National Library Week Verse—National Poetry Month 2020
April 21, 2020
What
happens when National Poetry Month
and National Library Week collide? Poetry about libraries, librarians,
and readers, of course. Most libraries are physically closed during the Coronavirus
lock down but are doing valiant
service finding ways to continue to serve
their users many of whom are
going bonkers and craving books like
a crack head in withdrawal.
Here
is a sample of the verse libraries inspire.
Walt Whitman.
|
You
knew that good old Walt Whitman who
often felt the sting of censorship and the condemnation of the gate
keepers to approved American culture
would have something to say.
Shut Not Your Doors to Me Proud Libraries
Shut not
your doors to me, proud libraries,
For that which was lacking among you all, yet needed most, I bring;
A book I have made for your dear sake, O soldiers,
And for you, O soul of man, and you, love of comrades;
The words of my book nothing, the life of it everything;
A book separate, not link’d with the rest, nor felt by the intellect;
But you will feel every word, O Libertad! arm’d Libertad!
It shall pass by the intellect to swim the sea, the air,
With joy with you, O soul of man.
For that which was lacking among you all, yet needed most, I bring;
A book I have made for your dear sake, O soldiers,
And for you, O soul of man, and you, love of comrades;
The words of my book nothing, the life of it everything;
A book separate, not link’d with the rest, nor felt by the intellect;
But you will feel every word, O Libertad! arm’d Libertad!
It shall pass by the intellect to swim the sea, the air,
With joy with you, O soul of man.
—Walt Whitman
Nikki Geovanni.
|
Nikki Geovanni is one of the
most celebrated poets her generation who has popped up regularly
in Poetry Month entries here. She has been associated with the Female Beats, and both Women’s Liberation and Black empowerment.
My First Memory (of Librarians)
This is my first
memory:
A big room with
heavy wooden tables that sat on a creaky
wood floor
A line of green
shades—bankers’ lights—down the center
Heavy oak chairs
that were too low or maybe I was simply
too short
For me to sit in and read
So my first book
was always big
In the foyer up
four steps a semi-circle desk presided
To the left side
the card catalogue
On the right
newspapers draped over what looked like
a quilt rack
Magazines face
out from the wall
The welcoming
smile of my librarian
The anticipation
in my heart
All those
books—another world—just waiting
At my
fingertips.
—Nikki
Geovanni
Alberto Rios.
|
Alberto Rios was the first Arizona Poet Laureate of and the author of many poetry
collections, including A Small Story about the Sky in 2015.
In 1981, he received the Walt Whitman Award for his collection Whispering
to Fool the Wind and he served as a Chancellor of the Academy of
American Poets from 2014 to 2020.
Don’t Go Into
the Library
The library is
dangerous—
Don’t go in. If
you do
You know what
will happen.
It’s like a pet
store or a bakery—
Every single
time you’ll come out of there
Holding
something in your arms.
Those novels
with their big eyes.
And those
no-nonsense, all muscle
Greyhounds and
Dobermans,
All non-fiction
and business,
Cuddly when
they’re young,
But then the
first page is turned.
The doughnut
scent of it all, knowledge
The aroma of
coffee being made
In all those
books, something for everyone,
The deli
offerings of civilization itself.
The library is
the book of books,
Its concrete and
wood and glass covers
Keeping within
them the very big,
Very long story
of everything.
The library is
dangerous, full
Of answers. If
you go inside,
You may not come
out
The same person
who went in.
—Alberto Rios
Mark Strand.
|
Mark Strand was awarded the
Academy of American Poets Fellowship
in 1979 and the Wallace Stevens Award
in 2004. He served on Academy of American Poets Board of Chancellors from 1995 to 2000.
Eating Poetry
Ink runs from
the corners of my mouth.
There is no
happiness like mine.
I have been
eating poetry.
The librarian
does not believe what she sees.
Her eyes are sad
and she walks
with her hands in her dress.
The poems are
gone.
The light is
dim.
The dogs are on
the basement stairs and coming up.
Their eyeballs
roll,
their blond legs
burn like brush.
The poor
librarian begins to stamp her feet and weep.
She does not
understand.
When I get on my
knees and lick her hand,
she screams.
I am a new man.
I snarl at her
and bark.
I romp with joy
in the bookish dark.
—Mark Strand
The Janitor as Poet from a 2004 newspaper clipping.
|
Finally
one from the Old Man when he was not
so old back in 2006 when post 9/11 hysteria and the Gulf War coughed up the so-called
Patriot Act, the most dangerous
assault on American civil liberties since the Alien and Sedition
Acts. Everyone was afraid to raise a peep in protest. When the American Library Association learned
that their members could be served
secret warrants for the usage records
of their users and could be fined and imprisoned as national
security threats themselves if they said anything about the warrant or search, they defiantly declared that they would not cooperate or violate their users’ privacy. The Feds ranted and raved, issued dire threats,
and launched a secret disinformation
plan to smear librarians as
traitors. The librarians did not blink.
They refused to comply with secret warrants. As far as I know, none were ever successfully prosecuted. Although it was likely that the NSA or other spook organization got what they wanted by hacking library computer
records, the stand of the Librarians was truly heroic. I was so impressed, I committed poetry.
Librarians at the Breach
2006
Who
would have thought it?
That
prim spinster,
severe hair in a bun pincushion
for a slanting pencil,
erect index finger epoxied
to permanently pursed lips
sssshing to the recalcitrant
in a thousand cartoons.
That
iron gray matron
of the Cheyenne Carnegie Public Library
hovering date stamp in hand
taunting my nightmares
demanding my two cents a day
for the Teddy Roosevelt biography
days AWOL under a corner of the davenport.
That
pale, tweedy nebbish of the stacks,
guardian of arcane tomes,
leather books with marbled edges
unmolested for decades
but ever ready for his urgent call.
That
smiling story lady
perched on her high stool
rapt, worshipful and fidgety
acolytes at her feet
sing-songing the words
of dreams upon the pages.
Who
would have thought it?
That
these unlikely heroes
would be called to unsheathe
Excalibur from stone
and set upon a Quest of Virtue,
would need to set once more
Liberty’s Red Cap upon the pole
and storm again the Bastille,
would resurrect the half-forgotten
promises
of Jefferson, Madison, Adams et. al.
against aspiring despots.
Who
would have thought it, indeed?
—Patrick Murfin
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