Since I saw it first in 1993, how often have I thought
 of Cézanne's studio stove
 And the great big potbellied cast-iron black cauldron
 sitting squat on its top,
 With God-knows-what seething away in its belly,
 or sweet nothing's in the pot,
 And the back of a canvas on a pinewood stretcher
 propped face to the wall
 Behind the stove perhaps to dry, or not; and, hard to figure
 from the chiaroscuro,
 A little painting, or an artist's palette; and that tiny palette,
 would it be a sketch;
 And a pottery pot on the floor; and another dim something
 in the tiny room, all
 Lit by the glow of a single red coal in the jaws of the coal-
 black cast-iron stove?
Ciaran Carson’s poem is from his new collection Still Life
 (Gallery Press)










    