Poetry is taking life by the throat.

— Robert Frost

“We Love Roller Girl.”

Celebrate National Poetry Month!  Head on over to Stanley Anne Zane Latham’s blog, “Surfacing Stanley,” for some amazing work.  And be sure to visit my favorite piece of hers, “Roller Girl.”

http://surfacingstanley.tumblr.com/poetry

“Play it again, Sam.”

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A Bridge Too Far …

Shown below is the pedestrian bridge over Route 1 in Fredericksburg, Virginia, linking Mary Washington College’s main campus with … a student apartment complex now?  There are those of us who remember when Giant Supermarket occupied that space, along with a huge crafts store that was popular with the girls, and a Domino’s Pizza managed by none other than my great old friend and alumnus, Sanjeev Malhotra.

You know what makes a guy feel old?  Seeing photos of his alma mater and noting the bridge and buildings that he cannot recognize because they have been erected in his absence.  Thank you, Janet Walbroehl Winston and Russell Morgan, for adding to my insecurities by sharing these pictures.

The second photo down is of Virginia Hall, which housed Freshmen women when I attended school.   I and my friend Jeff once went Christmas caroling there … in April.  “Milwaukee’s Best” beer was a contributing factor in our holiday spirit, which was lively and well intentioned, if not timely.  If that cheap beverage was truly Milwaukee’s best, I shudder to think of what the city’s worst might have tasted like.  Hell, even its average might have been poison.

The third photo down is of Trinkle Hall.  It is here where I took Philosophy 101 with Dr. Cynthia M. Grund, an immeasurably talented educator who often employed science fiction films and books as a starting point for discussing philosophical concepts.  I first read Philip K. Dick’s “Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep” under Dr. Grund’s guidance, and watched and first gained a genuine understanding of Ridley Scott’s “Blade Runner.”  The class was pure fun, enhanced by a wonderfully creative educational approach — it was one of my favorites.

Dammit … now I am hungry for Domino’s Pizza.

 

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The bridge over Route 1.

 

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Virginia Hall.

 

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Trinkle Hall.

 

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Ball Hall.

 

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Chandler Hall with Virginia Hall at right?

 

 

When a pretty girl meets you for coffee …

… and then loans you her werewolf novels?

That’s … that’s pretty much nerd cocaine right there.

“Those who have stolen into olive groves to sing of an execution at noon.”

Celebrate National Poetry Month — here is “NWAR,” the latest piece my great and talented friend, Dennis Villelmi.

http://dentatus1976.wordpress.com/2014/04/21/nwar/

I love the title of Dennis’ blog, which I think is quite artfully crafted — “a death’s head in green light.”  I am a major fan of both “Silence of the Lambs” and “Green Lantern” comics (I am just that weird), and it makes me think of a mind boggling mashup.  Buffalo Bill somehow gets a hold of a power ring … Clarice Starling must team up with Hal Jordan, John Stewart and Guy gardner in order to stop him.  Are you listening out there, DC Comics?

“No.”

Had a list of considered titles for the sequel to “The Dogs Don’t Bark In Brooklyn Any More;” ran them past my Girl Friday.

Her response?

“No.  No.  No.  NO.”

So, in other words, my early creative efforts have met with hearty approbation.

You can’t say she isn’t concise.

Horror comics, a Samurai death poem, and the origin of “Mayakovsky.”

Celebrate National Poetry Month — here’s is Ota Dokan’s famous farewell, written while he died from an assassin’s knife.

 

“Had I not now that I was dead already

I would have mourned

the loss

of my life.”

 

I came across this piece when I was 20 years old and reading Dark Horse Comics’ outstanding “Aliens: Hive” limited series, written by Jerry Prosser and illustrated by Kelley Jones.  (Yes, there are people out there who are nerdy enough to learn poetry from comic books.)  “Hive,” to this day, remains one of the most enjoyable science fiction stories I’ve ever read.  Prosser’s script and characters were amazing, and Jones’ art was beautiful; both men exemplified what two talented creators could accomplish with the under-recognized medium.

Most of my online friends know that “Mayakovsky” is a pseudonym I employ when writing movie reviews and such.  This story’s protagonist is from whom I took the name — not the famous poet.  Like I said … NERDY.

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Auden on Shakespeare

Well, who in his own back yard 
Has not opened his heart to the smiling
Secret he cannot quote?
Which goes to show that the Bard
was sober when he wrote
That this world of fact we love
Is unsubstantial stuff:
All the rest is silence
On the other side of the wall;
And the silence ripeness,
And the ripeness all.

—W. H. Auden, from the preface of The Sea and the Mirror, ed. Arthur Kirsch (Princeton University Press, 2003

“She drained me like a fevered moon.”

Celebrate National Poetry Month — here is “Fletcher McGee,” from Edgar Lee Masters’ “Spoon River Anthology.”

Below it are two photos of Mary Washington College’s outdoor amphitheater.  (Alum Janet Walbroehl Winston took the photos; Russell Morgan is pictured.)  Many, many moons ago, I was cast in an outdoor production of “Spoon River” as a Freshman.  “Fletcher McGee” was one of the roles I portrayed.  I was not Laurence Olivier.  After our first performance, one classmate advised me, “Stop overacting.”  You kinda don’t get much more candid than that, or concise.

Oh, well.  I still had fun.  I have wonderful memories of early Autumn evenings, eating cafeteria cheeseburgers and fish sandwiches, wearing vintage costumes and rehearsing lines with the other 19-year-old kids.  And that amphitheater was a beautiful place among those tall, overarching Fall trees, even if it was in a state of disrepair even then.

After I die, if I wind up speaking like the ghosts in Masters’ “Spoon River,” maybe that’ll be the place I will choose to haunt.

“Fletcher McGee”

She took my strength by minutes,
She took my life by hours,
She drained me like a fevered moon
That saps the spinning world.
The days went by like shadows,
The minutes wheeled like stars.
She took the pity from my heart,
And made it into smiles.
She was a hunk of sculptor's clay,
My secret thoughts were fingers:
They flew behind her pensive brow
And lined it deep with pain.
They set the lips, and sagged the cheeks,
And drooped the eye with sorrow.
My soul had entered in the clay,
Fighting like seven devils.
It was not mine, it was not hers;
She held it, but its struggles
Modeled a face she hated,
And a face I feared to see.
I beat the windows, shook the bolts.
I hid me in a corner
And then she died and haunted me,
And hunted me for life.

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