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Mill Recital

The luthier tunes to resurrect the styles
Of watered silk and butter in a churn;
In wavering moiré the harpsichord compiles
From disassembled ivory and lacquer
A tremblement and palpates still to learn
How tones align with shuttles of a jacquard.

This primitive mill — a river and a wheel —
Out of gross grain has clarified detail;
Grosgrain straps recover the smack of the flail,
And fishes whirl like bobbins in a creel.

Deus ex machina spinets are insistent
That sheer reprising overcomes the sloth
Of fingers at the keyboard plucking the cloth;
Tension in the song goes back to a sough,
And immortality tightens in an instant.

Luthier – (Pronounced LOOT-ee-ur) A person who makes stringed instruments such as violins and guitars.

Watered silk – Silk cloth that has been given a lustrous wavy pattern by being pressed between rollers or plates; prized for clothing since the Middle Ages.

Moiré – (Pronounced mwa-RAY) A ripple pattern in a fabric.

Tremblement – (Pronounced TREM-ble-ment) A quivering; in music, a tremolo or trill.

Shuttles of a jacquard – A jacquard (pronounced JAK‑ard) is a type of loom controlled by perforated cards; it was developed c. 1804 by French inventor Joseph‑Marie Jacquard (pronounced zha‑KAR). The shuttle of a loom is the thread holder that moves from one edge of the cloth to the other between the threads of the warp.

Grosgrain – (Pronounced GRŌ-grain) A strong, close-woven, corded fabric.

Creel – A play on two meanings of “creel”: 1) a wicker basket for holding fish; and 2) a metal frame in a textile mill for holding bobbins.

Sough – (Pronounced like “soft” without the “t”) A deep soft rustling sound like the wind or surf.

Jacquard Card Punching Machine
courtesy of the Dept. of Textile Art
Strzeminski Academy of Fine Arts, Lodz, Poland

Of fingers at the keyboard – The photo above shows the keyboard of a machine used to punch holes in jacquard loom cards. Such a machine is called a “piano machine,” “piano card cutter,” “piano punch,” and other similar names. Just like a real piano, the piano card cutter has a “pitch,” but unlike the musical instrument, the piano machine’s pitch means, not an exact tone, but the spacing of the holes — the number of threads per inch.