Thursday, March 5, 2020

March 5, 2020


Welcome

I have no reports of absentees, a report that posters now advertise our meetings and hope that new faces appear.


News and Jabber

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2020/feb/29/john-carey-history-of-poetry-interview

The above link leads to an interesting article about the author of what should be an interesting book. John Carey seems level-headed and I can understand why he didn't become a poet: 


"When I was at school in my young teens I fancied myself as a poet. I actually sent off poems to the Listener. They were terrible, obviously. There was a bloke in my class at grammar school, Dennis Keene, who later became a published poet. I remember we were asked to write a poem about the atomic bomb. Dennis began with the line: “Who took the sun and hung it in the trees?” I thought I could never write a line as good as that, so at that point I gave up."


Follow this link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5hy_-KU_MSQ to a four-minute video interview with John Carey. He begins saying "Poetry is to language what music is to noise." Worth  a listen.


Poet Lisel Mueller died at 96  this past month. She is another of those wondeerful writers I had never heard of until looking for news items to share today.

Here are two poems of hers:


Moon Fishing by Lisel Mueller

When the moon was full they came to the water.
some with pitchforks, some with rakes,
some with sieves and ladles,
and one with a silver cup.

And they fished til a traveler passed them and said,
"Fools,
to catch the moon you must let your women
spread their hair on the water --
even the wily moon will leap to that bobbing
net of shimmering threads,
gasp and flop till its silver scales
lie black and still at your feet."

And they fished with the hair of their women
till a traveler passed them and said,
"Fools,
do you think the moon is caught lightly,
with glitter and silk threads?
You must cut out your hearts and bait your hooks
with those dark animals;
what matter you lose your hearts to reel in your dream?"

And they fished with their tight, hot hearts
till a traveler passed them and said,
"Fools,
what good is the moon to a heartless man?
Put back your hearts and get on your knees
and drink as you never have,
until your throats are coated with silver
and your voices ring like bells."

And they fished with their lips and tongues
until the water was gone
and the moon had slipped away
in the soft, bottomless mud.


What a wonderful poem. Here is a link to the NYTimes article about her:


https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/28/books/lisel-mueller-dead.html.


Sometimes, When the Light


Sometimes, when the light strikes at odd angles

and pulls you back into childhood


and you are passing a crumbling mansion

completely hidden behind old willows


or an empty convent guarded by hemlocks

and giant firs standing hip to hip,


you know again that behind that wall,

under the uncut hair of the willows


something secret is going on,

so marvelous and dangerous


that if you crawled through and saw,

you would die, or be happy forever.


Today's Assignment

I may or may not have something of my own, given that I have been finishing a chapbook for my new granddaughter. TBD.


The Next Assignment

Describe yourself five years from now.


The Next Meeting

The next meeting will be on Thursday, March 19, 2020.




Friday, February 21, 2020

February 20, 2020


Welcome

Ed will not be here today. 

News and Jabber

We need to get a couple of new writers to join us lest we lose our moorings. I think MarLou was going to post a couple of things. How can we draft?



Of note is that on Saturday, February 22, 2020 poet Eamon Grennan will be reading at the GAelic Club at noon. Registration is requested. Here are the details:

Join us as we welcome Dublin-born renowned poet Eamon Grennan on Saturday, February 22 at 12 noon. Eamon Grennan is the author of more than 10 collections of poetry, including There Now, Matter of Fact, and The Quick of It, and a book of essays, Facing the Music: Irish Poetry in the 20th Century. He is a retired Professor of English at Vassar College and divides his time on both sides of the pond. Q & A session will follow the reading. Please help us with planning. RSVP via e-mail to
social@gaconline.org


Grennan is the real deal. He is now retired from his  professorship at Vassar. 


Cricket Trees Thunder 


What the cricket is saying with its high-pitched fire-alarm cheep

           its thin silk-line dividing night from morning is hard to place

till you look beyond the bedroom window and see the trees

           (locust oak dogwood maple ash—those patient beings

our dear upstanding companions in every weather) are wearing

           (this cloudy morning with thunder thumping at intervals among

gun-metal cloud-masses) an air of resignation as if on the way

           to mourning the matter of that moment when (the cricket knows)

they’ll strip stand stark and shake their skeletal fists at heaven.


Here is a link to a NYTimes article which preview several books of poetry the author of the article believes will be helpful in illuminating what is right now a dark America.

https://www.npr.org/2020/02/13/804880385/keeping-the-dark-at-bay-a-2020-poetry-preview.

The authors are worth taking the time to check on.




Today's Assignment

Any comments? I had difficulty in that I have embarked upon a series of  poems to my thirteenth grandchild, Mara, born on the 10th.


Next Assignment

What is the best thing about your life today/now?


Next Meeting

The next meeting will be on Thursday, March 5, 2020.

Thursday, January 2, 2020

January 2, 2019


News and Jabber


Today, the correspondence between T.S. Eliot and Emily Hale is being opened to the public. By agreement with the couple, the letters have been kept under wraps for fifty years after the death of the later to die. 


Note, too, that the collected poems of Herman Melville have been published. He is much less known for his poetry than his other work but many find his poetry more than estimable. Here is a link to the Library of America piece on its release: https://www.loa.org/books/610-complete-poems. You can find other articles via a google search.


I have been reading Different Hours by Stephen Dunn. His "Dog Weather" struck me as something that should  be posted in every senior center. Read it here:

https://stillgreen.tumblr.com/post/92601677/dog-weather-stephen-dunn?is_related_post=1.


I also came across a Christmas poem by J.R.R. Tolkien. It lay undiscovered in a school library for 80 years, finally found in 1936. It's a lovely poem, worthy of a reading every Christmas. The story about the poem and its discovery, along with the text of the poem may be found at the following link: https://www.carolinemcalisterauthor.com/blog/two-new-tolkien-poems-noel-and-the-shadow-man.


Check out poems by Louis Jenkins, a -mid-America prose poem writer who recently died. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/louis-jenkins, and http://www.yourdailypoem.com/listpoem.jsp?poem_id=97 for samples.


The next assignment:

Write a humorous poem, something to address Seasonal Affective Disorder


The Next Meeting

Will be on January 16, 2019. Bring money. I'll have copies of my new book, Mis-Givings