Saturday, February 27, 2021
Saturday Haiku: The Arrival
a flock of robins
Friday, February 26, 2021
Friday Funnies: Is There Life on Mars?
Not on Thursdays, but on Saturday night, they roll!
Monday, February 22, 2021
Monday Music: The Blizzard
Here is another piece that happily came across my YouTube feed: a previously unreleased song recorded by John Denver. "The Blizzard" was written by singer/songwriter Judy Collins. Since a historic winter snow and ice event has just swathed a good portion of the country, perhaps this is a good time to listen again to the late John Denver.
Saturday, February 20, 2021
Saturday Haiku: Winter Snows
a barn filled with hope and hay
stands on frozen ground
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Photo: "An old barn on U.S. Hwy. 11 near Springville Alabama" by Joe Songer
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Friday, February 19, 2021
Rush Limbaugh's On-Air Reign
The news came this past Wednesday that conservative radio personality Rush Limbaugh has died after an extended battle with lung cancer. Rush Limbaugh was a boon to the talk radio industry,
but he was a bane to the community and a blight upon the broadcasting landscape. He tapped into our worst, most selfish actions and reactions and gave multitudes permission to abide in their hatred and bigotry. When his radio
program first came to the Birmingham area it aired on the most widely listened to talk
radio station, WERC. I would often listen in to find out what the brouhaha was all
about. This was in the day when one could hear informative interview programs
that were nationally broadcast, as well as local talk, of which Tim Lennox was
a favorite in the city. It didn’t take much listening to the spouting of Rush
and the fawning of the “ditto-heads” calling in to understand what was
happening. Nevertheless, I kept my car radio tuned to WERC Talk Radio because I felt it was important to hear what was being said what others were thinking.
The other part of my story was that
I had been a Baptist seminarian who was so dismayed by the fundamentalist
takeover of the Southern Baptist Convention that I had left the denomination 5 or 6 years earlier. I
guess I still had some lingering hope for “my people,” why else would I have
wandered into the Baptist Bookstore one day? As I entered the bookstore, which
at the time was still on University Boulevard near UAB, there on prominent
display was Rush Limbaugh’s newly published first book, The Way Things Ought to Be. I had listened to Rush enough to know that he made no claim
to any religious faith and had stated as much, yet here in the store that once
presented only what was considered to be aids for Bible study and Christian
living was a book by a man who made no attempt to hide his narrow-minded
bigotry and expressed no love at all for any faith practice.
That moment simply re-affirmed for me the rightness of my
decision to have parted company with the church of my childhood. Moreover, it
showed me that the core beliefs of the denomination rested not on the Bible, as
was publicly stated, but on bigotry, xenophobia, and hate. It also showed me
that you don’t have to be religious to be a racist bigot, but a racist bigot is
readily welcomed by many religious folks. I walked out that day with no further
desire to even look back, though I have carried the grief that good-hearted
people can be so easily led astray.
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Thursday, February 18, 2021
Poems for Winter Days
Monday, February 15, 2021
Monday Music: Unchained Melody (Austin Brown)
Saturday, February 13, 2021
Saturday Haiku: February
of a grey overcast day
a robin’s bright song
Thursday, February 11, 2021
The Presidential Inaugural Poem: Calling Us to Our Touchstones
“When
power corrupts, poetry cleanses”
~ John F.
Kennedy
Amanda Gorman captured the nation with her recitation of “The Hill We Climb” at President Biden’s inauguration last month. The Presidential Inaugural Poem is a relatively new thing in the United States. There have only been six in our history, and they have all occurred in my lifetime. The first inaugural poem, “The Gift Outright,” was recited by Robert Frost at John F. Kennedy’s inauguration. I may have seen it – our family watched the inauguration on TV. At six years of age, I cannot claim to remember it, but I do remember that it was my first realization that there was a president of the United States and that it is a pretty big deal.
I can say that I have eagerly tuned in to hear each inaugural poem
since. There was no poetry at inaugurations after Robert Frost’s 1961 poem
until Bill Clinton’s inauguration in 1993. Clinton said that when he decided
that he wanted a poem, he knew right away that he would ask Maya Angelou, who
grew up in Stamps, Arkansas not far from his hometown of Hope. Miller Wiliams read a poem at Clinton's second inauguration. After that, there was another hiatus of
poetic voices until Barack Obama’s inauguration in 2009 when Elizabeth
Alexander read “Praise Song for the Day.”
Because it has been so important for me to hear these
inaugural poems, I wanted to bring them all together to hear again what the
poets spoke to the nation. I wanted to place myself again in that liminal space
where poetry can enliven, or as John F. Kennedy put it in his address at the dedication of the Robert Frost Library at Amherst:
When power narrows the areas of man's concern, poetry
reminds him of the richness and diversity of his existence. When power
corrupts, poetry cleanses, for art establishes the basic human truths which
must serve as the touchstones of our judgment.
I have assembled each of the Presidential Inaugural Poem events here for your viewing. If you take the time to watch and listen, you can get a sense of the role of the poet in the public square and you can see how that poetic voice has changed over the years, reflecting the dynamic interplay between poetry and society. We can also see what JFK described as “the richness and diversity of [our] existence.”
First, there is Robert Frost, the aging poet who honored the nation’s
youngest president with a poem that in retrospect is perhaps a vestige of
the patriarchy that went unquestioned from the time of our “founding fathers”
to the new day that would be heralded by a young JFK (who still referred to “areas
of man’s [sic] concern”). Then we see Maya Angelou opening up the national vista to
reflect the growing awareness of the diversity of people who inhabit our land.
By the time we get to Amanda Gorman’s bright poem, we see a poet
in her youth celebrating the inauguration of our oldest elected president. Her
poem exemplifies how spoken word artists have influenced the way poetry is
delivered to the public.
If you want to read the texts of each inaugural poem, you can
go the compilation at TheLiterary Hub.
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Photo credit: Gorman Photo by Alex Wong (Getty Images) Frost photo is from a Los Angeles Times File Photo
* * *
Here are the Presidential Inaugural Poems in order of occurrence:
1961 Robert Frost, "The Gift Outright"
1993 Maya Angelou, "On the Pulse of Morning"
Monday, February 8, 2021
Monday Music: Homeward Bound (Paul Simon and Willie Nelson)
In 2003, Paul Simon helped to celebrate Willie Nelson's 70th birthday to sing "Homeward Bound." The two of them sang it together and WIllie offered some excellent picking on old Trigger.
Saturday, February 6, 2021
Saturday Haiku: Cloud Canopy
the canopy of the world
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Photo: Skies of Central Utah
Credit: Scott Wright of Scott Wright Photography
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Friday, February 5, 2021
Friday Funnies: Mel Brooks Impersonates Frank Sinatra
Most of us have heard Ray Charles' serious and iconic rendition of "America the Beautiful," but Mell Brooks gives us an idea of how Frank Sinatra might have delivered the song.
Wednesday, February 3, 2021
This Is How the Dread Begins: When Fascism Rears Its Head
Fas-cism: a political system based on a very powerful leader, state control of social and economic life, and extreme pride in country and race, with no expression of political disagreement allowed. (Cambridge Dictionary)