A Poem for Read a Book Day

Reading is under assault in the U.S.

Right-wing extremists across the country are trying to get books banned – to get them removed from public libraries and public schools – labeling any books that make them uncomfortable as immoral, pornographic, or “not age-appropriate” for students.

Some of the books they are trying to ban have been required reading in our schools for decades, like To Kill a Mockingbird. Huckleberry Finn, and The Diary of Anne Frank.

So Read a Book Day is more important than ever.

Julia Donaldson (1948 – ) born Julia Catherine Shield in Hamstead, London; prolific English author, playwright, songwriter, and performer, best known for rhyming stories for children, including The Gruffalo, Room on the Broom, and Stick Man.  Served as the UK Children’s Laureate (2011-2013).

To read Julia Donaldson’s wonderful poem “I Opened a Book” click:

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TCS: This Is Not a Small Voice You Hear

Good Morning!

______________________________

Welcome to The Coffee Shop, just for you early risers
on Monday mornings. This is an Open Thread forum,
so if you have an off-topic opinion burning a hole in
your brainpan, feel free to add a comment.

______________________________

“Become such as you are,
having learned what that is.”

– Pindar

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“The poet speaks to all men
of that other life of theirs that
they have smothered and forgotten.”

– Dame Edith Sitwell

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A Charming Poem by Eugene Field

Eugene Field Sr. (1850-1895) was born on September 2, 1850, in St. Louis, Missouri; American writer, best known for his poems for children and humorous essays. In 1875, he started his career as a reporter for the St. Joseph Gazette, and rose to be the newspaper’s city editor. The Gazette was the first paper to print his humorous articles. He moved on to work for the Morning Journal in St. Louis, the Kansas City Times, and the Denver Tribune. He started publishing poems in 1879, eventually producing over a dozen volumes of poetry, mainly for children. In 1883, he began writing a column called Sharps and Flats for the Chicago Daily News. He died of a heart attack at the age of 45.

To read one of Eugene Field’s best-known children’s poems click:

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Bird of Eden

by IRENE FOWLER, Contributor

Whilst trying to forge ahead with our unique personal lives, as indeed we must, we are often weighted down with past baggage, hindered by present constraints, and fearful of future outcomes. In fact, the business of life and living, may feel like an impossible, daunting, Everest climb confronted by untrained, ill-equipped non-mountaineers. In other cases, we may feel lost-at-sea and perchance, catch a glimpse of a shoreline, only to discover it has disappeared like a mirage the nearer we get to it.

Our travails are varied. However, the common denominator is that we are all in search of solutions. In a peculiar way, we are all climbing the same mountain and we are all in the same needy boat.

Add to the conflicts and complexities, of one’s personal earthly sojourn and saga, are the events of the outside world. Today, we are still facing the head winds of a once in a century global pandemic. Added to humanity’s  challenges, are climate change and the spectre of fast-encroaching tyrannical authoritarianism.

With the run-up to the crucial US mid-term elections in full swing, the topmost concern of the majority of the American electorate, is the rapid erosion of democracy within the oldest democracy on the planet. The growing anxiety and turmoil, is such that democracy supersedes the state of the economy and burdensome inflation woes, as a dominating ballot issue. Since the Republican Party, the other half of America’s political duopoly,  have pitched their tent on the side of authoritarianism as their preferred choice/form of government, global democracy could not be in greater peril.

As we navigate the choppy, treacherous waters of human existence, as individuals, we can tap into a reservoir of inner-peace.

To read Irene’s new poem “Bird of Eden” click:

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TCS: Between Truth and Falsehood, a Little Empty Space

Good Morning!

______________________________

Welcome to The Coffee Shop, just for you early risers
on Monday mornings. This is an Open Thread forum,
so if you have an off-topic opinion burning a hole in
your brainpan, feel free to add a comment.

______________________________

“To rule is easy, to govern difficult … Divide and rule, the politician cries;
unite and lead, is watchword of the wise.” – Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

“All poets, all writers are political. They either maintain the status quo, or
they say, Something’s wrong, let’s change it for the better.’” – Sonia Sanchez

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A Poem by Rita Dove on Her Birthday

Rita Dove was born August 28, 1952, in Akron, Ohio; American poet and essayist; winner of the 1987 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for her book Thomas and Beulah; U.S. Library of Congress Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry, 1993-1995, the first African-American (after the title change from Poetry Consultant to Poet Laureate), and at age 40, the youngest poet to be appointed Poet Laureate by the Librarian of Congress. Her poetry collections include The Yellow House on the Corner, Mother Love, On the Bus with Rosa Parks, and American Smooth.

To read Rita Dove’ poem “Primer” click:

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Two Poems for National Dog Day

Today is National Dog Day, founded in 2004, to encourage adoption. Rescue dogs make great companions, and each one deserves a “forever home.”


To read Robert Service’s “Abandoned Dog” and Linda Pastan’s “The New Dog” click:  Continue reading

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Trump : Today’s King Uzziah

by IRENE FOWLER, Contributor

King Uzziah (783-742 BC) reigned in the ancient kingdom of Judah which had splintered from the kingdom of Israel. Unfortunately, his contempt for the settled norms and traditions of governance, got the better of him leading him to usurp the established authority of the priesthood, whose sole prerogative it was to burn incense to God in the temple.

Uzziah took it upon himself to sabotage this sacred, inalienable duty by entering into the temple and burning incense to God himself. His brazen, unorthodox conduct was egregious on its face, as he upended official structures and institutions, thereby, threatening the balance of power within the Kingdom. Obviously, the God of Israel was not amused by this foolhardy antic, nor was he willing to give him a pass and so He struck Uzziah with leprosy. In effect, the popular king was from henceforth consigned to a life of national shame, and relegated to the status of permanent outcast, becoming at once a pariah and a by-word.

 

The questions could be asked why a benevolent God would visit such a horrid, abominable fate on a king who by all accounts was a successful ruler? Why, couldn’t a forgiving God overlook his shenanigans? Finally, what lessons are applicable today from this human tragedy?

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TCS: The Mindfulness of Memory and Time Getting On

Good Morning!

______________________________

Welcome to The Coffee Shop, just for you early risers
on Monday mornings. This is an Open Thread forum,
so if you have an off-topic opinion burning a hole in
your brainpan, feel free to add a comment.

______________________________

Happy are the valiant, they that accept
with equal spirit failure or applause.

– Jorge Luis Borges,
from “Fragments of an Apocryphal Gospel”

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A Poem for World Mosquito Day

World Mosquito Day: on August 20, 1897, Sir Ronald Ross, British physician, discovers that female mosquitoes transmit malaria between humans. The London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine has held annual celebrations of the day since the 1930s.



John Updike (1932-2009) American novelist, short-story writer, art critic, poet, and literary critic. One of only four writers to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction more than once, along with Booth Tarkington, William Faulkner, and Colson Whitehead. Updike won in 1982 for Rabbit Is Rich, and in 1991 for Rabbit At Rest. Among many other honors, he also won the American Book Award for Fiction, and the National Book Critics Circle Award for both fiction and criticism. His collections of poetry include Facing Nature: Poems, Collected Poems: 1953–1993, and Americana and Other Poems (2001).

To read John Updike’s poem “The Mosquito” click:

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