand of heart
Willing with devotion their life to depart
The torment, the despair, a wretchedness of soul
The din of desolation rings its treacherous toll.

Rose Marie Raccioppi






"Dante's Divine Comedy, Canto 33 of the Inferno. This intensely Romantic sculpture derives from the passage in which Dante describes the imprisonment in 1288 and subsequent death by starvation of the Pisan count Ugolino della Gherardesca and his offspring. Carpeaux depicts the moment when Ugolino, condemned to die of starvation, yields to the temptation to devour his children and grandchildren, who cry out to him:"

"But when to our somber cell was thrown
A slender ray, and each face was lit
I saw in each the aspect of my own,
For very grief both of my hands I bit,
And suddenly from the floor arising they,
Thinking my hunger was the cause of it,
Exclaimed: Father eat thou of us, and stay
Our suffering: thou didst our being dress
In this sad flesh; now strip it all away."

http://www.metmuseum.org

Ugolino and His Sons, ca.1857-1861, Saint-Béat marble 1865-1867, Jean Baptiste Carpeaux, French sculptor and painter, 1827-1875, Metropolitan Museum of Art.