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Verse of April: Digital Anthology of Homage to the Poets

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"Nowhere Blues," an audio-visual-poem cutup inspired by a Langston Hughes-William S. Burroughs collaboration between poets Jamika Ajalon and Fork Burke.

56---> jamika & fork & hughes & burroughs

April 21, 2017

 

Below are the texts that make-up this collaborative tribute to poets Langston Hughes and William S. Burroughs:

 

them nowhere home blues

(for brothah from another other langston hughes)

by jamika ajalon

 

blues?

carry in my shoes

from one go to another

stop nowhere

 

imprints pissed stained

pleasured worlds of road

avenues & boulevards

askLangston

Hughes would agree--

the poetry of the city marianates

skull high sands

in loose coin & blues bones

tide in black froth & indigo

tied upin a knot

outbackmy throat

got me up and left me gone

 

this road aintso short

but it don't seem so long

 

them blues sisters

 been sitting ‘round me

in they kingdom thrones

singing me they songs

 and I been taking notes

 

like who evah heard

why she take to the road

when nowhere is home for long …

no nowhere is home for so long

 

 

NOWHERE BLUES cut up

by fork burke

 

Langston would agree – black and froth & indigo – pleasured worlds – throat sands – taking notes

who imprints singing – why this road – pissed one go to don’t

they songs - nowhere got avenues

avenues shoes round me kingdom – bones hughes blues loose coin stop

taking when agree

to poetry they kingdom

poetry nowhere marinates like notes

it thrones

stop ain’t sitting indigo city up

songs the & to

they & tied to pleasured

avenues notes long long the kingdom

they me

short of blues? she and indigo up gone

the indigo my nowhere

from for when worlds back pleasured thrones      brothah

the nowhere

don't the in tide been other

to in poetry

brothah bones blues        don't road blues

worlds sitting road Langston

been city

another no gone

my the marinates heard coin of blues

when is ask this don't

sands Langston hughes

longroad they singing Langston

go brothah        it from brothah

boulevards     go pleasured

road tide them home

worlds     why    worlds

city

 

 

________________________________________________________________________________

 

Name: Jamika Ajalon

Hometown: St. Louis, Missouri

Current City: Paris, France

Occupation : Poet/ writer /pluri-disciplinary artist/musician

 

Why Langston?: 

Langston Hughes is the blues. 

Why Burroughs Cut-up?:  

William Burroughs is another artist whose form inspires me in the various mutations of my artistic practice. My ode to Hughes had already gone through several permutations as a text on paper, and I wanted to transform it further. Fork Burke is probably one of the biggest fans of Burroughs that I know, and his influence is also very present in her work, so I invited Fork to do a cut up of my poem, my ode to Langston—“Them Nowhere Home Blues.” 

Why experimental audio-visual mash-up?:

The word is always the root of my practice, and I often re-work poetry and prose into visual/sonic pieces.  In the end, with “Nowhere Blues,” the video has become a kind of a cut-up of the cut, of the cut-up expressed through layers of voicings, sound, and dissected images.   The mood, tone, and theme of the poem speaks to Langston, but the transformation reflects Burroughs’ form, technique, and philosophy as an artist. Besides, I get a kick out of bringing seemingly disparate elements together to create a whole new beast.

 

 

Name : Fork Burke

Hometown: Detroit, Michigan

Current City: Biel-Bienne - Switzerland

Occupation: Poet

 

What does poetry mean to you? 

Poetry is like Spirit—It is in everything seen and unseen—I think of poetry as a communication I encounter all the time—All subversive moments are poetry and all poems are love poems—Poetry holds space—I am constantly taking notes—the poem emerges over a period of time, and it is the poets calling to witness possibility of truth—Poetry is both destructive and restorative, and writing poems is the work of Poetry.

 

Favorite poem:

Where Flesh Circulates

by William S. Burroughs

 

Its so hard to remember in the world – –   Weren’t you there?        Dead so you

think of ports – – Couldn’t reach flesh – –       Might have to reach flesh from

anybody – – 

           And i will depart      under the Red Masters

           for strange dawn words          of color                      exalting their

           falling on my face   impending attack         satellite in a 

          Gold and perfumes          of light              city red stone

          shadows brick terminal time             wet dream flesh            creakily the

          the last feeble faces             fountains play stale

          spit from crumpled cloth               Weimar youths            on my face

          bodies           where flesh circulates             Masters of color

         exalting their dogs      impending attack of light

         unaware of the vagrant        shadows on the Glass and Metal Streets

         silver flying   scanning patterns    electric dogs

         dark street life   “Here he is now”       staring out

         from the dawn           he strode toward the flesh     jissom webs drifting

         where identity       scarred metal faces      masturbating

         “Who him?” spitting blood laugh on the iron   afternoons

          ejaculates wet dream flesh          in red brick Terminal Time

          red nitrous fumes  under the orange gas flares

         grey metal fall out               on terminal cities

         to the shrinking sky fading color   sewage delta

        caught in this dead whistle stop                     post card sky

        dead rainbow flesh             and copper pagodas                flickered on the

        in a city of red stone       black skin work fish smell and

        dead eyes in doorways red water words             spitting blood laugh

        sharp as water reeds      fish syllables

        stirring this Moroccan sunlight           vagrant noon station

        spent in the mirror          dawn jissom webs       drifting rainbow

        speeded up from afternoon’s       slow ferris wheel          flesh.

 

(Originally published in Floating Bear 24 in September-October 1962. Republished by RealityStudio in August 2010.)

 

Why do you like this poem?

William Burroughs asked—What are words and how do they function?—Writers work with the enemy—The idea of freeing text and breaking the spell cast over words resonated with me deeply—The work of Burroughs goes beyond writing and storytelling—It is visionary work—Everything vibrates—I listenspeak—Burroughs seemed to be the keeper of a whole relationship to language that extended off the page and that is happening all the time—The Cut-ups—The recordings —Burroughs said, When you cut into the present the future leaks out”—There is no separation.

 

 

In 2017 Tags langston hughes, william s. burroughs, poetry, cutup, tribtue, homage, national poetry month, collaboration, audio visual, video, sound, blues, jamika ajalon, fork burke, language

Poet Kristin Sanders pays homage to Louise Glück with her video for "Pomegranate," a poem from Glück's The House on Marshland (1975).

55---> kristin & glück

April 20, 2017

 

Kristin Sanders on poetry and on "Pomegranate" by Louise Glück:

I've been thinking a lot about the idea of poetry being "too precious," and I totally get that, but for some reason when I think about my favorite poems, they end up being serious, traditional "poetry" types of poems. In my own writing, I try to stay away from the idea that poetry can only be a certain way, has to be sincere, has to end with a nice fluffy "bow" of a conclusion, shouldn't include certain uncomfortable things. I try to write against those ideas. But the poets who feel the most important to me, whose voices speak to me the strongest—Louise Glück, Margaret Atwood, Richard Siken—definitely do all of the "traditional" things I try to avoid.

I settled on this Louise Glück poem, "Pomegranate," because it's always been a favorite. I'm a fan of her use of Greek myth (especially in her book Meadowlands). I like her pessimism, her honesty about romantic relationships, her frankness, and the subtle ways she brings sex and bodies into her poems. I find her poems sort of sexy, and very sad. Or maybe realistic. I wanted to make a video that reflects my recent move back to the central coast of California, specifically San Luis Obispo: a place where—twelve years ago—Louise Glück's poems were constantly in my mind. Now I've returned, and I'm "my own woman, finally." I think writing poetry means the world sees you a certain way and projects a lot of weird stuff onto you—and this is especially true for women who write in any way about bodies, sexuality, gender, etc. But writing and reading poetry offers you access to "depths" you may not—like Demeter in the poem—normally be offered in your lifetime. I'm grateful for those depths.

 

______________________________________________________________________________

 

Kristin Sanders is the author of CUNTRY (Trembling Pillow Press 2017 and a finalist for the 2015 National Poetry Series), This is a map of their watching me (BOAAT 2015), and Orthorexia (Dancing Girl Press 2011). She has taught at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo; Loyola University, New Orleans; Belmont University; and Louisiana State University. She is currently a poetry editor for the New Orleans Review and a contributing writer at Weird Sister. 

Tags louise gluck, kristin sanders, poetry, poets, women poets, pomegranate, margaret atwood, richard siken, Greek myth, Meadowlands, sex and bodies, california, san luis obispo, sexuality, gender, depths, demeter
Portrait of Ai by Heather Conley

Portrait of Ai by Heather Conley

54---> noise & ai

April 20, 2017

This sound composition is inspired by Ai’s 1979 book Killing Floor. It represents a collaboration between myself and Godefroy Dronsart, who created/improvised the soundscape. Godefroy and I collaborated on this piece because we've been experimenting with poetic noise compositions. We wanted to hear Ai’s poetry in a sonic-world because we’ve never heard it there before.  

_______________________________________________________________________________

Portrait of Malik Crumpler by Scott Benedict

Portrait of Malik Crumpler by Scott Benedict

 

Malik Ameer Crumpler is a poet, rapper and music producer that’s released several albums, short films and five books of poetry. He co-founded the literary journals: Madmens Calling, Visceral Brooklyn and Those That This. Malik has an MFA in Creative Writing from Long Island University, Brooklyn. He is the curator/host of Poets Live, Paris and the new editor-at-large for The Opiate. Crumpler also wrote several musicals, ballets/arias commissioned by Harvest Works, Liberation Dance Theater, Firehouse Space, Panoply Lab, B’AM Paris, B’AM Vancouver, and Double Wei Factory.

 

Photo of Godefory Dronsart by Sabine Dundure

Photo of Godefory Dronsart by Sabine Dundure

Godefroy Dronsart writes poetry mainly because novels are too long and let's face it drama requires performers. He is fond of poetry which takes back alleys and has a weird limp, both full of itself and honestly altruistic.

 

 

 

In 2017 Tags ai, poet, poetry, malik crumpler, godefroy dronsart, killing floor, collaboration, sonicscape, sound, noise, soundscape, noise compositions, tribute, homage, rapper, music producer, madmens callin, visceral brooklyn, those that this, MFA, Long Island University, Poets Live Paris, The Opiate, musicals, ballets, Harvest Works, Liberation Dance Theater, Firehouse Space, Panoply Lab
Portrait of Jonathan Finlayson by John Rogers

Portrait of Jonathan Finlayson by John Rogers

52---> jonathan & hayden

April 15, 2017

 

Name: Jonathan Finlayson

From: Oakland, California

Current City: New York, New York

Occupation: Musician/Composer

Age: 35

 

What does poetry mean to you?

Poetry is that which is sublime and nameless without attribution, the movement that is exceptional within the ordinary, the well of emotional intelligence that exceeds our capacity in all directions.

Poet and poem I’ll use for this entry:

“Perseus” by Robert Hayden

Her sleeping head with its great gelid mass
of serpents torpidly astir
burned into the mirroring shield—
a scathing image dire
as hated truth the mind accepts at last
and festers on. 
I struck. The shield flashed bare.


Yet even as I lifted up the head
and started from that place
of gazing silences and terrored stone, 
I thirsted to destroy. 
None could have passed me then— 
no garland-bearing girl, no priest
or staring boy—and lived.

Why do you like this poem?

The simplicity and universality of the themes of Hayden’s poem are what resonate with me. We’ve all encountered something at one point in time so terrifying that it left us paralyzed with fear. Conversely, we’ve all also slew those fears and thus fed on the rush of endorphins that accompanies this type of achievement.

 

 

 

In 2017 Tags robert hayden, poetry, perseus, jonathan finlayson, oakland california, new york, musician, composer, jazz, trumpet, trumpeter, poem, universal theme, fear, paralysis, achievement
Mohammad Shafiqul Islam.JPG

51---> shafiq & das

April 14, 2017

 

 

Name: Mohammad Shafiqul Islam

Hometown: Tangail, Bangladesh

Current City: Sylhet, Bangladesh

Occupation: English Teacher at Shahjalal University of Science & Technology, Sylhet, Bangladesh; Poet; Translator of Bengali into English.

Age: 38

 

What does poetry mean to you?

Poetry is very important to me. It gives me immense pleasure, astonishes me, accompanies me at my distress, sometimes takes me far away from the mundane reality, engages me in a distinct thought process, and also makes me happy.

Poetry is a second presence in my daily life – I sometimes speak to poetry, and it also speaks to me. Poetry is what does not let me sleep, leaves me in a space that is both known and unknown. Poetry, to me, is breeze that spreads love and peace. In another sense, poetry represents what happens around us every day, what we experience in our quotidian existence, how we see the world, nature and human beings, and how we feel after a certain shocking or pleasant experience. Through poetry, we see reality in a distinct way, we travel around the world, through spaces, and we discover something new. We strive to imagine a safer world through poetry.

Poetry continues to live, keeps us alive, and we cannot survive without poetry.

Favorite Poem:

Out of many wonderful poems from around the world, I would like to mention one titled “Banalata Sen” by Jibanananda Das.

Why do you like this poet/poem?

“Banalata Sen” by Jibanananda Das is one of my favorite poems—it is indeed one of the most read and acclaimed poems in Bengali literature. The poem has been translated by several translators into English; I have read both the original and the translated version of the poem. Banalata Sen is the name of a girl who is a paradigm of beauty—she stands beside the most beautiful women characters presented by poets, writers and artists. Female beauty is glorified in the poem. Banalata is the poet’s muse who is his eternal inspiration in the creative venture.

The poet sets words in the poem in such a way that one is reminded of a great work that is created out of love—words in the poem are like pearls placed one after another to form an eternal beauty. Reading the poem means walking through a serene forest path surrounded by trees where breeze kisses the leaves with a sense of grandeur.

বনলতা সেন 

– জীবনানন্দ দাস

হাজার বছর ধরে আমি পথ হাঁটিতেছি পৃথিবীর পথে,
সিংহল-সমুদ্র থেকে নিশীথের অন্ধকারে মালয়-সাগরে
অনেক ঘুরেছি আমি; বিম্বিসার-অশোকের ধূসর জগতে
সেখানে ছিলাম আমি; আরও দূর অন্ধকারে বিদর্ভ নগরে;
আমি ক্লান্ত প্রাণ এক, চারিদিকে জীবনের সমুদ্র সফেন,
আমারে দু-দন্ড শান্তি দিয়েছিল নাটোরের বনলতা সেন ।
 
চুল তার কবেকার অন্ধকার বিদিশার নিশা,
মুখ তার শ্রাবস্তীর কারুকার্য; অতিদূর সমুদ্রের পর
হাল ভেঙ্গে যে নাবিক হারায়েছে দিশা
সবুজ ঘাসের দেশ যখন সে চোখে দেখে দারুচিনি-দ্বীপের ভিতর,
তেমনি দেখেছি তারে অন্ধকারে; বলেছে সে, ‘এতদিন কোথায় ছিলেন?’
পাখির নীড়ের মত চোখ তুলে নাটোরের বনলতা সেন।
 
সমস্ত দিনের শেষে শিশিরের শব্দের মত
সন্ধ্যা আসে; ডানার রৌদ্রের গন্ধ মুছে ফেলে চিল;
পৃথিবীর সব রঙ নিভে গেলে পান্ডুলিপি করে আয়োজন
তখন গল্পের তরে জোনাকির রঙে ঝিলমিল;
সব পাখি ঘরে আসে – সব নদী – ফুরায় এ জীবনের সব লেনদেন;
থাকে শুধু অন্ধকার, মুখোমুখি বসিবার বনলতা সেন।

 

BANALATA SEN

For a thousand years I have walked the ways of the world,
From Sinhala’s Sea to Malaya’s in night’s darkness,
Far did I roam. In Vimbisar and Ashok’s ash-grey world
Was I Present; farther off, in distant Vidarba city’s darkness,
I, a tired soul, around me, life’s turbulent, foaming ocean,
Finally found some bliss with Natore’s Banalata Sen.


Her hair was full of the darkness of a distant Vidisha night,
Her face was filigreed with Sravasti’s artwork.As in a far-off sea,
The ship-wrecked mariner, lonely, and no relief in sight,
Sees in a cinnamon isle sings of a lush grass-green valley,
Did I see her in darkness; said she, ”Where had you been?”
Raising her eyes, so bird’s nest like, Natore’s Banalata Sen.


At the end of the day, with the soft sound of dew,
Night falls; the kite wipes the sun’s smells from its wings;
The world’s colors fade; fireflies light up the world anew;
Time to wrap up work and get set for the telling of tales;
All birds home ─ rivers too ─ life’s mart close again;
What remains is darkness and facing me ─ Banalata Sen!

Translated by Fakrul Alam

In 2017 Tags Mohammad Shafiqul Islam, tangail bangladesh, sylhet bangladesh, english teacher, shahjalal university of science and technology, poet, translator, Bengali, English, banalata sen, Jibanananda Das, poems, poetry, national poetry month, verse of april
Portrait of Guy Choate by Joshua Asante

Portrait of Guy Choate by Joshua Asante

50---> guy & collins

April 13, 2017

Name: Guy Choate

Hometown: Beebe, Arkansas

Current City: North Little Rock, Arkansas

Occupation: Communications Team Manager at an engineering consulting firm; Founder and Curator of the Argenta Reading Series

Age: 35

 

What does poetry mean to you?

My default literary mode is set to nonfiction prose, so a lot of times what I think of as poetry is found within larger bodies of prose. To me, so much of the poetry I come across is the isolated brilliance of a section of prose or the arrangement of words within a piece that has no flaws. The relationship written poetry has with spoken language, however, is extraordinary.

I love reading aloud, so I can feel the written word. Sometimes, when I sit down to write something for an audience, I can’t get past an initial desire I have to stand at a podium and scream words at them. (I have no idea what this means.) As a form, though, prose typically requires more context than a yell, while I think a poem can inhabit this space. A good poet needs less reason, in the space of poetry, to hit people hard with words. She doesn’t always have to think about why or where the words, or the act itself of language announcing, must “fit” in the orderly space of essay. I will always be envious of that kind of expression, one that is not obligated to linearity, and the courage to articulate from these associative places. Poetry allows a space for words that don’t always want to be explained.

Favorite Poem:

“Dharma” by Billy Collins

Why do you like this poem?

The poem calls attention to how admirable dogs are for being able to leave the house without any belongings, and I think of the poem every time I put a leash on my own dog. It becomes a subconscious mantra for me when I walk out the door; every day I tell myself, I can navigate all of this, the whole world, without the help of the material goods of a house, what I put in the house. It find it so reassuring.

 

___________________________________________________

You can follow the (un)material-ridden days of Guy Choate on his very active and humorous photo-a-day blog.

In 2017 Tags billy collins, guy choate, beebe arkansas, little rock arkansas, north little rock arkansas, communications team manager, engineering firm, argenta reading series, poetry, literary modes, nonfiction, prose, spoken language, reading aloud, poet, dharma, photo-a-day, verse of april
Kyle Field by Peter Eriksson

Kyle Field by Peter Eriksson

48---> kyle & berman

April 11, 2017

Name: Kyle Field

Hometown: Born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama

Current City: Los Angeles, California

Occupation: Artist

Age: 44

 

What does poetry mean to you?

Well, it is a vague question, and to be honest I create more than I absorb from others these days, though my inspiration phase of early years was, of course, vital. Once you learn how to ride a bike there is less and less need to watch others doing it. Now it's time for them to watch you! Zoom zoom down the cobbly boulevard...

I truly enjoy the activity of puzzling words and rhymes and meter and syllable together, a practice I consider similar to constructing a picture or a painting. There are precise moves balanced with loose moves, and I believe that the difference in weight of several actions gives balance and flexibility to the fabric. Different juxtapositions based on the ever-evolving and mounting vocabulary of all of the words one has ever written, an ever-growing canon that reflects back on itself and rebounds, references, builds on and on, living in its own context and gaining mass glory and legend along the way.

That being said, my ideal place of reading is in bed, half-sick, maybe a mild fever, as I lay dying as the hunter's bow from Hamsun's Pan has felled me, and while bleeding I take in words on, sometimes hopefully, yellowed pages from a used $5 or less volume. This happens after I have run and run and run and worn out to the place that I have nothing left to say. Then, I read, with a notebook close at hand, and roll over with achy back and ribs, to jot in this small book of pages a tweak or grabbed phrase, sometimes twisting it into a song title. I rarely read my own poems. Most of my words ultimately end up in song, for, in some sense, I feel, if the words are strong, a poem is at it's strongest set to music.

Favorite Poet:

I don't have any single favorites, but, for the purposes of this questionnaire, I will say David Berman, as I just dug out of an outdoor storage closet, only yesterday, my 4th copy (I've given it away three times) of his excellent book of poems, Actual Air, from 1999. I will now read from his poem: 

"The Coahoma County Wind Cults"

My dream walked on four legs

toward the remote source

of a pale yellow letter

 

only to circle around the cabin

when it got there.

 

A black and white cave rainbow

arched between two old shoes.

 

Oxygen bounced off the face of a doll,

looking for the slow dazzling guts

of a life form.

 

There was a moment of sudden clarity

when the pages burned in opera glasses,

 

like a herd crossing zip codes

 

or an exhumed idea pressing

at the limits of the marquee bulbs,

 

my dream pushes air.

 

Why do you like this poet/poem?

What he does with words, word to word, gives me a liberating life experience, and I like the feeling just to have my eyes pass over them on a page. I also feel like he is always abstractly talking about something so normal in some sense, so universal to the human experience, yet the way he reframes it is intoxicating. That sounds so corny—descriptions and comparisons are odious, especially if the thing speaks for itself so well. Sometimes the spoken word is a jacket too tight.

His dead blog is still quite interesting. He talks about when he quit writing, like when Duchamp quit making art and just played chess, I somehow love these kind of grand gestures.

 

"SEE Paradise" by Kyle Field is a piece in conversation with David Berman's "The Coahoma County Wind Cults."

"SEE Paradise" by Kyle Field is a piece in conversation with David Berman's "The Coahoma County Wind Cults."

In 2017 Tags david berman, kyle field, little wings, tuscaloosa, Los Angeles, artist, musician, poetry, inspiration, rhymes, meter, syllable, juxtaposition, Knut Hamsun, Pan, songs, marcel duchamp, paradise, see, verse of april, the silver jews

47---> jennifer & beatty

April 10, 2017

 

Name: Jennifer Jackson Berry

Hometown & Current City: Pittsburgh, PA

Age: 39

Occupation: Claims Adjuster, Poet, and Editor

 

What does poetry mean to you?

Poetry has saved me. When life took turns that I didn't expect and when those turns left me unable to verbalize my emotions, I turned to the page. When someone tells me that one of my poems has helped them, I am so profoundly honored and so deeply happy. When I find a poem that helps me, I am indebted to that poet.

A Favorite Poem:

"I'll Write the GIrl" by Jan Beatty

Why do you like this poem?

Jan Beatty is an amazing mentor, a generous spirit, and a powerhouse poet. This poem speaks to me because I lost my way in the poetry world for a long time. I didn't write anything for nearly ten years after completing my MFA back in 2002. I didn't know how to be a poet if I wasn't going to be in the academy as a professor/teacher. I didn't think that what I was writing about was important, was high-art enough. I started writing again and found the Madwomen in the Attic Writing Workshops, which are workshops for students and community writers that are small, supportive, and intergenerational. I found friendships, support, and validation. I learned that I'll always write the girl, too, and that my voice is important when I'm writing about her.

In 2017 Tags jan beatty, jennifer jackson berry, pittsburgh pennsylvania, claims adjuster, poet, editor, poetry, emotions, the page, poem, mentor, madwomen in the attic writing workshops, intergenerational, support, the girl, verse of april
"Where to? What next?" by Katie Thompson is a piece inspired by Carl Sandburg's 1936 book-length poem The People, Yes. 

"Where to? What next?" by Katie Thompson is a piece inspired by Carl Sandburg's 1936 book-length poem The People, Yes. 

46---> katie & sandburg

April 7, 2017

Name: Katie Thompson

Hometown: Montgomery, Alabama 

Current City: Birmingham, Alabama

Occupation: Art Director by day, Visual Artist by night

What does poetry mean to you?

Poetry is difficult. It's difficult to write, it's difficult to read. Difficult to talk about. I believe poetry reflects our own inability to be absolute in the communication of our thoughts. We've created this incredibly difficult thing that holds as much meaning in between the words as it holds within the words themselves. Poetry is as indescribable as the human condition. 

Favorite poem/favorite poet, & why?

I'll share what has interested me lately: The People, Yes by Carl Sandburg. He wrote it in 1936 in America—so at the height of the Great Depression. I've been fascinated with this era of American history because I think it mirrors some of the anxiety that is currently buzzing here. The whole (book length) poem dives into the existential questions that all human societies tend to cycle through. I'll note that it's largely more optimistic than I am, especially when he approaches any notion of American exceptionalism. It's an interesting exercise to think what this poem would look like, if it could even exist, if Sandburg was writing in 2017 when optimism in America is not as easy to come by.

 

Here's an excerpt:

 

The people yes

The people will live on.

The learning and blundering people will live on.

    They will be tricked and sold and again sold

And go back to the nourishing earth for rootholds,

    The people so peculiar in renewal and comeback,

    You can't laugh off their capacity to take it.

The mammoth rests between his cyclonic dramas.

 

The people so often sleepy, weary, enigmatic,

is a vast huddle with many units saying:

    "I earn my living.

    I make enough to get by

    and it takes all my time.

    If I had more time

    I could do more for myself

    and maybe for others.

    I could read and study

    and talk things over

    and find out about things.

    It takes time.

    I wish I had the time."

 

The people is a tragic and comic two-face: hero and hoodlum:

phantom and gorilla twisting to moan with a gargoyle mouth:

"They buy me and sell me...it's a game...sometime I'll

break loose..."

 

    Once having marched

Over the margins of animal necessity,

Over the grim line of sheer subsistence

    Then man came

To the deeper rituals of his bones,

To the lights lighter than any bones,

To the time for thinking things over,

To the dance, the song, the story,

Or the hours given over to dreaming,

    Once having so marched.

 

Between the finite limitations of the five senses

and the endless yearnings of man for the beyond

the people hold to the humdrum bidding of work and food

while reaching out when it comes their way

for lights beyond the prison of the five senses,

for keepsakes lasting beyond any hunger or death.

    This reaching is alive.

The panderers and liars have violated and smutted it.

    Yet this reaching is alive yet

    for lights and keepsakes.

 

    The people know the salt of the sea

    and the strength of the winds

    lashing the corners of the earth.

    The people take the earth

    as a tomb of rest and a cradle of hope.

    Who else speaks for the Family of Man?

    They are in tune and step

    with constellations of universal law.

    The people is a polychrome,

    a spectrum and a prism

    held in a moving monolith,

    a console organ of changing themes,

    a clavilux of color poems

    wherein the sea offers fog

    and the fog moves off in rain

    and the labrador sunset shortens

    to a nocturne of clear stars

    serene over the shot spray

    of northern lights.

 

    The steel mill sky is alive.

    The fire breaks white and zigzag

    shot on a gun-metal gloaming.

    Man is a long time coming.

    Man will yet win.

    Brother may yet line up with brother:

 

This old anvil laughs at many broken hammers.

    There are men who can't be bought.

    The fireborn are at home in fire.

    The stars make no noise,

    You can't hinder the wind from blowing.

    Time is a great teacher.

    Who can live without hope?

 

In the darkness with a great bundle of grief

    the people march.

In the night, and overhead a shovel of stars for keeps, the people

march:

    "Where to? what next?"

 

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Katie Thompson is a designer and artist living in Birmingham, AL. Currently, she serves as Artistic Director at Studio By The Tracks, a non-profit organization that provides art guidance and materials to emotionally conflicted children and adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder or other mental illnesses. 

In 2017 Tags carl sandburg, american people, american poetry, birmingham alabama, montgomery alabama, art director, visual artist, poetry, human condition, 1936, great depression, american exceptionalism, optimism, 2017, studio by the tracks, non-profit organization, autism spectrum disorder, mental illness, writing, drawing, art, community
Self-Portrait (Told Slant) by Ross Peter Nelson

Self-Portrait (Told Slant) by Ross Peter Nelson

45---> ross & oliver

April 6, 2017

 

Name: Ross Peter Nelson

Hometown: Northern Montanifornia

Current City: Helena, MT

Occupation: Playwright/Photographer/Programmer

Age: Slouching towards geezerdom

 

What does poetry mean to you?

Poetry is the girl you watch shyly from the sidelines, wondering if she'd like you. And when (or if) you finally get up the nerve to talk to her, you don't understand her at all. Rinse, repeat. Then, after dozens of confusing encounters, there is clarity, a spark. To me, poetry is a distilled essence of a mood, situation, and poet, and it's so personal and idiosyncratic that unless we match at a nearly genetic level, the connection doesn't happen.

Favorite poem:

I love Mary Oliver's "Little Owl Who Lives in the Orchard."

Why do you like the poem?

I love the contrasts: it's dark; it's whimsical; it speaks of valentines; it speaks of death. It's imagery evokes so much. Her "festal mouse" conjures up an almost Arthurian gala, and the "aluminum ladder of his scream" is both aural and visceral. Her little owl is both darling and dread. It's a portrait no painter or photographer could ever match.

Mary Oliver is attuned to nature in a way that inspires awe. Her visions are clear-sighted; when she celebrates new life in the spring, she doesn't spare the observation of the whitened bones that didn't survive winter.

There is one bit of poetic advice that I try to hold to in my own writing and that is Emily Dickinson's "tell the all truth, but tell it slant," and I love writers whose own "slant" lets me see things anew.

 

_________________________________________________

Ross Peter Nelson self-identifies as a playwright but enjoys cross-genre experiences as well. His plays have been produced on three continents, and his drama, fiction, photography, and political essays have been published in magazines, anthologies, and appear online. His dark internet surveillance comedy Becoming Number Six premiered last fall in New Orleans, and he will spend October 2017 as playwright-in-residence at Can Serrat, Spain.

 

 

In 2017 Tags mary oliver, poetry, poet, language, writer, connection, ross peter nelson, imagery, Emily Dickinson, verse of april, playwright, cross-genre, plays, drama, fiction, photography, political essays, Becoming Number Six, New Orleans, Montana

44---> leela & sexton

April 5, 2017

 

Name: Leela Chantrelle

Hometown: San Francisco, CA

Current City: Paris, France

Occupation: Literature Teacher

 

What does poetry mean to you?

Poetry is a means of identifying my own emotions and feeling less alone. (And that is what I hope my poetry could do for people when they read my work.)

Favorite poet/poem:

My favorite poet is Anne Sexton, and my favorite poems of hers would have to be "For my Lover Returning to his Wife" and "The Ballad of the Lonely Masturbator."

Why do you like this poet, these poems?

I like Anne Sexton because she has always felt as closely to myself as I have found in writing, because her poems make me cry and because she writes about masturbation as a marriage between the bed and the self and because no one else can do that. I used to be afraid that I would kill myself like her, now I am more reassured that I will live because of her. 

The following is a poem I wrote with Sexton in mind:

 

Here’s the IV Drip of It All

                              —for Annie

The grossest part of the body is its own anatomy,

Its inconceivability;

What clothing manages to let loose.

 

If you closely examine a love handle

You might not understand the temptation

 

Of the slobber of a lover 

Who’s forgotten to get tested

Or how this

Boy pulls me

Back in – even across oceans,

 

Watch me end

Up in the middle

Of an ocean. Who’s allowing me to survive?

 

Find your own oasis.

What if it’s not a page?

What if you can’t hold

 

Me again, but then

Remember this morning I woke up as pieces

Of evidence, my body curdled around yours.

 

What’s the solution in permanence?

Like a pair of black boxer briefs, black boxers, black.

It’s good when it doesn’t seem dirty after awhile,

That’s quality.

In 2017 Tags anne sexton, leela chantrelle, san francisco, california, paris, france, poetry, literature, teacher, love, lover, ballad, wife, masturbation, masturbator, writing, marriage, bed

43---> kali & gilbert

April 2, 2017

 

Name: Kali McNutt

Hometown: Birmingham, AL

Current City: Birmingham, AL

Occupation: Entrepreneur/Importer/Foreign Policy Semi-Wonk

Age: almost 32

 

What does poetry mean to you?

Poetry is a way to say more than what is literally on paper—it’s a method of evoking a feeling using few words.

Favorite poem or poet:

For the past two years I have returned to "Failing and Flying" by Jack Gilbert.

Why do you like this poem?

Gilbert’s poem provides an alternate way to look at failure in romantic relationships, a way that I think is more real than most anything I've ever heard or been taught. Also, it has the ability to make me weep every time I read it. A friend shared it with me, and I have shared it with others—all have been moved by it in some way.

In 2017 Tags kali mcnutt, poetry, poem, national poetry month, jack gilbert, relationships, verse of april

42---> yara & de musset

April 1, 2017

 

Prénom, Nom: Yara Lapidus
Ville actuelle: Paris
Travail: Chanteuse, auteur


Que signifie pour vous la poésie ?

La poésie est pour moi un espace de liberté absolue. Elle est indissociable de l’imagination, elle n’est pas dictée par aucune limite. La phrase suivante de Raymond Queneau est une parfaite illustration: "La poésie, c’est de savoir dire qu’il pleut quand il fait beau et qu’il fait beau quand il pleut." (1)

Poème préféré :

Il m’est très difficile de choisir un poète ou un poème tant la liste est longue.
Disons qu’aujourd’hui, le premier qui me vient à l’esprit est ce poème "VI" adressé à George Sand par Alfred de Musset :

A George Sand

Porte ta vie ailleurs, ô toi qui fus ma vie ;
Verse ailleurs ce trésor que j’avais pour tout bien.
Va chercher d’autres lieux, toi qui fus ma patrie,
Va fleurir, ô soleil, ô ma belle chérie,
Fais riche un autre amour et souviens-toi du mien.

Laisse mon souvenir te suivre loin de France ;
Qu’il parte sur ton coeur, pauvre bouquet fané,
Lorsque tu l’as cueilli, j’ai connu l’Espérance,
Je croyais au bonheur, et toute ma souffrance
Est de l’avoir perdu sans te l’avoir donné. (2)

Pourquoi aimez vous ce poème ?

J’aime ce poème pour la noblesse de la générosité qui se dégage des deux derniers vers ; Ces dernières phrases me bouleversent. (3)
 

Un nouvel album de Yara Lapidus se prépare dont la sortie en version française est prévue le 23 juin 2017. Elle est l'auteur et l'interprète. Gabriel Yared est le compositeur. Découvrez "One Thing, Nothing", extrait de ce nouvel album Indéfiniment sur son site. (4)

______________________________________________________________________________

Traduit du français par Carrie Chappell/ Translated from French to English by Carrie Chappell

(1) For me, poetry is a space of absolute freedom. It is deeply intertwined with the imagination and knows no bounds. This following sentence from Raymond Queneau is a perfect example of this: "Poetry is being able to say, it's raining when the weather is nice and that the weather is nice when it's raining." 

(2) It is really difficult for me to choose a poet or a poem as the list is long. For today, let's say that first poem that comes to mind is this "VI" addressed to George Sand by Alfred de Musset:

 

To George Sand

Lead your life elsewhere, o thou who was my life;

Pour out this treasure that I held as property.

Go find some other place, you who were my country.

Flourish, o sun, o my beautiful darling,

Make rich another love and remember mine. 

 

Let my memory follow you away from France;

That it could part on your heart, poor faded bouquet,

When you gathered it, I knew Hope,

I believed in happiness, and all my suffering 

Is to have lost it without giving it to you. 

 

(3) I love this poem for the noble generosity that emerges in the last two verses; those last lines shatter me. 

(4) Yara Lapidus' new album is in its final stages and is due for release on July 23, 2017. She is the writer and singer. Gabriel Yared is the composer. You can preview "One Thing, Nothing," a single already released from Indéfiniment, by visiting her site. 

In 2017 Tags yara lapidus, music, poetry, verse of april, singer, paris, raymond queneau, imagination, George Sand, Alfred de Musset, Gabriel Yared, compositeur, album, carrie chappell

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