Tuesday, April 29, 2025

The Old Man’s I Can Relate to That Verses—National Poetry Month 2025

 

These two poems are personal.  Sort of.  They were not written to or about me and the poets presumably are totally unaware of my existence on the planet.  But each provided an ah-ha moment of personal recognition for me as a person of advancing age in increasing decrepitude.

 

Sydney Lea.

Sydney Lea is a poet, novelist, essayist, editor, and professor, and was the Poet Laureate of Vermont from 2011 to ‘15.  His most recent book is The Exquisite Triumph of Wormboy, a graphic mock-epic poem in collaboration with former Vermont Cartoonist Laureate James Kochalka—how utterly Vermont to have a Cartoonist Laureate.   His thirteenth collection of poetry, Here was published 2019.  He founded New England Review in 1977 and edited it till 1989. His work has appeared in literary journals and magazines including The New Yorker, The Atlantic, The New Republic, The New York Times, Sports Illustrated, and Virginia Quarterly Review.  Lea has taught for the Master of Arts in Liberal Studies program at Dartmouth College, and at Yale University, Wesleyan University, Vermont College, Middlebury College, Franklin University Switzerland, and the National Hungarian University


A cabin and the Montana night sky.

Reckoning struck me first because it opens in the state of my birth under the vast starry sky of the West that was such a part of my childhood and then because it shifts to the lights of a big city—Gotham for him, the Windy City for me.  I have no son, but daughters, I hear their voices thirty years ago—the bored indifference to those same Montana mountains and eagerness to find a mall—any mall—in the small towns among the pine smells.  The children of those two eldest daughters are grown now and one has a laughing toddler of his own.  My third and youngest lives with us now with her almost five year old daughter.  I wonder if Matilda will walk by the hand with me to find the elf door in a rotting tree in a remnant wood or a flop-eared rabbit in a cage.  I, too, feel some sort of transgenerational connection.

Reckoning

Let us not take it for granted that life exists more fully in what is commonly thought big than in what is commonly thought small.

         —Virginia Woolf, The Common Reader

 

Once, on the steps of a cabin in wild Montana,

just before dawn I stood stunned

by that delirium of stars.

I’ve looked from a friend’s apartment in New York

at nine o’clock in the evening,

likewise astounded by countless windows.

Light everywhere. Light everywhere. And dark.

 

Coleridge opined that the sublime

can make us feel like nothing.

I’m sure I’d have known as much without him.

The older I become the less I aim

at epic self-expression.

It’s best, I think, as I didn’t always,

to keep my counsel in face of sights and themes

 

that lie beyond my ken, right where they’ve lain

lifelong, though once ambition

obscured all that. But I check myself:

I’m no more nothing, in fact, than anybody.

My memory feels boundless,

and if it fetches no sublime,

still moments may be fashioned into stories.

 

As randomly as I might choose a star

or a single light from some high-rise,

I summon a time—or it summons me—

when I and my son, then just three years old,

walked through a patch of woods

to spy on a hidden beaver pond.

I longed for this adventure to unfold

 

exactly as it did. The wind came right,

and just enough of day

remained for both of us to see

three beavers swimming, a mere five feet from where

we crouched in pond-side reeds.

Clear as judgment in my mind,

the rasp of roost-bound crows, thick August air,

 

that tannic orange of the cruising rodents’ teeth.

My son appeared transported

as we left the place by early starlight.

“How was it?” asked his mother back at home.

“Oh, Mom! You should have seen!

There were some bugs in the water! They all were swimming!

All of them were swimming around and around!”

 

In my twenties then, I didn’t know

how not to feel let down.

I know some things today, that is,

that compensate for slackened aspiration.

That child is forty-seven,

his children much older than he was then.

I study my boy. I’m lost in speculation:

 

I resembled him, I hope, in intending kindness.

In my case, though, vague zeal

distracted my heart and mind and soul.

He’s taking his daughter to ski this afternoon.

They’ll command an epic view,

yet it may be only the shape of a mogul

or cloud that, come the evening, she’ll retain.

 

And my son? He has perhaps already traveled

like me to where all types of light are local.

 

Sydney Lea

The next poem was shared just a few years ago on Facebook by my best friend from high school, Jonathan Ben Gordon, now a retired Cantor.  

  

                             Camisha L. Jones.

Camisha L. Jones is the author of the chapbook Flare published by Finishing Line Press in 2017. She received a 2017 Spoken Word Immersion Fellowship from the Loft Literary Center.  She served as the managing director at Split This Rock, a national nonprofit that cultivates, teaches, and celebrates poetry that bears witness to injustice and provokes social change.  According to the Deaf Poets Society blog Jones “lives with fibromyalgia, Ménière’s Disease, and an adamant commitment to keep her writing life from scorching on the back burner.”  She lives in Herndon, Virginia.

At first glance it would seem that I would not have much in common with a young deaf Black poet.  Certainly I am not deaf but I am hard of hearing due to prolonged exposure to industrial noise and ear-bleeding rock and roll as a young man.  Before I finally got hearing aids I had plenty of those I’m-sorry-I-can’t-hear-you moments, especially when I clerked overnight at a gas station/convenience store  to exasperated customers whose lottery and cigarette requests I could not quite make out.  Equally annoyed was my wife who got tired of repeating herself over and over.  Things are mostly better now if I “have my ears in.”  But why the hell do they whisper on all of my favorite TV dramas?  And don’t get me started on garbled phone calls.  

 

                                                "Sorry, I can't hear you."

Disclosure

I’m sorry, could you repeat that. I’m hard of hearing.

To the cashier

To the receptionist

To the insistent man asking directions on the street

I’m sorry, I’m hard of hearing. Could you repeat that?

At the business meeting

In the writing workshop

On the phone to make a doctor’s appointment

I’m-sorry-I’m-sorry-I’m-so-sorry-I’m-hard-for-the-hearing

Repeat.

           Repeat.

Hello, my name is Sorry

To full rooms of strangers

I’m hard to hear

I vomit apologies everywhere

They fly on bat wings

towards whatever sound beckons

I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I am so, so sorry

           and repeating

                       and not hearing

Dear (again)

I regret to inform you

I       am

here

 

Camisha L. Jones

Monday, April 28, 2025

A Short Story Maven and Life Long Activist Turned Her Hand in Verse—National Poetry Month 2025

 

Grace Paley in her middle years--a writer and an activist.

Grace Paley authored three acclaimed collections of short stories, which were compiled in the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award finalist The Collected Stories in 1994. Her stories home in on the everyday conflicts and heartbreaks of city life, informed by her childhood in the Bronx.

Beyond her work as an author and university professor, Paley was a feminist and anti-war activist, who described herself as a “somewhat combative pacifist and cooperative anarchist.” But she was also a poet who in her later years was selected as Poet Laureate of Vermont in 2003.

She was born Grace Goodside on December 11, 1922, in the Bronx, to Jewish parents, Isaac Goodside and the former Manya Ridnyik, immigrants from Ukraine, and socialists.  It was a secular family with her father refusing to attend temple services.  She later described herself as a bigger believer in the Jewish diaspora than in Jewish nationhood—“I was never a Zionist.”

The youngest of three children by several years she reveled in the intellectual debates around the family table  and she was a member of the Falcons, a socialist youth group.  An independent spirit she dropped out of high school at 16.  She attended Hunter College in 1938-’39 and later briefly studied poetry with W. H. Auden at the New School, when she was 17.  

                                                    Grace Goodside at 17 by her future husband Jess Paley.

She married film cameraman, Jess Paley, when she was 19 in 1942.  For the next several years writing to a back seat to raising her two children Nora and Danny and her commitment to activism in the early second wave feminist movement and pacifist causes. 

What writing she did do collected more rejection slips than acceptances. It was not until 1959 that Doubleday published her first short story collection, The Little Disturbances of Man which included several tales now considered classics.  Two subsequent collections published at lengthy intervals, Enormous Changes at the Last Minute in 1979 and Later the Same Day in 1985 continued with characters from the first book but with expanded social justice vision and inclusion of more Black and lesbian characters.

                                                                Paley with daughter Nora in Greenwich Village in 1954,

Paley also published several volumes of poetry including Leaning Forward  in 1985,  New and Collected Poems in 1992, and Begin Again: Collected Poems in 2001 which assembled work from throughout her life.  

Meanwhile Paley was also heavily involved in activism. Paley was known for pacifism and for political activism. The FBI categorized her as a Communist and kept a file on her for thirty years. Beginning in the 1950s, Paley joined friends in protesting nuclear proliferation and American militarization. She also worked with the American Friends Service Committee to establish neighborhood peace groups helping found the Greenwich Village Peace Center in 1961. She met her second husband, Robert Nichols, through the anti-Vietnam War peace movement.

With the escalation of the Vietnam War, Paley joined the War Resisters League.  She was arrested on a number of occasions, including spending a week in the Womens House of Detention in Greenwich Village.  In 1968, she signed the Writers and Editors War Tax Protest pledge, vowing to refuse tax payments in protest against the War. In 1969 she accompanied a peace mission to Hanoi to negotiate the release of prisoners of war.  She served as a delegate to the 1973 World Peace Conference in Moscow.  Paley and was arrested in 1978 as one of the White House Eleven for unfurling an anti-nuclear banner that read “No Nuclear Weapons—No Nuclear Power—USA and USSR” on the White House lawn. In the 1980s Paley supported efforts to improve human rights and resist U.S. military intervention in Central America and she continued to speak out in her final years against the Iraq War.

                                                            Paley under arrest again on the steps of the Capitol.  

Among Paley’s many other causes was abortion rights, part of her broader feminist work. She organized one of the first abortion speak-outs in the 1960s after having an abortion herself in the 1950s and then struggling to obtain a second one a few years later.

Despite her lack of any degree Paley also had an academic career.  She began taught writing at Sarah Lawrence College from 1966 to 1989 and helped to found the Teachers & Writers Collaborative in New York in the late 1960s.  Later she served on the faculty at City College and taught courses at Columbia University. She also taught at Syracuse University and served as vice president of the PEN American Center, an organization she had worked to diversify in the 1980s.

Paley’s honors included a Guggenheim Fellowship for Fiction, the Edith Wharton Award Certification of Merit, an OHenry Award in 1969 for her story Distance. She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1980 and went on to receive the Rea Award for the Short Story, the Vermont Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts, the PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in Short Fiction, and the Jewish Cultural Achievement Award. She received an honorary degree from Dartmouth University.

She also received the Robert Creeley Award in 2004, the Fitzgerald Award for Achievement in American Literature, and at Dartmouth’s annual Social Justice Awards ceremony in 2006 the Lester B. Granger ‘18 Award for Lifetime Achievement.

The Grace Paley Prize, a literary award, is now presented by the Association of Writers & Writing Programs in her honor.

Paley was a decades-long resident of West 11th Street in Greenwich Village, where she raised her children. After an amicable divorce from Jess Paley she began spending summers in Thetford, Vermont, with her second husband Robert Nichols, in the 1970s and couple settled there permanently in the early ‘90s.

 

Paley in maturity surrounded by young admirers.

Paley died at the age of 84 on August 27, 2007 in her adopted Vermont home town breast cancer.  

Like her short stories, much of Paley’s poetry settled on the experiences of ordinary urban Jewish women.  As one editor who worked with her wrote, “Her characters are people who smell of onions, yell at each other, mourn in darkened kitchens.”  She explained that she wrote what she knew—“I couldn’t help the fact that I had not gone to war, and I had not done the male things. I had lived a woman’s life and that’s what I wrote about.”

In the Bus

 

Somewhere between Greenfield and Holyoke

snow became rain

and a child passed through me

as a person moves through mist

as the moon moves through

a dense cloud at night

as though I were cloud or mist

a child passed through me

 

On the highway that lies

across miles of stubble

and tobacco barns our bus speeding

speeding disordered the slanty rain

and a girl with no name      naked

wearing the last nakedness of

childhood breathed in me

                   once    no

                   once    two breaths

a sigh    she whispered    Hey you

begin again

                      Again?

again     again    you'll see

it's easy    begin again    long ago

 

—Grace Paley


In later life her poems reflected her relentless activism like this work from Long Walks and Intimate Talks by Grace Paley and Vera B. Williams from 1991 about a peace mission to Nicaragua.    

The Dance in Jinotega

In Jinotega women greeted us

with thousands of flowers roses

it was hard to tell the petals

on our faces and arms falling

 

then embraces and the Spanish language

which is a little like a descent of

petals pink and orange

 

Suddenly out of the hallway our

gathering place AMNLAE the

Asociación de Mujeres women

came running seat yourselves dear

guests from the north we announce

a play a dance a play the women

their faces mountain river Indian

European Spanish dark-haired

women

 

dance in gray-green

fatigues they dance the Contra who

circles the village waiting

for the young teacher the health worker

(these are the strategies) the farmer

in the high village walks out into the

morning toward the front which is a

circle of terror

 

they dance

the work of women and men they dance

the plowing of the fields they kneel

to the harrowing with the machetes they

dance the sowing of seed (which is always

a dance) and the ripening of corn the

flowers of grain they dance the harvest

they raise their machetes for

the harvest the machetes are high

but no!

 

out of the hallway in green and gray

come those who dance the stealth

of the Contra cruelly they

dance the ambush the slaughter of

the farmer they are the death dancers

who found the schoolteacher they caught

the boy who dancing brought seeds in

his hat all the way from Matagalpa they

dance the death of the mother the

father the rape of the daughter they

dance the child murdered the seeds

spilled and trampled they dance

sorrow sorrow

 

they dance the

search for the Contra and the defeat

they dance a comic dance they make a

joke of the puppetry of the Contra of

Uncle Sam who is the handler of puppets

they dance rage and revenge they place

the dead child (the real sleeping baby)

on two chairs which is the bier for

the little actor they dance prayer

bereavement sorrow they mourn

 

Is there applause for such theater?

 

Silence then come let us dance

together now you know the usual

dance of couples Spanish or North

American let us dance in twos and

threes let us make little circles let us

dance as though at a festival or in peace-

time together and alone whirling stamping

our feet bowing to one another

 

the children

gather petals from the floor to throw

at our knees we dance the children

too banging into us into each other and

one small boy dances alone pulling

at our skirts wait he screams stop!

he tugs at the strap of our camera Stop!

stop dancing I’m Carlos take a picture

of me No! Now! Right now! because

soon Look! See Pepe! even tomorrow

I could be dead like him

 

the music

catches its breath the music

jumping in the guitar and phonograph holds

still and waits no no we say Carlos

not you we put our fingers on his little

shoulder we touch his hair but one of

us is afraid for god’s sake take his

picture so we lift him up we photo-

graph him we pass him from one to

another we photograph him again and

again with each of us crying or

laughing with him in our arms

we dance

 

—Grace Paley