O'Keeffe: Days in a Life
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About this ebook
“Carol Merrill’s tribute to Georgia O’Keeffe is poems in the shape of finely rendered sketches, some of them even paintings. These intimate images convey the delicate and tough shape of O’Keeffe’s final years in New Mexico.”—Joy Harjo, author of She Had Some Horses
“When I got O’Keeffe mss I sat down after midnite at kitchen table when I should’ve been in bed & read it thru in an hour because it was interesting, curious, distinctive, focused, condensed, epiphanous, ordinary & understandable. The details are all, sacramentalizing everyday life in a world of genius—a woman, vast space, chewy intelligence, almost selfless observation.”—Allen Ginsberg, author of Howl
C. S. Merrill
C. S. Merrill worked for Georgia O’Keeffe from 1973 to 1979 as secretary, librarian, reader, cook, nurse, and companion. Merrill is also the author of Weekends with O’Keeffe (UNM Press). She is the volunteer librarian at Ghost Ranch in northern New Mexico.
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Book preview
O'Keeffe - C. S. Merrill
1
The roofless room with vigas and screen
two gigantic jade trees in pots.
Against the far wall a slight niche
with a huge black rock there.
On the whole white wall, a slight shadow
and that rock. O’Keeffe’s sight so poor
she doesn’t see it, but knows it’s there.
Also one moonflower plant blooming wide open
and onions drying on screens, fragrance of earth.
August, 1973
2
O’Keeffe at lunch, the table her design
patty pan squash & zucchini lightly steamed
carrots cooked in butter & dill;
home-baked bread with sunflower seeds
thinly sliced roast beef, chipped ice in glasses
with raspberry juice and mint tea.
In the center a large glass bowl
with an enormous pink hibiscus flower
floating with a green sprig of tansy
good for a miscarriage,
O’Keeffe said
talking of herbs for female parts.
In the roofless room trumpet flower blooming.
August, 1973
3
O’Keeffe used to go
to the Lawrence Ranch
before Frieda died.
Trees have grown
and the view is
not so full
as it used to be.
She used to rest
under one tree,
spent much time
looking up through branches
her head by the trunk.
August, 1973
4
O’Keeffe loved
a silk kimono
she wore so much
there was a hole
in the seat of it;
patched it
with a satin patch,
wore a hole
in that.
Couldn’t bring herself
to patch the patch.
"You know . . .
glad we were young
when we were,
wouldn’t want to be these days."
August, 1973
5
O’Keeffe lost her eyesight slowly
in a store in Santa Fe
walked out to a dim day
surprised the day was overcast.
Next day was overcast, but it wasn’t;
that was how it started, a bloodclot
so she has to look to one side to see.
September, 1973
6
One worker came to the sliding door
long hair, mustache, and a little slumped
asked to trim Russian Olive hedge.
She said no at first, then yes.
He said in a slow sentence
the great painter should not
scuff around in unpolished shoes.
He oiled & polished her worn flats,
they shined, slick, like new.
September, 1973
7
O’Keeffe empties the sleeve
of her Chinese coat of fuzz
My opinion is not worth much
I pick the fuzz off her coat.
We walk round the driveway
in Abiquiu, so many times
make a mile, the light faded,
she gestures to the mesa
behind the house, "Let’s go in