April is National Poetry Month in the USA, and I begin the month with Walt Whitman’s famous phrase and will attempt to duplicate the joyous urgency of his call to celebration. That means I am going to try to post just a little more frequently in April.
Poetry month began this year with a wonderful act of creative largesse on the part of a friend who sent me a poem…dedicated to me. Receiving a gift like this one is humbling; and it has been quite a long time since anyone’s written a piece for me. David Dunn, to whom my collection Water-Rites is dedicated, wrote a few poems for me or inspired (indirectly or directly) by our friendship or my family and surroundings. But he died over a decade ago, and since then I suppose I have had to learn to celebrate myself.
Not that this is a bad thing–celebrating the self–but for some of us it presents certain cultural or psychological obstacles. In this, Whitman has been an important teacher for me. As a great observer, loafer, lover of the world and all its beings, he was able to include himself among the beloved. My background, Protestant, agrarian, modest, surrounded by the biblical entreaty to remain always humble before God, combined with a natural shyness, means that I have had trouble admitting of self-celebration in any form and under any circumstances. I don’t take praise comfortably. The left hand shouldn’t know what the right hand is doing.
However, Whitman seems contented in his skin and in his world and follows a different parable as model: he does not hide his light under a bushel.
Furthermore, his passion admits of compassion and of aesthetic appreciation for all of the “Kosmos.” Each breath, scent, texture, color, hue, person, idea, object, sentient or non-, living or inert or dead long-past or recently, religious or scientific or imagined comes to life in language through line, syntax, lists, descriptions, words. I think there is a hint of zen-like acceptance in Whitman’s most lasting poetry, the vulnerable willingness to accept all that we experience and to do so non-judgmentally.
Thank you, Beejay, for the poem. I feel inspired anew. And as I celebrate all poets and the valuable, irreplaceable, gorgeous, ancient art of poetry this month, I shall endeavor to embark upon the celebration of myself (davening to ol’ Walt with humble pleasure). Therefore, a reminder:
My book Water-Rites is still in print, and Brick Road Poetry Press sells it (as does Amazon.com, where poetry-lovers can purchase the book in e-book form for Kindle). Dawn Leas reviews it at Poets Quarterly this month. Click for the link here!
May April be full of revelations in the form of poems for you.
Great post. Great beard.
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Thanks. I can’t take credit for the beard…
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Wonderful post, Ann, and look forward to the poems. Oh, I, too, am concentrating less on whether the right hand knows what the left is doing, and I like the freedom of it.
Karen
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Nice post, Ann…. but I was disappointed that you did not include the poem your friend wrote! it would be lovely to read it and be able to celebrate you along with yourself…. cheers to poetry and self-celebration, simply the fact that we are still waking up each morning and able to hear a bird or two sing can be enough to feel glad sometimes. Happy spring, Leigh
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I will post it today, if I get a chance! I think I have a photo to accompany it…
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The poem is now up under “Visionaries.” Beejay kindly permitted me to blog-publish it!
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Okay, I will take a look!
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