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Friday, January 10, 2025

Poems for Jan. 8-9, 2025

January, by William Carlos Williams; Making Luxury out of Flat Soda by Frederick Joseph; Sign by Sahar Romani; Sandpiper by Elizabeth Bishop; After Rain by Michael Pfeifer (Ekphrastic response to Paradigm Shift” by Morgan Reed.  Image: https://www.rattle.com/after-rain-by-michael-pfeifer/ ) Claim by Kasey Jueds; To the New Year by W.S. Merwin


Poetry echoes loudly and unapologetically the transformative power that language has to connect, challenge, and inspire....

We started with mention of the Public Defendant Heather Shaner and her key for 2025:  humanity.  In this video,  

https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=The+New+Yorker+Documentary+A+Public+Defender%E2%80%99s+Radical+Approach+to+Representing+the+January+6th+Riotersyou can see her at work with those involved in the Jan 6, 2021  insurrection.  Each of us have a story, and it behooves us to try to understand each one.

So it is with poetry.  The selection started with  the poem January and ended with To the New Year.  I can't think of more unlikely pieces of bread to make a sandwich of poems!

What we all appreciate in these sessions is the wealth of angles shared in trying to understand the words some other human being has penned to share something of importance to him or her.

 

William Carlos Williams:  What was going in 1921 when he published Sour Grapes, a volume of poetry in which you will find this poem January?  It is not an especially accessible poem, even if you are a musician and know about chromatic  or perfect fifths[1], or perhaps find an association with John Donne's Holy Sonnet, Batter My Heart Three-Person'd God  (see below) which has a more convincing form replete with tripled adjectives and triplet of verbs  [2]

 

Again: first word, and one thinks of how January rolls around each year, announcing a "new year", but what are the triple winds?  Winds of fortune? time? the physical winter wind?  And how are they filled with derision for the poet who twice attributes derisive to the wind and its music?  We were not insensitive to the double meaning of "sentences" .  Donne also develops this idea of  being "imprisoned" as well.  How to understand "You will not succeed". The wind, perhaps unlike Donne's 3-personed God, cannot enthrall.

On surface, given the set-up of the poem, it implies the wind and poet seem to be in a fierce contest.  As one person said, "Williams seems to be saying,  Bring it on.   Perhaps this is a poem where an inner struggle is reflected in the outside weather.

 

I saw an explanation  of Williams' poem The Red Wheelbarrow, as a series of implied chromatic intersections. If one makes 3 circles out of details, such Red (wheelbarrow) overlapping with Blue (glazed with rain water) (with a small slice of purple); Blue overlapping with yellow (beside the white chickens) (with a resulting slice of green) and the yellow overlapping with the red with a slice of orange, one can see a small triangle of the interconnected overlappings of all six colors as visible light.  This was labeled with the opening line, So Much Depends On...

 

Perhaps January is a similar arrangement where the first 3 lines and final 4 lines as outside wind overlap with the inner sanctum of the poet's world.

Donn';s Sonnet:  https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/44106/holy-sonnets-batter-my-heart-three-persond-god

Batter my heart, three-person'd God, for you

As yet but knock, breathe, shine, and seek to mend;

That I may rise and stand, o'erthrow me, and bend

Your force to break, blow, burn, and make me new.

I, like an usurp'd town to another due,

Labor to admit you, but oh, to no end;

Reason, your viceroy in me, me should defend,

But is captiv'd, and proves weak or untrue.

Yet dearly I love you, and would be lov'd fain,

But am betroth'd unto your enemy;

Divorce me, untie or break that knot again,

Take me to you, imprison me, for I,

Except you enthrall me, never shall be free,

Nor ever chaste, except you ravish me.

 

Making Luxury out of Flat Soda:  A different sort of metamorphosis happens here.

This poem was an immediate favorite and for good reason: story with universal appeal well-crafted sound, delightful alliterations, imagery.  

We could feel the particulars of Grandmommy's kitchen and had no doubt about its authenticity.  One person remarked on the detail of "gossiping over cognac" which is usually something reserved for the well-to do.  One possible explanation is to elevate the "metaphorical  status" and importance of the family gatherings.  One senses a feel of an idealized "Aunt Jemima in the South", and yet it is not contrived but a real Grandmother delivered importance life lessons.  The opening and closing lines both contain the verb "breathe" -- which sets up the central line of "learning to fill my lungs with survival".  Joseph skillfully shows us how the Grandmother leads the way--

"how deserted became a diamond for joy's crown".  A meaningful, heartwarming poem of reminiscence, filled with all the senses.  Perfect material for a sermon called, "How to make positive choices". 

Judith brought up Frances Hodgson Burnett's story T. Tembaron.  You can read it free of charge here : https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/2514

 

Sign: This poem about coincidences, starts with a  statement: What aren't you willing to believe. Not a question.  You can hear her read it here: https://poets.org/poem/sign and one doesn't sense a challenging tone, but rather an exploratory meditation about "sightings and significance".  She mentions the poems leads her towards an answer.  I'm not sure what that is.  

I love that she embraces the multiplicity of a yin/yang approach to life, indeed, quoting the line from Bishop's poem, Sandpiper where the world is mist, and then all clear.  For sure, the final line could be a statement about reality and what we think we believe is real.  Does it take whimsy and ego to believe the universe will tape your shoulder?  If so, she doesn't show how.  She only says she believes this to be true, and is convinced there is such a thing as truth, contradictory as it might seem.  

 

We felt we were witnessing a mini scene in a play or film.  What aisle though?  in a store? a church? a tram?  We all picked up on the poem's yearning for a hint of meaning in life.

I brought up Victor Frankl's book, Man's Search for Meaning.  A rich inner life can help us through horrific circumstances, provide alternatives to protective apathy, or a sense of despairing helplessness. 

 

Sahar is an Arabic name for girls meaning "dawn, morning, awakening".  https://poets.org/poet/sahar-romani  I am not sure where she is from, but the nod to Rumi, the detail of her mother's bracelets places us somewhere in a timeless sense of Persia, and yet, the mention of the Indian actor, producer and television personality Shah Rukh Khan places us in contemporary times.  The poem is an example of the rich conversations we can carry on, whether from the 13th century with Sufi mystic Rumi,  translated by Halah Liza Gafori in 2022, or 20th century Elizabeth Bishop (February 8, 1911 – October 6, 1979) and contemporary (and fabulously innovative poet) Terrance Hayes (b. 1971)[3]

 

Sandpiper:  wonderful poem where one could easily transpose "he" for human, not bird. 

One observation was, if human, he was self-absorbed and prisoner of his own self-imposed panic.  If a student of Blake, the quote, "to see the world in a grain of sand" runs through the poem, like a reassuring anchor.  Rather like Romani's statement, "Truth is not going anywhere.  It's your eyes passing by".  No need to be obsessed looking for something, repeated 3 times.

 

After Rain: In viewing the image, the co:mmentary by the series editor doesn't jive that the women have their backs turned to us-- we see many faces... The subject of the poem, "she"  is intriguingly described as shadow, fog and rememberance -- and that haunting image of being

a "collapsing umbrella after rain".  Other "resurrection sisters "hold a ticket/for a train of sand and fear", another unsettling image.  That the rattle of goods confident they willbe sold, is akin to a mystery confident it will be told, creates a sense of urgency, perhaps like the obsessive sandpiper searching for food, and for us, trying to cajole  meaning out of chance moments. 

 

Claim:  Many stories about animals, the comfort they bring us came up after the reading of this poignant poem.  The opening sentence set the scene of someone out of touch with the world, insecure and wanting a sense of connection and belonging.  We agreed this was a "feel good" poem which is successful in providing a deeper meaning. with the reversal that the dog would be the one to say to the human, stay.

 

To the New Year: from Merwin's book Present Company.  The soft sounds provide a magical antidote to the opening poem.  Perhaps if you live in Hawaii, one is exempt from the cold with little light we experience in the Northeast. However this may be, "we have ccome with our age" -- meaning, our years, this point in our human history in the time period in which we live,

.  

 



[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perfect_fifth : perfect fifths are more consonant than other intervals; Chromatic is the straight path through all 12 notes in an octave.  It is often jarring to listen to applied to atonal music.

[2] line 2: knock, breathe, shine; line 4: break, blow, burn;  verbs 11th line: Divorce, untie, break

[3] Since the publication of his first book, Muscular Music, in 1999, Terrance Hayes has been one of America's most exciting and innovative poets, winning acclaim for his sly, twisting, jazzy poems, and his mastery of emotive, restless wordplay.  Hayes structures his poem using the poignancy formula, which is a variant on the Greater Romantic Lyric form. He invented the "Golden Shovel" and "The poignancy formula" which simply presents the present, then the past, then the present with the past, normally using imagery.

Preparing for the New Year

 December 27, 2024.

Words...  Judith on "dumbing down prose" -- my poem follows.

 A writer friend asked me to edit a few chapters of something she is writing, and I had quite a discussion with her about the slovenly trend in the last twenty years or so—it appeared suddenly and spread like poison ivy—of having people “exit” a room.  By me (New York Yiddish derived dialect) exit is written over doors and otherwise appears in play scripts.  And it is a dead word.  It took a while for Melody to get it  (well she is considerably younger than I am..NOT me, by the way, which is worse than poison ivy and is EVERYWHERE.)  I insisted it is dead.  You can amble, flounce, stomp, slither, stalk—all sorts of nice juicy active verbs to convey situation or character, so why exit?  She finally got it.  Exhausting.

see my poem: Exit with a nod to Sartre and TS Eliot and dedicated to the inimitable Judith Judson (filed in December 2024)

Exit

            with a nod to Sartre and TS Eliot 

 

It's clearly marked: over the doorway, to show

the way out.  But please, says my friend, would you 

have it be a verb?  Exit a room?  What does that tell?

Amble, flouncestompslither, or even stalk will add 

a bit of juice to convey the character, the how of it all.

Rather like hushing the CH in touch so plutoc(h)ratic 

crisps its freshly minted bills, pressing

them into the CHIC gloves of oligarchical.

The infamous "they" say, all cyclical.

How easy to switch off the howl of ouch with the paint 

of T, squeezing the uh, uh, of touch.

 

Let's review Huis Clos performed three months before 

the "end" of world war II 80 years ago. Let us 

re-examine decisions behind closed doors— 

stop the play.   No matter how you stage 

and re-stage,  translate it as No Way Out, 

Vicious Circle or Dead End, it doesn't help 

the smell of the rat. 

 

The hush returns.  Shantih. 

Shantih.  Shantih.

 

commentary on Bishop's Sandpiper: (tbd on Jan. 8-9)

Wallace Stevens ended one of his poems hilariously:  “Happens to like is one /of the ways things happen to fall.” I love how irreverentially he notes that our emotional lives and our desires are often governed by accident

 ...  Pablo Neruda’s “Ode to Tomatoes” likewise  celebrates the objects which surround us, amidst which we live our lives, and insists that the small things we take for granted are important, even if we too often we ignore them.  For more commentary read: https://www.huckgutman.com/sandpiper

**

Two Poems not chosen for the start of the year 2025...  The first somewhat discussed in O Pen.


"A wonderful poem to read when "ever negotiating the psychic demands of being present in a world where kindness feels in short supply." posted on the Slowdown, 12/2/2024    

On Living  by Nazim Hikmet, translated by Randy Blasing and Mutlu Konuk


Living is no laughing matter:

      you must live with great seriousness

             like a squirrel, for example—

   I mean without looking for something beyond and above living, 

             I mean living must be your whole occupation. 

to continue reading: https://poetrysociety.org/poems/on-living

 

Christmas on the Border, 1929 by Alberto RĂ­os

       Based on local newspaper reports

       and recollections from the time.

 

1929, the early days of the Great Depression.

The desert air was biting, but the spirit of the season was alive.

 

Despite hard times, the town of Nogales, Arizona, determined

They would host a grand Christmas party

 

For the children in the area—a celebration that would defy

The gloom of the year, the headlines in the paper, and winter itself.

 

In the heart of town, a towering Christmas tree stood,

A pine in the desert.

 

Its branches, they promised, would be adorned

With over 3,000 gifts. 3,000.

 

The thought at first was to illuminate the tree like at home,

With candles, but it was already a little dry.

 

Needles were beginning to contemplate jumping.

A finger along a branch made them all fall off.

 

People brought candles anyway. The church sent over

Some used ones, too. The grocery store sent

 

Some paper bags, which settled things.

Everyone knew what to do.

 

They filled the bags with sand from the fire station,

Put the candles in them, making a big pool of lighted luminarias.

 

From a distance the tree was floating in a lake of light—

Fire so normally a terror in the desert, but here so close to miracle.

 

For the tree itself, people brought garlands from home, garlands

Made of everything, walnuts and small gourds and flowers,

 

Chilies, too—the chilies themselves looking

A little like flames.

 

The townspeople strung them all over the beast—

It kept getting bigger, after all, with each new addition,

 

This curious donkey whose burden was joy.

At the end, the final touch was tinsel, tinsel everywhere, more tinsel.

 

Children from nearby communities were invited, and so were those

From across the border, in Nogales, Sonora, a stone’s throw away.

 

But there was a problem. The border.

As the festive day approached, it became painfully clear—

 

The children in Nogales, Sonora, would not be able to cross over.

They were, quite literally, on the wrong side of Christmas.

 

Determined to find a solution, the people of Nogales, Arizona,

Collaborated with Mexican authorities on the other side.

 

In a gesture as generous as it was bold, as happy as it was cold:

On Christmas Eve, 1929,

 

For a few transcendent hours,

The border moved.

 

Officials shifted it north, past city hall, in this way bringing

The Christmas tree within reach of children from both towns.

 

On Christmas Day, thousands of children—

American and Mexican, Indigenous and orphaned—

 

Gathered around the tree, hands outstretched,

Eyes wide, with shouting and singing both.

 

Gifts were passed out, candy canes were licked,

And for one day, there was no border.

 

When the last present had been handed out,

When the last child returned home,

 

The border resumed its usual place,

Separating the two towns once again.

 

For those few hours, however, the line in the sand disappeared.

The only thing that mattered was Christmas.

 

Newspapers reported no incidents that day, nothing beyond

The running of children, their pockets stuffed with candy and toys,

 

Milling people on both sides,

The music of so many peppermint candies being unwrapped.

 

On that chilly December day, the people of Nogales

Gathered and did what seemed impossible:

 

However quietly regarding the outside world,

They simply redrew the border.

 

In doing so, they brought a little more warmth to the desert winter.

On the border, on this day, they had a problem and they solved it.

 

-- posted on Poem-a-day 12/22/2024


AND  a little commentary from Paul on the session he missed (see Dec. 18)



On Friday, January 10, 2025 at 02:04:04 PM EST, K Jospe <kjospe@gmail.com> wrote:


I thank you for this!!  Not that we need end of the world messages ... but well-crafted ones with that extra ribbon, "Humanity dies gently with a sigh of relief" -- invites a poem in itself.  Most days I don't see humanity dying gently at all... but I have great compassion for whoever will sigh that sigh of relief when the play is over.

 I added it to my blog post of Dec. 18 !

By the way... I WISH I had taken a portrait photo of you -- what a wonderful New Year attire you wore with the red suspenders, the reds in the plaids... 
you are quite the dapper Dan... and you know I am always grateful for your insights shared!
Hope all is well.
xoxoxo
Kitty

His reply:     My father used to quote a fellow lawyer who was famous for an overabundance of malarkey and after attaining a favorable decision, said to the Judge,
" Your honor is too kind."   I admit to a certain amount of malarkey and apply those very same words to your kind e mail remarks.

                                                                      Daniel Dapper,III,
                                                                     Late of Saville Row

Thursday, December 19, 2024

Last post for 2024 -- with useful links!

 EXTRA LINKS!!!

Jim recommends the Astronomy picture of the day:  to receive it in your inbox:  http://apodemail.appspot.com/

 

 Some of you might know the blog below by Maria Popova -- https://www.themarginalian.org/newsletter/

Jan brought up Popova's extraordinary book of illustrated essays, The Universe in Verse.  Maria Popova, presents "a celebration of the human search for truth and beauty through the lenses of science and poetry." Each of the 15 essays is followed by a poem.  https://www.amazon.com/Universe-Verse-Portals-through-Science/dp/1635868831

 

You might enjoy her list of "best books" -- with tastes to sample of some of her favorite books...

https://www.themarginalian.org/2024/12/17/best-books-2024/?mc_cid=73985a9ea1&mc_eid=2e713bf367   Well worth spending at least half an hour to see the rich feast available that "fathoms"  life and celebrates the bond we feel with the joy of reading as a means to "deepen our way of living".

 

Emily shares this quote from Kurt Vonnegut

There is love enough in this world for everybody, if people will just look. The arts are not a way to make a living. They are a very human way of making life more bearable. Practicing an art, no matter how well or badly, is a way to make your soul grow, for heaven's sake.

 

 

 

Dec. 18

  

A Journey  by Nikki Giovanni; Telescope by Louise GlĂ¼ck; The Work of Happiness  by May Sarton; The Moon Burgled the House by Elizabeth Bishop;  In a Grain of Sand by JesĂºs Papoleto MelĂ©ndez

It is hard to believe that the year is coming to a close... Poetry has guided us through 50 weeks of discussions, prompted by poems-- providing us with consolations, ruminations, words which dig deep into layers seen, felt, sensed by experiences.  Hearing each other respond in multiple ways to just one poem magnifies the power of words to help us sort out our desire to find pattern, meaning.  What a gift as we listen and ponder, note, and marvel at the crafting of words, at their music, their arrangement on the page,
as they meet the task of rendering something universal about being to the particulars of a slice of life!

The first poem, is a tribute to Nikki Giovanni, (1943-2024):
A Journey.   The title is not, The Journey, or Journey, but A Journey which could mean just one of many, but quickly rectified by the repeat, "It's a journey . . .", as if to imply a way to label how to go about living.  Rose Marie commented on Giovanni's style, broken with suspension points and large spaces, which  marked exactly how she spoke in an interview with Krista Tippett in 2016.  
One could make suppositions about her style reflecting something about "searching for words", or perhaps giving space to the poem to go to work without her interference,  perhaps she is not sure of herself, but wants to share her search for words, or perhaps, she imagines the reader, and wants to involve us, invite us to take time to go from one fragment to the next, supplying our own details. She does not impose any proposal, does not specify if this is a journey from life to death, or a general description of going through life, which accentuates the idea of a journey which by definition, is a process which may or may not reach any goal, or  have a purpose in the first place.

Neil was reminded of the John Fowles novel, The Magus  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Magus_(novel) which in turn, sounds like one of the three Magi, and their reputed journey to follow the Star of Bethlehem.  

The poet indeed, may not assume the role of guide,  but a fellow passenger, and yet says she is Ra, the all-knowing Egyptian Sun God,  in a space "not to be invented but discovered".  This sounds otherworldly.  She reassures us, provides the adjective exhuberant to describe "autumn's quilt", tells us we are in charge of our own guide posts and shows her courage.  Does she make you curious  to embark on such a journey?  
The poem is enigmatic, intriguing, and one senses she is about to leap into the void-- and eager to do so.

I just heard the 4th annual session "Reading Rilke" held at the Poets Corner in Maine, with guests Krista Tippett, Padraig O'TĂºama and Mark Burrows. https://www.thepoetscorner.org/events/reading-rilke-today?ss_source=sscampaigns&ss_campaign_id=6759a96c4ffaad2b3280a8f7&ss_email_id=675eef262d3b4836ead2f005&ss_campaign_name=Join+us+for+First+Light+in+2025&ss_campaign_sent_date=2024-12-15T15%3A01%3A23Z  (fast-forward several minutes for a long introduction about the Poets Corner by Meg Weston.  You might enjoy hearing Padraig read some of Rilke's fragments which share the same quality of this poem "A Journey".  None of us really know what "being" is...  

Telescope:   Louise GlĂ¼ck: 1943—2023, deserves a long introduction.  We agreed that the crux of the poem is about relationship, since how we see things is constantly in flux.  A poet can make statements, for instance in the 2nd stanza, "you're in a different place/... where human life has no meaning" which sound like assumptions that may or may not be true.  Jim challenged her statement in the 3rd stanza, that stars should be coupled with the word, "stillness" and shared the Astronomy Picture of the Day: https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ (The Crab Nebula shown on 12/18 might look still, but the universe is a violent place filled with exploding stars, swirling gasses and dust.) This brought up Arthur Clark's short story, "The Star" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Star_(Clarke_short_story)... which in turn brought up the fact that what we see in the sky is actually 40 billion years ago... and how do we start to even comprehend light years??? Looking at the last stanza, there is no mention of interconnection we so highly prize and mention about life on earth but rather a chilling sense of how removed "each thing is from every other thing".  Claudia brought up how how the poem moved from visual to an auditory plane of the silence of the night sky.  Later, in discussion of "In a Grain of Sand" , we discussed at length how poetry can work "visual" arrangements, how to interpret them which in turn brought up comments about jazz, and how differently "improvisation" can sound depending on who's working the tune.  (Oscar Peterson vs. Count Basie for instance, who "leaves out notes in the right place.").
This blogger gives a far more detailed discussion of the poem! https://hungerforpoetry.blogspot.com/2013/03/telescope-by-louise-gluck.html
Then again, you could spend a few days reading many more such reviews!!!!  How do we balance what seems to be a cold, distant universe with our own inner world focussed on ourselves?

The Work of Happiness: this poem brought up many stories about May Sarton, her biography by Margo Peters https://www.amazon.com/May-Sarton-Biography-Margot-Peters/dp/0449907988  and the fact that two people in the group had met her, Kathleen visited her house.  What is happiness?  What is the work of happiness and how does it work?  Sarton weaves a beautiful metaphor where the bottom line seems to be that happiness is growth and a sense of peace each of us find in our own way.  The discussion touched on the comfort of familiar objects,  and ways we relate to things perhaps as treasured hierlooms, perhaps as possession to show off.  Back to discussion of relationship (as in the poem, Telescope): some were surprised that in the poem, there is no mention of a person.  This led to the idea of home and what happens when it is taken away, whether through violence of bombing, disappearance, or when ousted from it for whatever reason.  One illustration was the mention of the 1996  movie "Twister" (and 2024 sequel Twisters.)  
I couldn't write down all the comments fast enough, but a recurring comment was an agreement that Sarton does not TELL us what happiness or its work is but rather through her meditation about it, allows us to think of what it might be for us individually. 

Moon Burgled: Bishop's dates are (February 8, 1911 – October 6, 1979), so I am curious why her poem was in the January 23, 2006 New Yorker!  
The poem was read and promptly dismissed. 
Paul's comment: (Jan. 10, 2025)     I was not present for the apparent disdain of Moon Burgled by the O  pen society. I Iiked it as a thought provoker, although the theme is fairly worn. I don't know why , but these thoughts were where it brought me.
    If she moved as a traveler, literally and metaphorically, through waves of emotion, as some critics would charge, then Moon Burgled is a dream drifting through the deathly demise of humanity, and to my thoughts of her thoughts, something quite different from what I have read of her other poems. 
    This sad, dark dream is a robust interpretation of what is coming, It has for her come and completed itself. It is the end of the world. Humanity dies gently and with a sigh of relief. She was timely ahead of time

In a grain of Sand:  The poet explains the visual style as "cascadance" -- more dance than cadence with the visual cascade of words as a flow of consciousness on a canvas.  Many referred to examples of performance, sign language, and how a playful style of repeated words, reversed, inversed, lends to level of acting that heightens the power of the words.  The Body is involved with the poem.  Judith brought up the visual power of negative space for an artist,  and Martha Graham's choreography.  She recommended seeing The Moor's Pavane -- Shakespeare's Othello set to choreography by JosĂ© Limon: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Moor%27s_Pavane but with the caveat, not all performances are equal. 

Friday, December 13, 2024

December 11

 Features of the Modern Age  by Ashley Steineger; Permission Granted by David Allen Sullivan; Southbound On The Freeway; Louder by Eric Nelson (inspired by The House on the Hill by E. A. Robinson); Relic  by Jennifer Foerster; That’s My Heart Right There  by Willie Perdomo;  If I can stop one heart from breaking -- by Emily Dickinson


It is Friday night, the day after Santa Lucia, a beautiful holiday that celebrates light. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Lucy%27s_Day  I was reminded of it by my friend from Sweden who was an exchange student in my senior year in High School. She and I had a long WhatsApp talk.   This has been a week of many such beautiful connections, including a poem shared with me this morning by a very special older friend.  

"When Will You Be Back?"

A poetry prayer for the 2d Week of Advent


Yesterday I visited an old man in the hospital.

I was not the only one. We talked on the elevator ride down—

Has he gained any weight? Will he stay in that room?

Does he like the food? Has he called?

All the man wanted to know was, When will you be back?

We ask that question in a thousand different ways

every single day,

our hearts leaning over themselves, bending to get closer to love.

We say, Text me when you're home.

Call me when you're free.

One more kiss!

I love you all the time.

When will you be back?

What we really mean is

I can't go through life alone.

Please don't let me go through life alone.


Poem by Rev. Sarah A. Speed | A Sanctified Art LLC / sanctifiedart.org


This is what poems allow us... they hold our hands, or perhaps irritate us, baffle us, but it is another person behind them who is sharing.  Last night, as featured reader, I listened to the 30 odd voices along with the poems by the other featured reader.  Such a rich sharing.  I haven't had time to process all I heard...


I know I will miss the two weeks when O pen does not gather in person.  


First things first... the write up of the discussion of the poems Wednesday then send out of Dec. 18 poems.  


Nutshell:

Features of the Modern Age:  The poetess is a holistic psychologist and joins many fine environmental poets in looking at our current state of affairs and writing with honesty to touch people so they indeed are shaken out of complacency. Indeed guilt and blame sabotage and are not helpful. It serves no purpose to go back 70-80 years and cry out Rachel Carson warned us with her book Silent Spring, just as it serves no purpose to cry out warnings to leaders who insist on wars.  I'm not sure who offered these words which sound like a blues song:    "Riven with negatives, we can still sing little songs as we face great sorrows."   Judith brought up Alvin Ailey's ballet Cry  https://ailey.org/repertory/cry composed in 1971.  

In response to the third couplet, (the invention of a word for the painful loss of dark skies, noctaglia),

Neil brought up light pollution and the example of the light dome in Phoenix.  In his words: "Phoenix, the tenth largest US city with a greater metropolitan population of over 5 million is typical of other huge dense urban sprawls with its large polluting light dome of nighttime luminance that obscures the night sky. The famous Kitt Observatory, over 150 miles away in the desert to the SW has to carefully adjust their scopes to avoid these light pollution flares.


Tucson, a city of about a million residents, is only 50 miles away from Kitt, but since Tucson has strict light pollution laws that prohibit light sources directed towards the sky, it does not represent the same type of night light pollution that Phoenix represents."


People shared insights on astrology and the vocabulary in the poem referring to astronomy, such as retrograde.  https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/retrograde   This prompted quite a few references to Science Fiction, for example people live without sun, but know one day it will appear and they will be totally destroyed. I believe this might be it? https://medium.com/@digital.artistry.10/the-lost-sun-a-short-story-5483f7e84d0c


As for the poem itself, the title might provide insight to the mention of what is disappearing, but it is connected to the personal theme of our own death, and the unsettling thought that one will not be able to see the familiar constellation of Orion with those three distinctive bright stars for his belt where the mother pointed -- as reassurance, "when I die, that's how you'll find me."

(The myths and importance of Orion are fascinating: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orion%27s_Belt)

It is unsettling to think the night sky will become a foreign text... the stars untranslatable words.  It might be a depressing note on which to end, but points to the limitations of our understanding and ability to guide ourselves in "blinding dark". However, it also does no good to keep our heads in the sand, or stop trying to understand our constantly changing universe.  Perhaps the old system of beliefs needs drastic revision. 


Permission Granted might beg the question: "why is it necessary and by whom is it given".  Clever and by the 5th stanza one arrives at the crux of the matter:  "Each beat of the world's pulse demands /only that you feel it."  The poet uses the technique of coupling unusual adjectives and juxtapositions, such as "See the homeless woman following/ (note the enjambment... the following is interrupted) the tunings of a dead composer?  There is a hopeful note of "following her down, (enjambment, this time as suspension enhanced by a comma) inside, ( the commas contain the space of line break and the word inside-- which gives a sense of vastness), where the singing resides. 


Bernie remarked how it reminded him of Mary Oliver, Wild Geese https://www.poetry.com/poem/123017/wild-geese

Participants noted the personal self-help advice in the 5th stanza... free from the shackles of guilt and the news.

Eddie commented how the poem seemed to be written bty someone distant from his/her family who has found peace within himself. 


Southbound on the Freeway:  was to provide a sequel to the poem last about the automated cars.  Here, there is a feel of a sci-fi premise and the human characteristics quite apparent.  One person remarked how enjoyable it is to read poems which seem to say one thing, but actually say another as well.  This is such a poem.  Discussion brought up more Sci Fi, Sinclair Lewis and the worship of the family automobile.

I first read this poem in 1963 -- it was fun to re-read it so many years later, actually, unsettling to see how accurately Swenson captured humans as soft, brainless guts whose machines drive them!


Louder:  I placed this side by side with the Robinson villanelle with its refrain "Nothing more to say" which haunted Eric Nelson. The haunting refrain of not being able to tell what is said, the imminence of death, the sense of being an outside all weave through.


Relic:  A Native American perspective on America, in a dream, which counters the myth "everyone can live their dream".

It helps to know more about the poetess: https://www.jenniferfoerster.com/ 

I believe it was Paul who started the song, As I was going up the stair, I met a man who wasn't there..."  and Judith brought up Bartleby and his refrain, "I prefer not to"... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartleby,_the_Scrivener


That's my heart right there:  Elaine and I performed this as a duet... Blues gets to the point... and the repetition "right there" and rhymes with heart paint the power of love.


If I can stop one heart from breaking seemed to be the perfect antidote!