Author Archives: Sally Ashton

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About Sally Ashton

Poet, writer, teacher, editor, moon-watcher. Check my bio page, "About," for the full bank account.

Mimi Ahern: A favorite poem

Separation
by W. S. Merwin

I fell in love with poetry when I read “Separation” at the age of 46. I hadn’t known a poem could be so short yet nail an emotion so soundly.  Since that time, this poem with its simple words describing the humble act of sewing has followed me through 20 years and all the times that I have experienced loss: especially now with the sudden death of my husband, Bob.


Mimi Ahern, 66
Semi-Retired Teacher of Teachers
San Jose



Separation

Your absence has gone through me

Like thread through a needle.

Everything I do is stitched with its color.

W. S.  Merwin


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Poetry on the Move: Submissions open!

Call to Santa Clara county residents:

Submit your best poem, 50 words or less, to Poetry on the Move that in some way relates to the contest theme, “Invention.” I’m looking for poems that celebrate who we are and what we do in Silicon Valley. Write about “Invention” as a subject or a theme, or think of your poem as an invention. In it, capture the spirit of “making new” that shapes our county. Winning poems will be placed in light rail and buses throughout the county in April for National Poetry Month.

Submissions of your original poem can be made online only through the submission manager. Click HERE or in the sidebar “Poetry on the Move” link for further detail and complete submission guidelines. Find poems that feature the required word length under the “Sample Poems” page in the blog header.

Contest closes January 31.

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Danielle Roberts: A favorite poem

Depression, Too, Is a Kind of Fire
by Taylor Mali

Taylor Mali’s poem “Depression, Too, Is a Kind of Fire,” has captivated me from the moment I first heard it.  I don’t normally like refrain poems, but the repeating self-chastising phrase, “because I’m an idiot,” really sticks with me. Perhaps it was because it was spoken by the poet himself; perhaps it is because I relate to the events of the piece.  Regardless, I whisper it to my boyfriend as if it was a love poem and he recites it back.

Danielle Roberts
San Jose


Depression, Too, Is a Kind of Fire

I’m an idiot because once
before we were married she asked me whether I knew
that we would not be having children
if we did get married, and I said yes.

And because she knew I was lying,
she asked if I was really okay with that.
And because I’m an idiot I said yes again.

And once during a fight, not married
more than two years, she said she felt like my first wife,
and I, like an idiot, assured her that she was.

She worked out at the gym five times a week
and smoked as many packs of ultra lights,
and I’m an idiot because when I asked her why,
She said, Because I hate myself and I want to die.
And I laughed and said something I don’t recall,
something completely and utterly insufficient.

From the roof of our apartment,
I saw 40 or 50 people jump from the towers
on a Tuesday morning—we used to be able to see them to the south,
just as, to the north, we can still see
(and by “we” I guess I mean now just me)
the Empire State Building,
which still steeps me in gratitude
because I’m an idiot—
out of the smoke with arms flailing.
And I swear I saw a perfect swan.

And I was going to write a poem
about how fire is the only thing
that can make a person jump out a window.

And maybe I’m an idiot for thinking I could have saved her—
call me her knight in shattered armor—
could have loved her more,
or told her the truth about children.

But depression, too, is a kind of fire.
And I know nothing of either.

Taylor Mali



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Quentin Correll: A favorite poem

High Flight
by John Gillespie Magee, Jr.

It makes me smile to know that poetry can be made from the strangest subjects!

Quentin Correll
75, retired
Sunnyvale



High Flight

Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of Earth
And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings;
Sunward I’ve climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth
of sun-split clouds, — and done a hundred things
You have not dreamed of — wheeled and soared and swung
High in the sunlit silence. Hov’ring there,
I’ve chased the shouting wind along, and flung
My eager craft through footless halls of air….

Up, up the long, delirious, burning blue
I’ve topped the wind-swept heights with easy grace.
Where never lark, or even eagle flew —
And, while with silent lifting mind I have trod
The high untrespassed sanctity of space,
— Put out my hand, and touched the face of God.


John Gillespie Magee, Jr.
(1922–41)


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Sherri Harvey: A favorite poem

Wild Wind, Green Tea
by Eleanor Lerman

This poem for me categorizes the nature of “unconventional”–unconventional anything, really, but here, more specifically, relationships that somehow scare you but promise you the keys to the kingdom in one breath.  The imagery of October and witch dreams gets me every time. Are we ever ready to meet our fate?

Sherri Harvey
Lecturer, San Jose State University and Foothill College

San Jose



Wild Wind, Green Tea

Your birthday. A dark night of wild wind and goblin clouds.
The moon rocks in starry rafters, yellow lanterns sizzle on the
terrace, which you’ve opened to the sky. You are delighted
with all this mad weather, with the witch dreams of October.
Cold sheets, cold kisses, nightgowns dancing by themselves:
this is what a good soul conjures with wicked wishes, why
the world won’t harm you, why it is yours. Why instead of
cake, there are little dishes of green tea ice cream, civilized
and pure. Yet also full of secrets, strange and tasty. You hold
out the spoon and say, One bite and you are mine forever.
And because I believe you, I refuse that first mouthful,
waiting to gobble it all later, when I am ready to meet my fate.

Eleanor Lerman


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Resuming Favorite Poem Posts: Watch for Contest Details

I’ll be resuming posting Santa Clara County’s Favorite Poem submissions as of tomorrow and into the New Year, 2012!

As announced below, my project for the coming year is the poetry contest “Poetry on the Move,” in collaboration with VTA. Please stay tuned for a forthcoming announcement regarding the submission period in January. Further contest detail is in the link above.

In the meantime, please enjoy the poems and thoughts posted here, and poets, keep writing.

Happy New Year to all!

Sally Ashton
Santa Clara County Poet Laureate

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Poetry on the Move: a contest for 2012

Poetry on the Move
“Invention”

Announcing the Santa Clara County Poet Laureate’s 2012 project, “Poetry on the Move,” a poetry contest supported by the City of San Jose Office of Cultural Affairs, VTA, Arts Council Silicon Valley, and Santa Clara County to put poetry in public transportation. Winning poems will be placed in VTA light rail and buses next year.

Call for submissions:

Send your best poem, 50 words or less, that in some way relates to the contest theme, “Invention.” I’m looking for poems that celebrate who we are and what we do in Silicon Valley. Write about “Invention” as a subject or a theme, or think of your poem as an invention. In it, capture the spirit of “making new” that shapes our county.

These guidelines are to get you started writing. Poems of 50 words prove an ideal length to fill the transit “car cards” and still be read easily. I will post a few samples of poems that “fit” the 50 word limit on the blog [www.poetlaureateblog.org], but it’s up to you to find a way to envision the theme, “Invention.”

Here are a few ideas. Take your journal, ride VTA  around the county, and see what inspires you out the window. Visit The Tech Museum or the Computer History Museum of Mountain View . Head to an art museum; attend a public performance; walk your city center. Read the Technology section of the paper; stay home and Google. Get inspired. Write. Invent something!

Submission Guidelines:

  1. One poem of which you are the author
  2. 50 words or less
  3. Relate your poem in some way to the theme, “Invention”
  4. Online submissions only; details described at a later date
  5. County residents only; please provide address to verify
  6. Final judging by an outside judge
  7. Five winners will have poems appear on car cards in VTA transit
  8. Writers acknowledge that poem format, not content, might be changed to fit car card dimensions.
  9. Runners-up will be posted on the Poet Laureate blog and participate in public readings as possible.

The open submission period and complete submission instructions will be announced early January, 2012. Stay tuned to updates here at http://www.poetlaureateblog.org

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December 7 thoughts: Nils Peterson

I thought you might be interested to read comments former Santa Clara County Poet Laureate Nils Peterson made to the San Jose City Council on this date during his tenure.Remembering is a practice essential to living humane lives. Thanks for your thoughts, Nils.

Sally Ashton
Santa Clara County Poet Laureate

“I feel privileged to be here speaking on December 7th, the anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor.  I was 8 when it happened.  I lived then in New Jersey where my father had found a job after some difficult years early in the Great Depression, but on that day, we were visiting Mt. Vernon, N.Y. where my parents, both of them from Sweden, had met in an English as a Second Language Class.  They still had many friends there among the small colony of Swedes. We had a nice day, but I was looking forward to the ride home because we were going to listen to Jack Benny.  We drove through the Holland Tunnel, then turned the radio on, but there was no Jack, only news of the attack and the whole world began the change that still goes on.  My father, too old for the army, left a job he loved for work in a factory to help with the war effort.  Half a continent away, David King, my future father-in-law, left his wife and the two-month old daughter who would later become my wife to join the Navy.

Soon meat, sugar, and gas were rationed, (the speed limit was set at 55 if you could find gas) and soon all the windows of all the houses were covered with black shades to make sure light would not betray us to night attack.  Wardens strolled the streets to make certain no glimmer shone through.  Soon there were red and white flags in those windows with space for the blue stars announcing this was a house that had sent a soldier, or soldiers, off to war.  When the first casualty lists came back, some of those stars changed to gold.  And soon the whole world was changed, the great globe at the center of the reading room of the library which had seemed so permanent, each country defined by its own color, became more and more irrelevant.  At the war’s end, it was as outmoded as the Gatling gun.

In those days, at school assemblies, we sang not only the first verse of the “Star-Spangled Banner,” but the 4th which begins:

Oh, thus be it ever that free men shall stand
Between their loved homes and the war’s desolation.

it goes on,

Praise the power that hath made and preserved us a nation

Our time too is difficult with its own wars and desolations, but on this day, it is my hope, and I’m sure the hope of all your constituents, that you will be given the wisdom to make choices that will preserve us, a city, a state, a nation, and, yes, more than preserve – the choices that will help us grow in justice, good will, and freedom.”      -Nils Peterson

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Favorite Poems in Morgan Hill!

The second Favorite Poems Reading was another delightful time with a strong turnout filling all the seats at Booksmart in Morgan Hill Thursday night. Readers including Morgan Hill Mayor Steve Tate and County Supervisor Mike Wasserman came up to bat–literally, in Supervisor Wasserman’s case–for poetry.  The rest of the reading lineup included Harry Lafnear, Karen English, Kelly Cressio-Moeller, Millicent Kellogg, Nancy Glaze, Mary Lou Taylor, Dennis Richardson, Cinda Meister, Darrell dela Cruz, and Stefan Moeller. See what they read posted in the List of Readers link, above.

It’s difficult to explain how a group of volunteer readers come together and create a single memorable event from their personal comments around such diverse poems, but they do. I find it a privilege to attend and be a part of the magic. I’ll be hosting one more early next year, so stay tuned both for the opportunity to read your earlier submission or simply to soak it in.

While we didn’t get a group shot this time, these few pics will give you a small sense of the readers and the venue. Thanks again, Booksmart, Morgan Hill.

Sally Ashton
Santa Clara County Poet Laureate

Welcome to all from Booksmart owner, Cinda Meister

Professor Karen English, San Jose State University, reading from Anne Bradstreet

County Supervisor Wasserman reading "Casey at the Bat"

Mayor Steve Tate, Morgan Hill reading "At the Zoo"

Arts Council Silicon Valley Executive Director, Nancy Glaze giving her thoughts.

SLAC physicist Stefan Moeller ringing in December reading Schiller's "Song of the Bell"

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Favorite Poems Reading: This Thursday December 1

Join me this Thursday, December 1 at 7pm at Booksmart in Morgan Hill as I host the second public reading of Santa Clara County’s Favorite Poems.  I’m looking forward to hearing contributors read their poems and their thoughts about them. We’ve got a great line-up of readers. You can see them and their favorite poems on the “List of Readers” page above. We’ll begin and end with “bells,” perfect for the holiday season.

See you there!

Sally Ashton
Poet Laureate

 

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