Search Results for: Kevin Densley

Almanac Poetry: E(a)rnest

Some iconic writers, like Ernest Hemingway, have been imitated so often that their output can no longer be read as the fresh, new, innovative literary work it originally was – this is the issue tackled by Kevin Densley’s latest (and previously unpublished) Almanac poem. [Or: The importance of being the old man and the sea – Ed.]

On William Hogarth’s The Graham Children (1742)

This week’s poem by Kevin Densley concerns a group portrait of children by English painter William Hogarth. KD states: ‘This ekphrastic poem mainly deals with happiness and melancholy, the inevitable passing of time, and children and pets. ‘

Almanac Poetry: Goya’s El Pelele (The Straw Manikin)

Previously unpublished, Kevin Densley’s poem gives voice to the figure of the airborne straw man in Goya’s well-known painting. [Gives new meaning to straw manning, Ed.]

Almanac Poetry: Venticelli

This zephyr of a poem from Kevin Densley concerns the ephemeral venticelli, Italian for ‘little winds’.

Almanac Poetry: Italicised Poem

In today’s poem, Kevin Densley looks humorously at italics.

Almanac Poetry: Ode to Cigarettes Past

Following on from his latest music themed post, we reshare Kevin Densley’s look back on the “golden age” of cigarettes. A one-two punch of pungency if you will.

Almanac Poetry: Captain Albert Jacka, VC, MC and Bar

On another Remembrance Day – arguably at a time when the collective memory of war is most sorely tested – we reshare Kevin Densley’s poem on the iconic, heroic and ultimately tragic figure of Albert Jacka this week.

Almanac Poetry: A Pilgrimage to San Isidro

This week’s poem from Kevin Densley, previously unpublished, takes as its point of departure a disturbing late painting by Spanish master Francisco Goya.

Almanac Poetry: Larger Than Life

Kevin Densley says regarding this week’s poem: ‘Can a writer, in some sense, become his own body of work?’

Almanac Poetry: Italianesque

This week’s poem from Kevin Densley is a previously unpublished one, written about one of his favourite artists, the Pre-Raphaelite painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti.

Almanac Poetry: Sequence of Dreams

Dreams? Fantasies? Trying to find yourself? … This previously unpublished poem from Kevin Densley tackles some of the ‘big issues’ related to life’s journey, in a poem tinged with humour. (And KD thanks a Bob Dylan song for inspiring the poem’s title.)

Almanac Poetry: Memento Mori

Kevin Densley’s latest poem is a previously unpublished, blackly comic one about mortality.

Almanac Poetry: Writer’s Lament

This week’s hitherto unpublished poem from Kevin Densley offers a humorous take on writing competitions.

Almanac Poetry: The Geelong College Gates, Geelong, Victoria

This week’s poem from Kevin Densley is a hitherto unpublished one concerning a former student’s bravery commemorated by gates at The Geelong College.

Almanac Poetry: Billabong Creek, near Forbes, May 5, 1865

This week’s poem from Kevin Densley is a hitherto unpublished one about the death of bushranger Ben Hall, often portrayed as the great romantic figure of Australian bushranging.

Almanac Poetry: To Leanne, My Long-Lost Friend, Nude in Last Night’s Dream

This week’s poem by Kevin Densley deals with dreams, utopia, transience and loss.

Almanac Poetry: Oedipus and the Theban Sphinx

This week’s poem by Kevin Densley offers his perspective on the ancient Greek story of Oedipus’s encounter with the Sphinx who blocked the entrance to the city of Thebes.

Almanac Poetry: Chaconne in F for Recorders, Viola da Gamba and Harpsichord

Kevin Densley describes this week’s poem as ‘a souffle-light piece about the writing of poetry and English baroque composer Henry Purcell, with a touch of humour’. [Succintly conveyed – Ed.]

Almanac Poetry: Shapeshifter

This week’s poem by Kevin Densley concerns shapeshifting – an ability, often represented in the arts, to transform oneself into something else.

Almanac Poetry: This/That

Kevin Densley describes this week’s contribution as a ‘poem about opposites’.