Thursday, November 19, 2015

Poetry Week!

As we are wrapping up our adventures through various genres, we have final arrived at poetry week.  After this we only have one blog left, then the term is over and we can return to reading whatever we want. (I am hoping we all continue to read; it will break my heart if someone decides that not reading anything is the better choice.)

This week I have focused on the Dust Bowl, so travel back with me to a time when there was " nothing to buy and no money to buy it with" (Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird).

Poetry Foundation
Dust Bowl by Langston Hughes

The land wants me to come back
To a handful of dust in autumn,
To a raindrop
In the palm of my hand
In spring.
The land wants me to come back
To a broken song in October,
To a snowbird on the wing.
The land wants me to come back.

I always enjoy Hughes' work ("The Negro Speaks of Rivers" is simply amazing). The poem reminded me more of my friend Dean than the Dust Bowl. Dean is a kind, gentle man, but the dirt of the fields calls to him season after season. The line, the land wants me to come back, is exactly the way I see Dean; it is as if he and the land breathe together. I don't understand farming, but I understand the without the land, Dean wouldn't know how to get through the day.  I also was touched by the lines, To a raindrop, In the palm of my hand. One of the most glorious places in Tipton County is the post office. There is a beautiful Depression era mural above the postmaster's door. In the bottom right corner of the mural is a man holding out his hand in hopes of feeling a raindrop. Hughes' imagery vividly brings that painting to mind.

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Since my Hughes' poem is only nine lines long I needed more. I reread Karen Hesse's novel in verse, Out of the Dust.  Since ECA tests are in two weeks, I appreciated the poem "Tested by Dust."

While we sat,
Taking our six-week test,
the wind rose
and sand blew
right through the cracks in the schoolhouse wall,
right through the gaps around the window glass,
and by the time the tests were done,
each and every one of us
was coughing pretty good and we all
needed a bath.

I hope we get bonus points
for testing in a dust storm.
                         April 1934



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I have also read a couple of picture books this week. Potato: A Tale from the Great Depression by Kate Lied is a cute picture book about eating potatoes day after day since that is all the family could afford. Having just finished Whose Names are Unknown by Sanora Babb, I know this was a common survival food. As the situation became more dire even the potato skins were kept to make a pot of water into soup.

There is also a great primary source book over the Dust Bowl, free for downloading, at the Library of Congress.


Next week is Thanksgiving, so no blogs for us! But the following week is our last blog. I still haven't reviewed a movie, so that is in the works and I need to finish discussing my books. I plan to wrap up with some work on Dorothea Lange's iconic image Migrant Mother.

2 comments:

  1. One word that I noticed in the first sentence of your blog is the word final, I think that you meant to have the word finally. "the way I see Dean; it is as if he and the land breathe together." I love the way that you talk about this and the imagery that it brings to mind. "One of the most glorious places in Tipton County is the post office." This is an amazing sentence and I completely agree with you, I love the Tipton post office I think that it is beautiful and it reminds me of simpler times. "so travel back with me to a time when there was" The imagery in this one sentence is very vivid and helps to get the reader ready to read and better understand the poem. The line where you talk about people not reading after this class is very true, I think that people who don't read are missing out and I think that everyone should always be reading.

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  2. Your blog is very different, it's not bad but it's not my favorite either. Although I did really enjoy your poem! One thing that I love that you do is how you talk about something and I can imagine it all in my mind. "Glorious places Tipton County is the Post office" I did notary with that because there are so many other pretty places. I love how you are pushing us to read because 1. We don't get time to read on out own, and 2. You are strengthening our vocabulary, reading skills, and most people won't ever read after this class.

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