Sherry Chandler » Joanie DiMartino

Joanie DiMartino

Joanie DiMartino, another feminine and feminist poet I met in Jim Hall’s 2000 master poet workshop, is also a historian. Her day job is Adult Programs Coordinator at the Kentucky History Center. Joanie is a fellow member of Mosaic and is currently exhibiting a holographic poem, “Carousel in Winter,” at the Sideshow exhibit at the Carnegie Center for Literacy and Learning for which there is a companion painting by Jill Plaisted.

from Tres Riche HeuresJoanie’s poems, naturally, have a strong historical theme, often emphasizing the women’s perspective. “Anne of Bohemia Invents the Sidesaddle” is one of my favorites. I use it in my workshop on ekphrastic poetry because the visuals are so strong. You can just see the painting this poem was written from. But there is no painting (the graphic here is from a tapestry called Tres Riches Heures de Duc de Berry). The poem was written from a note in a timeline at the International Museum of the Horse at the Kentucky Horse Park.

Anne of Bohemia (1355 - 1394 ) came to England in 1381 to be married to Richard II in 1382. She was a popular queen of an unpopular king but she did not have issue. The heirless Richard was forced to abdicate by Bolingbroke (Henry IV) in 1399 and died, probably of starvation, in the Tower of London in 1400, the same year Geoffrey Chaucer disappeared. Anne did invent or at least popularize the sidesaddle in England. Before that women rode pillion behind men, sometimes astride in split skirts. “Anne of Bohemia Invents the Sidesaddle” was originally published in Wicked Alice poetry journal.

Anne of Bohemia Invents the Sidesaddle

With closed thighs Anne prepares
to enter London.

In poised witchery,
she floats atop her gelding:

twisted regal at the torso,
feet demure inside her shoes
on the oak planche.

Anne balances in a mild chair
with brocade skirts fanned over her knees
and red ribbons
glimmering in late morning.

A Queen-to-be is never spread
astride, her robes
rimpled or wrinkled,
calves pressed
against a horse: shivering,
sweating.

London perches
in the distance; its citizens
not meant to glimpse Anne’s legs,

from between which England’s heir
will emerge.

Possibly related posts:

    Joanie DiMartino
    Native Cat
    Anne Bradstreet (1612 - 1672)
    Dorothy Sutton
    Oscar Wilde

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3 Comments

  • 1. Sherry Chandler&hellip replies at 18th April 2005, 5:44 pm :

    [...] arencies and my marker set. It looked better hanging from a helium balloon. Many thanks to Joanie DiMartino for reading my poem for me. All the Sideshow readings are over, but the show hangs un [...]

  • 2. Sherry Chandler » T&hellip replies at 17th April 2007, 1:31 pm :

    [...] I couldn’t make the Sideshow reading at the Lexington Gallery Hop on Friday so decided I’d put up a little bit of nonsense called “Three Rings” that I did playing around with overhead transparencies and my marker set. It looked better hanging from a helium balloon. Many thanks to Joanie DiMartino for reading my poem for me. [...]

  • 3. Sherry Chandler » V&hellip replies at 28th May 2007, 9:38 am :

    [...] [Note: I need to check with Joanie DiMartino at what is soon to be The Thomas D. Clark Center for Kentucky History, but I wonder whether this event may have taken place during the time that doctors (men) were taking childbirth away from midwives in the name of science. Science has not always been kind to women.] [...]

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