Friday
Dec. 27, 2002
1989
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Poem: "1989," by Ron Koertge from Geography of the Forehead (University of Arkansas Press).
1989
Because AIDS was slaughtering people left and right,
I went to a lot of memorial services that year.
There were so many, I'd pencil them in between
a movie or a sale at Macy's. The other thing that
made them tolerable was the funny stories people
got up and told about the deceased: the time he
hurled a mushroom fritata across a crowded room,
those green huraches he refused to throw away,
the joke about the flight attendant and the banana
that cracked him up every time.
But this funeral was for a blind friend of my wife's
who'd merely died. And the interesting thing
about it was the guide dogs; with all the harness
and the sniffing around, the vestibule of the church
looked like the starting line of the Iditarod. But
nobody got up to talk. We just sat there,
and the pastor read the King James version. Then he
said someday we would see Robert and he us.
Throughout the service, the dogs slumped beside their
masters. But when the soloist stood and launched
into a screechy rendition of "Abide With Me," they sank
into the carpet. A few put their paws over their ears.
Someone whispered to one of the blind guys; he told
another, and the laughter started to spread. People
in the back looked around, startled and embarrassed,
until they spotted all those chunky Labradors
flattened out like animals in a cartoon about
steamrollers. Then they started, too.
That was more like it. That was what I was used to-
a roomful of people laughing and crying, taking off
their sunglasses to blot their inconsolable eyes.
It's the birthday of novelist Wilfrid Sheed, born in London, England (1930). His books include The Hack (1963), Office Politics (1966), and The Boys of Winter (1987).
It's the birthday of author Louis Bromfield, born in Mansfield, Ohio (1896). He wrote Early Autumn (1926), Out of the Earth (1950) and From My Experience: The Pleasures and Miseries of Life on a Farm (1955).
It's the birthday of novelist and playwright Zona Gale, born in Portage, Wisconsin (1874). She wrote over thirty novels, plays, and collections in her lifetime, but she is probably best known for the novel-turned-play Miss Lulu Bett, which won the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1921. She was fixated upon her small hometown of Portage, Wisconsin. Many of her stories depict small-town life, and they all are based on that town, or at least her transformed perception of that town. She said, "Life is something more than that which we believe it to be."
It's the birthday of poet and essayist Charles
Olson, born in Worcester, Massachusetts (1910). He developed a unique,
open-form poetic style that he called "projective verse," and he published
an influential manifesto of the same name in 1950. He began to write poetry
himself in the late 1940s, and produced his first collection, In Cold Hell,
in Thicket in 1953, which included his most famous poem, "The Kingfishers,"
all written in his striking projective verse. Charles stood at six feet eight
inches tall -- one of the tallest poets in American literature."But that
which matters, that which insists, that which will last, that! o my people,
where shall you find it, how, where, where shall you listen when all is become
billboards, when, all, even silence, is spray-gunned?"
Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.®