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Nye - Voices in the air: poems for listeners

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Nye Voices in the air: poems for listeners
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    Voices in the air: poems for listeners
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Voices in the air: poems for listeners: summary, description and annotation

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Ninety-five poems pay tribute to essential voices past and present that have the power to provoke us, lead us, and give us hope --;Section I. Messages -- Section II. Voices in the air -- Section III. More worlds -- Biographical notes.

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Voices in the air poems for listeners - image 1
For Connor James Nye and Virginia DuncanIn memory, Paula Merwin, Paul Rode, Bill Hanson,Thomas Lux, James Tolan, Catherine Kasper, Brother Tony HearnVoices in the air poems for listeners - image 2Contents Poet Galway Kinnell said To me poetry is someone standing up so - photo 3 Contents Poet Galway Kinnell said To me poetry is someone standing up so to speak - photo 4 Poet Galway Kinnell said, To me, poetry is someone standing up, so to speak, and saying, with as little concealment as possible, what it is for him or her to be on earth at this moment. SomeoneAbraham Lincoln?once remarked that all the voices ever cast out into the air are still floating around in the far etherssomehow, somewhereand if we only knew how to listen well enough, we could hear them even now. Voices as guides, lines and stanzas as rooms, sometimes a single word the furniture on which to sit... each day we could open the door, and enter, and be found. These days I wonderwas life always strangejust strange in different ways? Does speaking some of the strangeness help us survive it, even if we cant solve or change it? Where is my mapwhere are we, please? Can voices that entered into our thoughts when we were little help us make amends with the strange time were in? William Stafford, great twentieth-century American poet and teacher, tireless encourager of dialogue and nonviolence, is still speaking in the slant shadows falling across the path. If we only knew how to listen better, he said, even the grasses by the roadsides could help us live our lives.

Theyre flexible, for one. What might he say about our current moments in history? Would he be surprised by the divisive rhetoric, mysterious backsliding? Or not surprised at all? When I see a highway sign, No Right Turn onto Whirlwind DriveStafford comes to mind. He carried a decisive calm. Peter Matthiessen, the only American writer ever to win the National Book Award in both fiction and nonfiction, is still standing out on his Long Island beach, staring at the sky, asking us, Did you see that? Flying over just now? Did you catch the span of the wings, the rosy tip of the head? Might we pause on our way to everywhere we are rushing off to and hear something in the air, old or new, that would make sense? Voices in the air poems for listeners - image 5 Not so long ago we were never checking anything in our hands, scrolling down, pecking with a finger, obsessively tuning in. My entire childhood did not involve a single deletion. These are relatively new acts on earth.

In those archaic but still vivid days, there might be a meandering walk into trees, an all-day bike ride, a backyard picnic, a gaze into a stream, a plunge into a sunset, a conversation with pines, a dig in the dirt, to find our messages. When we got home, there was nothing to check or catch up onno one speaking to us in our absence. Recently, when I had the honor of visiting Yokohama International School in Japan to conduct poetry workshops, student Juna Hewitt taught me an important wordYutorilife-space. She listed various interpretations for its meaningarriving early, so you dont have to rush. Giving yourself room to make a mistake. Starting a diet, but not beating yourself up if you eat a cookie after you started it.

Giving yourself the possibility of succeeding. (Several boys in another class defined the word as when the cord for your phone is long enough to reach the wall socket.) Juna said she felt that reading and writing poetry gives us more yutoria place to stand back to contemplate what we are living and experiencing. More spaciousness in being, more room in which to listen. I love this. It was the best word I learned all year. Not that sense of being nibbled upas if message minnows surround us at all moments, nipping, nipping at our edges.

Perhaps we have more voices in the air nowon TV, in our phones and computers and little saved videosbut are we able to hear them as well? Are these the voices we really need? Is our listening life-space deep enough? Can we tell ourselves when we need to walk away from chatter, turn it off entirely for half a day, or a full day, or a whole weekend, ease into a realm of something slower, but more tangible? Can we go outside and listen? In 1927 Freya Stark, an English writer born in Paris in 1893, who would become known for her astonishing travels through even the most remote parts of the Middle East, paused for a picnic near some Roman ruins outside Damascus. She wrote, We ate our food with little clouds of Roman sand blown off the hewn stones and thought of the fragility of things. Near Baghdad she wrote,... in the morning all is peace, and all went out to pasture. The camels, looking as if they felt that their walk is a religious ceremony, went further afield; they are comparatively independent, needing to drink only once in four days; the sheep and goats stayed nearer. And when they had all gone, and melted invisibly into the desert face, the empty luminous peace again descended, lying round us in light and air and silence for the rest of the day.

Freya Starks light and air and silence feel palpable in her paragraphs. Her respect for people unlike herself, her fascination with worlds very different from the European ones she had grown up inyet fully recognizable in their humanity and hopeheartens me when my own time feels too odd to bear. Her curious voice traveling through the air is more comforting than people currently claiming power, demanding recognition, trying to make others feel as if they dont belong. Literature gives us a home in bigger time. But how do we find our ways home? Continually, regularly? With so much vying for our attention, how do we listen better? Reminding ourselves of what we love feels helpful. Walking outsideits as quiet as it ever was.

The birds still communicate without any help from us. In that deep quietude, doesnt the air, and the memory, feel more full of voices? If we slow down and intentionally practice listening, calming our own clatter, maybe we hear those voices better. They live on in us. Take a break from multitasking. Although many of us are no longer sitting on rocks in deserts watching camels, sheep, and goats heading out to pasture, we could sit. In a porch swing? On the front steps? In a library or coffee shop? On a park bench? Quiet inspiration may be as necessary as food, water, and shelter.

Try giving yourself regular times a day for reading and thinkingeven if just for a minute or two. Mindfulness, many agree, is profoundly encouraged by regular practice. A different sort of calm begins feeling like the true atmosphere behind everything else. If youre an I read before I go to sleep sort of person, why not add a little more I-just-got-home-from-school-or-work reading? In the modern world, we deserve to wind down. Or perhaps some morning reading, to launch yourself? How long does it take to read a poem? Slowing to a more gracious pacingtrying not to hurry or feel overwhelmedinch by inchone thought at a timecan be a deeply helpful mantra. Its a gift we give our own minds.

The melancholy, brilliant singer-songwriter Townes Van Zandt died suddenly on New Years Day 1997. His many fans were stunned and saddened. That was the first day our son showed me I could enter the world wide web to read obituaries and stories about Townes rising suddenly from all over the worldNashville, London, Berlin. Incredible! How had this happened? Everything was nowavailable? The searching process felt exotic, haunting, and comfortingfans around the world, grieving for Townes together. His song lines kept rising in my mind for months afterward. If I needed you, would you come to me? I think they all would.

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