Poetry Out Loud

Interior at Petworth: From Turner

POEM VIEWS: 2868
Print this Page


Rosanna Warren (1953--) was born in Fairfield, Connecticut to a pair of writers: Robert Penn Warren, a major poet and novelist, and Eleanor

. . . MORE »

By Rosanna Warren

(Lord Egremont speaks)

It was a way of punishing the house, setting it ablaze
in ruddy, golden flames; smoke
in billows up the front stairs; walls
cringing like leaves.
I say, I am afraid
in my own house. Do not believe
I started this, it was
that man, who was to portray the park alone, mind you,
but then became
enamored of the music room.
And now what have we: floods
of fire rolling from room to room, furniture wrecked
in seethe, my wife
Lady Amelia turned
wraith, God knows what fish
and drowning slaves cast up in the tide
along with pocket Bibles, snuffboxes, antimacassars, the
familiar bric-a-brac of the well-kept house.
Where are Edward, Lavinia, Jane? Why
is no one crying, “Fire! Fire!”? Am I
alone?
         The man has no sense of proportion.
He had himself lashed to the mast, once, it is said,
on a steamboat off the harbor mouth
in full blizzard: sailors blinded by snow, the boat
crippled, led by the lead, they damn near died to a man, and he—
he was observing “the light at sea,” he said.
The painting? “Soapsuds and whitewash,”
the critics described it so.

But here, in our house, it is catastrophe
of flame, not weather, he loosed.
He is a man
in love with last things, clearly,
the last things, but
never understood the first, it seems to me,
and certainly not the genial medias res
of decorous, daily life.
What tea-times we’ve known in these chambers, what sonatinas,
lieder of an evening, whist,
Emmeline embroidering, the hounds calm at the hearth, now all
dissolved.
               Perhaps there are no flames.
A bloody haze arises, it could be
my own eyes that fail.
I hear nothing, but fear
the upstairs rooms, cramped rooms
I have not entered in ages, only remember
the draughts, creakings, grime in closet corners,
windows too tight to lean from, the smell
of antique damp. And now, who knows
what acts unroll
on narrow beds, on floorboards warped askew?
As steam is rising, rising? As heat
buoys the house up into an atmosphere
all of its own creation?
Who are
the participants? Where has Amelia gone?
Why, in this furnace, can I hear no sound,
or feel my own skin begin to peel?

Turner painted a series of paintings for his patron, Lord Egremont, between 1830 and 1837. Some were interiors from Lord Egremont’s own house, Petworth. I have taken liberties with the historical character of Lord Egremont.

Rosanna Warren, “Interior at Petworth: From Turner” from Each Leaf Shines Separate. Copyright © 1984 by Rosanna Warren. Reprinted with the permission of W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. This selection may not be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher.


HOME

BLOG

ABOUT THE PROGRAM

POEMS
Browse Poems
Browse Poets
Pre-20th Century
25-Lines and Fewer
Keyword Search
Today's Poet
Audio Guide
Videos

TEACHERS GUIDE
Table of Contents
Writing Activities &
  Lesson Plans

Contest Promotion

FOR TEACHERS
State Contacts
Judges Guide
Teacher FAQ
NCTE Standards
Students with
  Disabilities

Competition Resources
Teacher Quotes
Teacher Feedback

FOR STUDENTS
Find a Poem
Evaluation Criteria
Student FAQ
Submit Comments

NEWS & EVENTS
National Finals
Press Releases
Events Calendar
Media Contacts
News Clips
Photo Gallery
Download Graphics

FOR STATE PARTNERS
Contacts
Program Resources
State Partner FAQ
Finals Planning
Download Graphics
SAA Forum

STATE CONTACTS