. . . Think of the wren
and how little flesh is needed to make a song.
from Why Regret?, Galway Kinnell
The Grandson and I are playing with Legos on the back porch. Above the constant chitter of the goldfinch kaffeeklatsch shines a sudden clear bright whistle. “Listen, Saul. That’s a Carolina Wren.”
After a few minutes of silent cogitation, a few more minutes of Lego cars brmmm-brmming across the planks, we hear the bird again. Saul remarks, “He’s saying Senner-pede, Senner-pede.”
“You mean centipede, the little crawly thing with a hundred legs?”
“No, Senner-pede.” Brmm, brmm. “I made that up.”
And the moral of the story: Encountering the logic of the philosopher, even if only six years old, it’s probably best to listen.
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The Carolina Wren is one of my favorites, feisty little troglodyte whose voice is 30 decibels too big for his 30 grams of fluff. Listen to enough wren song and you discover the birds can be quite individual. Scolds, chatters, and so many variations on that 2- or 3- or 4-note whistle: just when you think you know them all someone new moves into the neighborhood.
Fred Chappell is one of my other favorites. He’s one of the writers that inspired me about twenty years ago to rediscover the dark forest of Poetry. I carried a typescript copy of his poem Forever Mountain around in my wallet until it wore through and I’d about memorized it. As I sort through the piles on my shelves I think it’s safe to say I’ve bought every one of his books. The epigrams, the complex forms, the backsass, the cat poems . . .
. . . and just when you think you know his song someone new moves into the neighborhood. At this year’s Sam Ragan Poetry Festival Fred revealed to us that he’s now writing fables, poems that tell a story with a moral. His voice just keeps getting bigger and bigger. And you can bet that a Fred Chappell fable is going to stretch your intellect and then bite you on the ass.
Feisty, yes; troglodyte, no.
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Fox and Bust by Fred Chappell; read at Sam Ragan Poetry Festival,
Weymouth Center for the Arts and Humanities in Southern Pines, NC, on March 21, 2105
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Every year the North Carolina Poetry Society sponsors the Sam Ragan Poetry Festival, named for our state’s third and longest-serving Poet Laureate. Sam was succeeded by Fred Chappell as our fourth Poet Laureate, illuminating that post from 1997-2002. In 2004 Fred collaborated with philanthropist and poet Marie Gilbert, assisted by William Jackson Blackley and a volunteer board, to create the Gilbert-Chappell Distinguished Poet Series. Each year since then three notable NC poets have been selected to serve as mentors, each to 3 or 4 students middle school to adult, to create and critique a body of poems, followed by public readings in libraries throughout the state. Fred is still a guiding light for this endeavor, which celebrated its tenth anniversary at this year’s Sam Ragan Poetry Festival in Southern Pines on March 21, 2015.
The photos and poems from this and the five preceding GriffinPoetry posts commemorate that event.
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Weymouth Woods
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Gosh Bill what a wonderful experience. All those poets; all those lovers of poetry and interesting people, all in one room. We follow the poets and their words from afar much as we “follow” our son on the AT; with excitement, reverence, longing and hope.
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It makes such sense that Fred Chappell would be writing fables after those sassy cat poems. He has a sly humor, as witnessed by Fox. Also, thank you, Bill, for these beautiful photos of Sam Reagan Day. Again I am so sorry to have missed it.
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Thanks, Debra – I hope it won’t be too long before we see Fred at NCPS again.
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Bill, your photos and editing provide such a service for those of us who can’t attend the reat poetry programs in our state I am deeply grateful!
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What wonderful sharings! Bill, you just bless us all!
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This is the actual post I was replying to in my last comment! When I searched for “Sam Ragan” to start off my online reading of his work and life I got a link which placed several of your posts together. I just love your expressiveness here–beautiful as poetry; it is poetry!
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