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Saturday, April 30, 2022
Saturday Haiku: Living in the World
to live in the world
Thursday, April 28, 2022
Poetry Unites Alabama
I watched this excellent 30 minute program on PBS. It is very well done. We heard four individual stories of how poetry had provided impetus at crucial moments. We also saw the overall story of Alabama. Great viewing -- you can see it on demand on PBS Passport under APT programming with the PBS app.
https://aptv.org/apt-news/poetry-unites-alabama/
Wednesday, April 27 at 10:00pm
What poem do you love? That was the question posed by Polish filmmaker Ewa Zadrzynska and Alabama Poet Laurette Jennifer Horne in an essay contest conducted in Alabama early in the pandemic. The response was tremendous and helped Zadrzynska identify the subjects for her film Poetry Unites Alabama which premieres Wednesday, April 27 on Alabama Public Television in recognition of National Poetry Month.
“We received entries from Alabamians of different ages, different backgrounds, who live in different parts of Alabama, but they all share a love for poetry,” said Horne, who headed the jury for the contest. “We selected nine winners, four of which are included in the film.”
Christian Crawford wrote his essay on Ballad of Birmingham, a poem about Black children marching in Birmingham in the 1960s written by Dudley Randall. Rachael Farr reflects on Muscogee Creek writer Joy Harjo’s poem Remember. Walter Givhan looks at There are Things I Tell to No One, by Galway Kinnell. Amber Moore explores the power of Audre Lorde’s A Litany for Survival. Each essayist reads their chosen poem and shares the meaning it has for them.
“Ewa’s film is more than a celebration of poetry. It’s a keen insight into the power of words to move and inspire people of all ages and backgrounds. Much of it is filmed outdoors and reveals the beauty of our state along the way,” says APT programming director Mike McKenzie.
Alabama is the fourth state to be featured in the series Poetry Unites America, following New York, Kansas and Kentucky. Poetry Unites America is a non-profit organization dedicated to uniting people using the harmonizing power of poetry while promoting reading and writing. The Poetry Unites program was developed and produced by Ewa Zadrzynska for the Evens Foundation in Europe. It was inspired by the Favorite Poem project created by the U.S. Poet Laureate, Robert Pinsky. The project is supported by the Alabama Humanities Alliance and Alabama Arts Council media grants to the Capri Community Film Society, Inc., and a grant from the Alabama Power Foundation.
Other members of the jury included Ashley M. Jones, Alabama State Poet Laureate, 2022-2026; Alexus Cumbie, poet, founder of Literary Vibes; Edward Hirsch, Poet and President of the Guggenheim Foundation; Roy Hoffman, journalist and novelist; and filmmaker Zadrzynska.
Find more information on Poetry Unites America
POETRY UNITES ALABAMA ESSAY CONTEST WINNERS
Christian Crawford, essay on Ballad of Birmingham, by Dudley Randall
Debbie Esslinger, essay on Daybreak in Alabama, by Langston Hughes
Rachael Farr, essay on Remember by Joy Harjo
Walter Givhan, essay on There are Things I Tell To No One, by Galway Kinnell
Isabella Jones, essay on Annabel Lee by Edgar Allan Poe
Ramona Hyman, essay on Christ In Alabama, by Langston Hughes
Amber Moore, essay on A Litany For Survival, by Audre Lorde
Kathryn Seawell, essay on Ghost Confederacy by Larry Levis
Jacqueline Allen Trimble, essay on “won’t you celebrate with me” by Lucille Clifton
Wednesday, April 27, 2022
My Season with Dante
Celebrating National Poetry Month
[The following post originally appeared on October 26, 2012. The summer of 2012 was very much enriched by my study of Dante, and I had a great time putting this together with words from Dante's The Divine Comedy and illustrations by William Blake. ~ CK ]
Just as a dolphin having been held captive in some murky inland pond might have an expansion of his senses when released into the warm open gulf, seeing reefs of bright coral, schools of colorful fish, and waves of sea grasses in the ocean-filtered sunlight; so was my plunge into the world of Dante Alighieri this past summer.
I should also note that since I have no proficiency in Italian, I did not experience "pure" Dante. What I listened to was, of course, an English translation. Knowing my experience of Dante may be "once removed," I am still grateful for the skill and the talents of translators who have brought Dante's world to life in my own native language.
Virgil with Dante at Hell-Gate (William Blake) |
In the Garden
When I considered that warning, I thought of some examples of my own well-ordered garden. Personal meditation, or “quiet time” can easily become a habit in which I retreat from the real world. It is easy to imagine a “spirituality” that works within that well-ordered garden of meditation, but will not hold up in the real world. Thus a useful practice such as meditation can become a dangerous place when it becomes isolated and egocentric. It can be that well-ordered garden on the way to Hell.
Another garden for me is poetry. Poetry can be a realm of transcendence, but if it becomes merely an escape, danger is surely not far away. Within the perceived order, structure and safety of the garden, we disarm ourselves and can fall prey to hubris. Well-ordered gardens come in many forms.
Reason and Impulse
Virgil comes to Dante as he is running from the Three Beasts (William Blake) |
There is a section in Inferno near the beginning in Canto V that describes punishment in the afterlife, but can also speak to the heartache that many encounter in this life. Dante describes those in the second circle of Hell as suffering because they subjected their reason to the rule of lust:
then there are cries and wailing and lament,
and there they curse the force of the divine.
I learned that those who undergo this torment
are damned because they sinned within the flesh,
subjecting reason to the rule of lust.
- There is the profound psychological statement on Dante's part when he begins his work saying that he was "in the middle of the journey of our life" when he found himself lost in a dark wood. Carl Jung was one of the earliest to formulate a
psychological concept of midlife transition, stating that the primary goal of the second half of life is to confront death. Perhaps this is another concept that Jung got from Dante. - There is the significance of the classical poet Virgil who was Dante’s wise and noble guide and who explained to Dante that it was Beatrice who summoned him to his aid.
- There are the three blessed women who make Dante's journey possible: Mary the mother of Jesus who set things in motion and directed St. Lucia (associated with sight and vision) to enlist the help of Beatrice in Dante's journey.
- There are the many conversations Dante had with "shades," souls along the way in his journey from Inferno to Paradiso.
- There is much to be said of the city of Florence and the politics of Dante’s time which sheds more light on the poet’s work.
My purpose is not to say all that can be said. I only wish to share my wonder and enthusiasm for the poetic genius of Dante, and to encourage others to discover the poet for themselves.
- The Divine Comedy: Inferno - Purgatory – Paradise, Naxos Audiobooks; Unabridged edition (November 30, 2004) This is the audio version that I found at our public library. Heathcote Williams narrates and Benedict Flynn did the English translation. It is also available for purchase online or I’m sure can be ordered at your preferred bookstore.
- The Figure of Beatrice: a Study in Dante, by Charles Williams, published by Faber and Faber (1953). This is the work I referenced above, and is another one that I found at the library. It is also available in more recent paperback editions.
- Blake's Dante: The Complete Illustrations to The Divine Comedy, by Milton Klonsky. Harmony Books, New York (1980). This is a compilation of illustrations painted by William Blake for an edition of The Divine Comedy that was never published. Many of Blake's paintings are unfinished, but they are still quite fascinating - as you can see by the few that I chose to illustrate this blog post.
- The Open Yale Courses, “Dante in Translation” with Professor Giuseppe Mazzotta which our class viewed is available on You Tube. You can access those lectures at http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLD1450DFDA859F694&feature=plcp .
- The quotations I used from The Divine Comedy are from a translation by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow which I found online at http://dante.ilt.columbia.edu/
comedy/ There are other translations available online as well. A modern translation by A.S. Kline can be downloaded at http://www.poetryintranslation.com/klineasdante.htm - There is also a beautiful and elaborate website, Dante’s World, at http://www.worldofdante.org/
St Peter, St James, Dante and Beatrice with St John the Evangelist (William Blake) |
Monday, April 25, 2022
Monday Music: Sure on this Shining Night (Morten Lauridsen)
Celebrating National Poetry Month
Morten Lauridsen composes some of the most evocative choral music being written today. Continuing with our examples during National Poetry Month of poetry and music, this week's post is a superb joining of the two. Lauridsen provides a choral music setting for James Agee's poem, "Sure on this Shining Night." It is performed in this video by the University of Wyoming Collegiate Chorale.
Of star-made shadows round
Kindness must watch for me
This side the ground.
All is healed, all is health
High summer holds the earth,
Hearts all whole.
I weep for wonder
Wandr’ing far alone
Of shadows on the stars.
Saturday, April 23, 2022
Saturday Haiku: War-torn
bombed-out apartment buildings
pigeons still gather
_______________________
Photo credit: Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters
"Charred cars and a heavily damaged apartment building in Mariupol, Ukraine, which was in increasingly dire straits." (New York Times)
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Friday, April 22, 2022
Wednesday, April 20, 2022
On Transcendence (and Being Discrete)
Celebrating National Poetry Month
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Monday, April 18, 2022
Monday Music: I Have Loved Flowers That Fade (Gerald Finzi)
April is National Poetry Month and during the month of April, Monday Music is featuring musical settings for works of poetry. Robert Bridges was a practicing physician in London as well as a poet. He was England's poet laureate from 1913 until his death in 1930. His poetry inspired many composers of his day. Choral composer Gerald Finzi wrote musical settings of "Seven Poems by Robert Bridges." "I Have Loved Flowers That Fade" is one of those poems.
I Have Loved Flowers That Fade
by Robert Bridges
I have loved flowers that fade,
Within whose magic tents
Rich hues have marriage made
With sweet unmemoried scents:
honeymoon delight–
A joy of love at sight,
That ages in an hour–
My song be like a flower!
I have loved airs that die
Before their charm is writ
Along a liquid sky
Trembling to welcome it.
Notes, that with pulse of fire
Proclaim the spirit’s desire,
Then die, and are nowhere–
My song be like an air!
Die, song, die like a breath,
And wither as a bloom;
Fear not a flowery death,
Dread not an airy tomb!
Fly with delight, fly hence!
’Twas thine love’s tender sense
To feast; now on thy bier
Beauty shall shed a tear.