If comedic-philosophical-absurdist-hip-hop-opera poetry is your thing, you’re going to dig DJ Spinoza. I picked this up on the advice of a blog. It’s a fast read, and one that I think will reward repeated attention. This first edition is limited to 1,500 copies, and I’d get one if I were you.
Leave a CommentCategory: Poetry
Last Night I Watched
by Jason Crane
Last night I watched an American president-elect on the television and cried. Next to me was my wife Jennifer, tears running down her cheeks.
Last night I watched the awakening of a nation that had all but given up on its principles and ideals.
Last night I watched Jesse Jackson hold one finger to his trembling lips as he wept, the marathon runner finally crossing the finish line.
Last night I watched John Lewis talk about the unbelievable road from “Whites Only” bathrooms to steel truncheons on the Edmund Pettis Bridge to the steps of the Capitol.
Last night I watched an actor from The Color Purple rest her chin on the shoulder of a friend as she watched an African-American man speak about his future presidency.
Last night I watched an ocean of joyful tears give a gentle lift to the ship that is America.
Last night I watched Walt Whitman as he knelt down and pulled a blade of grass from the rich earth, singing.
Last night I watched as Kenyans danced on dusty ground, arms raised toward the glorious sun.
Last night I watched as a crack opened in the wall, and looking through, I could see the glimmering field of stars.
3 CommentsPoet Gerald Schwartz sent me his thoughts this morning:
For times, then,
All through our lives
We delight in a unity,
The great union,
Of our ventured selves
With what sustains
All possibility. We ride
The swell and are
The surf and with
Changed belief
Inner and outer
We find our talk
Turned to hope:
Our hope into truth:
For a time, early,
We become at home
In you, World.
–Gerald Schwartz
Leave a Comment
My sister, mom, dad and friend Kevin at my 2007 birthday shindig.
Here’s a poem I wrote in 2007 after celebrating my birthday with friends and family at Thali, our favorite Indian restaurant in Rochester.
Birthday
by Jason Crane
This is my birthday poem:
Stuffed full of Chicken Makhani,
Squeezing the plastic skull
With its bulging brains.
This is my birthday poem:
Grumpy-faced children
Fight off the smiles
That take over their faces.
This is my birthday poem:
Moving from one end of the
Long table to the other,
A timeline with forks and knives.
This is my birthday poem:
A box of old feelings
Hidden away in the closet,
Buried with new garments.
This is my birthday poem:
Pedaling slowly to Barrington Street,
My young son beside me,
Dodging the potholes.
This is my birthday poem:
Enchiladas and rice
And a dusty courtyard;
Beyond — and old bookstore.
This is my birthday poem:
“Daddy wants jam and bread.”
And knees in my back
Keep me awake in the small hours.
This is my birthday poem:
Tucked in, supine,
Balancing a notebook
On my stuffed belly.
(September 2007)
Leave a CommentPeople react to tragedy in different ways. For Thomas Flynn, a network news reporter covering the 9/11 tragedy as it happened, the story became more than an object to be studied. It became an all-encompassing, life-or-death struggle through the debris-strewn, dust-blind streets of New York.
Seven years later, Flynn tells his tale through the underused medium of the epic poem.
I picked up this book several weeks ago at The Book House, an independent bookstore (!) here in Albany. Today I went back there to have the book signed by its author during his in-store appearance. It turns out that Tom Flynn was born in Albany and still has many connections here.
His book is worth your time.
Leave a CommentI drove to Shaftsbury, VT, today to visit one of the houses in which poet Robert Frost lived. It was in this house — known as the Stone House — that he wrote “Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening.” Just as most of the classic Xmas albums were recorded in the summer, this quintessential winter poem was written in July.
Leave a CommentIn 1999, Jen and I lived just over the bridge from Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. I played in a dance club on the island, and Jen taught ESL. There was a guy who frequented our club, and who was known to just about everyone who knew the island. He was your typical working-class islander, living the beach life to the best of his ability. He was a big reggae fan, and one morning, in the small hours, we was found dead outside a little reggae hideaway near the beach. This is his poem.
Reggae Shack
by Jason Crane
2 a.m.
Waves examine the sand, retreat.
A bird nestles its head
into wings.
The air holds a final sigh,
a letting out of breath from
tired lungs,
the gritty sound
of reggae on worn vinyl
from a wooden shack
nestled in the trees
only a few feet away.
Bright smiles on black faces,
sweat on glasses of unlicensed beer.
Voices ease past the half-open door;
slip, unconcerned, into water.
Again, the waves glance at the sand;
the bird looks up, startled
by a dull wooden sound.
A head lolls against the tabletop —
spent, unknowing, spirit released.
He is found alone;
arms splayed out in
supplication, or exhaustion.
(July 1999)
Leave a CommentOur neighbors recently had a baby boy. This is the poem I wrote on the day he came home from the hospital.
Aidan Arrives
by Jason Crane
Sunday morning —
Sweet soul music,
Archie Bell and the Drells
Can’t stop dancing
While I sweep locust leaves
Off our porch.
Then it’s Marvin Gaye with a
Soul sacrament, his own
Worship of the joined human form,
While I fill the recycling bin and pick up
The kids’ rockets and bouncy balls.
Across the street, a ceramic pelican
Heralds the arrival of a new
Baby boy
Who comes home from the hospital today.
The Stylistics sing a backdrop to
Dog walkers, leaf rakers,
And two brothers chasing each other
With a bright orange butterfly net.
Our rope swing sways in an autumn breeze
As the little one starts crying,
Not wanting to come inside.
Then a red Jeep rolls to a stop
From a speed so low that the brakes
Are barely needed.
The neighborhood is instantly alert.
A silent signal —
And the boys screaming “The baby!†—
Brings everyone from their houses.
A dad (!) takes his first steps
Onto a driveway filled with new
Dangers and joys.
His wife slowly emerges from the passenger seat,
One hand on her lower back as she
Leans against the Jeep for support.
A circle of eager children is
Held at bay
By cautious parents.
A boon is granted —
A glimpse of tiny new life
Nestled in blankets,
All but covered by a striped hat.
Young Mr. Magoo has come home.
They slip past the pirate and the ghost
Suspended from the porch
In preparation for Halloween.
The door closes,
And the street lets out its breath.
(October 2008)
2 CommentsJen and I just got back from five days in San Francisco:
Leave a CommentFor Henry Grimes
Henry sits
in a plastic chair on
the balcony,
drinking water and watching
the lake.
Below the surface,
roiling motion.
Outside,
reflected sky.
Henry waits
to be surprised,
never knowing where
this note — here —
will take him.
Sometimes
he doesn’t find his way back
for a long time.
Henry talks
with his hands,
plucking and bowing his message,
going to the ritual and
inviting all to follow.
John F. Kennedy was inaugurated on this date in 1961. Robert Frost read a poem at the inauguration. He was planning to read a new piece called “Dedication,” but for one reason or another had trouble reading the printed poem. Instead, he recited “The Gift Outright” from memory. Here it is.
Leave a CommentThe Gift Outright
The land was ours before we were the land’s.
She was our land more than a hundred years
Before we were her people. She was ours
In Massachusetts, in Virginia,
But we were England’s, still colonials,
Possessing what we still were unpossessed by,
Possessed by what we now no more possessed.
Something we were withholding made us weak
Until we found out that it was ourselves
We were withholding from our land of living,
And forthwith found salvation in surrender.
Such as we were we gave ourselves outright
(The deed of gift was many deeds of war)
To the land vaguely realizing westward,
But still unstoried, artless, unenhanced,
Such as she was, such as she would become.— Robert Frost
Jen and the boys and I are in Saratoga Springs after a week in Lake Placid. While we were on vacation, I scribbled this poem about being a dad.
Fatherhood
Guardian of sleep
Protector of winter dreams
Chronicler of snow stories
Teller of bedtime tales
Snuggler on winter nights
Hugger with gentle arms
Gazer of wistful looks
Namer of newborn boys
Holder of tiny hands
Crosser of busy streets
Dreamer of far-off scenes
Kisser of sleeping limbs
Singer of simple songs
Soother of nighttime cries
Carrier of tired limbs
Father of children.
29 Dec 2007
One Comment