There
are five practical ideas for creating more
powerful access to poetry; bringing it home is one of them.
Poetry
seems to attach itself to certain cities or regional areas. San Francisco had
the beats. Chicago had Carl Sandburg. Kentucky has Wendell Berry. Hartford had
Wallace Stevens. New Jersey had William Carlos Willams. And New York, well, New
York had everyone else.
When
one thinks of poetry, St. Louis doesn’t come immediately to mind. (Currently,
it might immediately come to mind for other things, but not poetry.) And yet.
Billy Collins
gives a poetry reading at the St. Louis County Library, and 800 people
show up – a sell-out crowd, causing a traffic jam on a Saturday night.
St.
Louis has the Eugene Field
House,
a three-story brick row house that was Field’s childhood home. While it is all
that is left of its original row, and original neighborhood, it is still there,
still attracting locals and tourists alike.
While
he became a British subject, T.S. Eliot was born in St. Louis, and his family
was involved in the founding of several educational institutions that are still
flourishing today.
To continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak Poetry.
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