50th Anniversary Poems

 
TABLE OF CONTENTS
A Story for our Campus
Anyone’s Song to Sing on Campus
Campus Vignettes
Walt Whitman’s Daughters
Meditation in a Formal Garden
Mockingbird Memory
Looking for Walt Whitman at C.W. Post
The Native American Poet’s Circle
Arboretum Naming Song
On the Steps in a Garden
Diné Degree
 

CAMPUS MEDITATIONS:
Poems for the Fiftieth Anniversary
of the C.W. Post Campus, Long Island University

Dr. Norbert Krapf, Poet Laureate for the C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University, was commissioned to create a collection of poems in honor of C.W. Post’s 50th Anniversary.

DEDICATION

These poems are for

all the former students
who appreciated my passion
& shared in my meditations,

all the colleagues
who gave approval, laughed at my humor,
& came to listen to poetry in the Great Hall,

all the administrators
who let me go far away to renew myself
whenever I needed to & then welcomed me back,

& all the members of the L.I. poetry community
who contributed their talents to what was happening
on the C.W. Post Campus
of Long Island University during my 34 years here:

you do not need to be named
because you know so well who you are
& come with me as I move on to wherever I must go
 

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      A STORY FOR OUR CAMPUS

    in honor of the 50th anniversary of the
    C.W. Post Campus, Long Island University

    A girl with jet black hair and eyes and mocha
    skin arrives on campus. She wonders why
    nobody looks her in the eye, misses family
    & friends, how everyone spoke to her
    on the rez. She reads books. She learns how

    to function in time. She practices volleyball
    & shows white girls from the suburbs how
    to hustle & scrap & win. She writes papers,
    makes friends, & one day begins a memoir
    about growing up as a Navajo. She feels

    the power of the word surge through her
    from beyond. Others begin to listen. She
    receives prizes for the story she tells. Now
    two famous universities want to pay her
    to come to their campus to continue to tell

    this story. Her family comes all the way
    from the rez to see her stand on the stage
    in a rug dress to receive the first diploma
    in the family & they & others stand
    & applaud & she walks in beauty

    off our campus to one in the desert
    & stands on the other side of the desk
    & learns how to teach students not
    much younger than herself how to
    find & put their words on paper.

    (c) Norbert Krapf, 2004

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    ANYONE’S SONG TO SING ON CAMPUS

    I won’t say this place is paradise
    but if you take a walk and look
    carefully at the tulip next to your
    foot and the tulip poplar above
    your head you will find much
    to make you feel you have come
    into a world well worth loving

    and if you give what you have
    been bequeathed to develop
    to the best of your abilities
    and share it with others
    in the finite time you have
    been given to stay in a place
    as good as this one surely is

    then what you find and what
    you give will carry you
    and others farther than you
    thought you could ever go.

    (c) Norbert Krapf, 2004

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    CAMPUS VIGNETTES

    In her backpack one student lugs
    The Complete Plays of Shakespeare
    as she sips morning coffee on her
    way into the first class of the day.
    Such a burden to carry tradition!

    At her back chugs an ecstatic guy
    listening to rap on the wire
    as he scoots in from the rain.
    His feet barely touch the ground.

    A professor sits in his car
    in the lot rehearsing the sad lines
    he will deliver as he returns
    the latest set of exams. "These
    are the times," he begins, "that..."

    All of a sudden in unison
    every bud lurking on campus
    decides to break open &
    begin a riot of fresh blossom.

    Be careful: You never know
    what people will do when
    riots begin. Some have
    even been known to awaken
    & start a whole new life.

    (c) Norbert Krapf, 2004

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    WALT WHITMAN’S DAUGHTERS

    On an eleventh-month afternoon
    on Paumanok we trade impressions
    of Walt nurturing a runaway slave
    and juxtaposing that episode
    with the incident of a well-to-do
    woman hiding behind the curtains
    of her fine house while in her fantasies
    she gives herself to twenty-eight
    young men splashing in the salt
    water not far beyond her window

    and I look up from my text
    and see across the desk from me
    two young women, one Puerto Rican,
    one Navajo, their dark eyes ablaze,
    one pair round as full moons,
    the other parallel ripe almonds,
    huddling together close as sisters
    brought together by kindred spirits
    and the distance from their homes

    and I understand better than ever
    before how a kelson of the creation
    is indeed love and that all men
    and women are brothers and sisters
    and that a man is rich in proportion
    to the number of daughters and sons
    he can admit into his affection and
    carry with him as he journeys forth
    every day the rest of his life

    and I, a native Midwesterner,
    conclude that a country
    that can produce a poet like
    Walt Whitman from an Island
    off the East Coast who brings us
    together to share our perceptions
    from different perspectives
    and bloodlines and places
    so far apart in so many ways
    is richer than I ever imagined.

    (c) Norbert Krapf, 2004

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    MEDITATION IN A FORMAL GARDEN

    How this bud swells
    & opens into blossom

    when the light intensifies
    in this bed so carefully

    cultivated by a gardener
    whose hands have just

    the right touch is not
    unlike the young mind

    ripening with stimulation
    from beyond and also from

    the caretaker in the room
    as it opens into insight

    & ideas that unfold like
    layer upon layer of petal.

    (c) Norbert Krapf, 2004

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    MOCKINGBIRD MEMORY

    After we finish talking about
    Whitman’s poem of childhood
    memory based on the story
    of mockingbird lovers separated
    by death on the shores of this Island
    where the boy absorbs the tale
    of love lost and is reborn
    as the poet who now looks back
    at the scene from his youth
    and sees the mystical interplay
    between life and death and finds
    his mission is to put together
    a musical arrangement of words
    that survive the onslaught of time

    there is a pause and I hear
    a sliding song issuing from
    the old black walnut tree
    where I have seen generations
    of the songbird with the white
    wing bars and the musical
    shuttle in their throats
    near the corner of Humanities
    Hall where we sit and reflect.

    I ask if anyone knows
    what that sound is and none
    of the natives of Paumanok’s
    suburbs recognizes it as
    the music of the mockingbird

    and I am brought back to memories
    of walnut trees in southern Indiana
    where as a boy I picked up the lobed
    green fruits that turned dark brown
    and carried them home in a burlap
    bag slung over my shoulder.

    The lyric of mimicry sliding
    from the tree outside the hall
    on this quiet day tallies with
    the tale of the Long Island poet’s
    revisitation of the mystical play
    of moonlight and shadow on the shores
    that he loved where he found the voice
    that sings his poems of loss and rebirth

    and I awaken as the boy I was
    in the hills of southern Indiana
    with a burlap bag of walnuts
    over my shoulder and at the same
    time remain the man that I have
    become here on Whitman’s Long Island
    a thousand miles away from the hills
    where I haunted the woods and fields.

    Now I see that song in trees
    and in poems carries us beyond
    where we come from and where
    we go and takes us well beyond
    ourselves and this world where
    we live until we depart as spirit

    that will one day shine back down
    on a bird singing its song woven
    from the songs of others while young
    people sit at their desks yearning
    to find the voice that carries them
    beyond where they now are to
    what they hope they shall become.

    (c) Norbert Krapf, 2004

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    LOOKING FOR WALT WHITMAN
          AT C.W. POST

    If you want me again look
    for me under your boot-soles.
    —"Song of Myself"

I went looking for you, Walt,
all over campus after we read
your Paumanok poems.

I found your boot prints
in the mulch of flower beds
in the formal garden beside
the administration building.

In the woods along
the arboretum walk I saw
those prints again and swear
I could hear your bardic voice
trill and catalogue the names
of American hardwoods
as if you were reciting
the names of the saints.

In the recesses of the library
stacks I spied your gray-bearded
presence peering into volumes
of experimental poems from
the heart of the continent.

Walking down the hall
where one class door was ajar
I saw a familiar colleague
with his mouth wide open
but heard you declaring
to his wide-eyed students
our independence from
Old World hegemony
and insisting we must open
our doors more to immigrants
and those the system despises
and let our instincts speak
more fully without check.

I was afraid, Walt, what kind
of revolution you might foment.
I opened my mouth to issue
a warning to the young about
the potential danger of your
influence but all that came out
were words I recognized as yours,

I bequeath myself to the dirt
to grow from the grass I love
,

and I knew that wherever I stepped
on this campus and your Island
I would always be touching you.

(c) Norbert Krapf, 2004

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THE NATIVE AMERICAN POET’S CIRCLE
for Jeanetta Calhoun—

We sit in a circle
to talk about the oral
tradition in Native poetry

and our guest, whose
Delaware ancestors
lived in this region

ages before our families
arrived from other lands,
asks for volunteers

to read passages from
a Zuni narrative
in which the community

remembers the ancestors
and gives praise by
naming plants & animals

and soon she calls
her devotees by name
and they respond to

her questions and she
lowers her voice to
a near hush to make

a point about contrast
and emphasis and
everyone looks up

as her voice goes down.
I close my eyes and
imagine we are gathered

in a circle in a cave
around a campfire,
members of a religion

that has been around
since smoke rose from
the first flame ignited

by humans of their
own power, and we
listen to the words

of this woman
whose voice holds
us together in prayer.

(c) Norbert Krapf, 2004

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ARBORETUM NAMING SONG

1.
We cannot remain
in love with what
we cannot name

and because on this
October day when air
is crisp & sunlight
so clear we do not
want to risk falling
out of love with this
world into which
we were born
no matter how
bruised it may be

we come from different
places and traditions
to stand, to see, to say:

Thundercloud Plum,
burgundy leaves
stirring in the breeze;

Tabletop Scotch Elm,
grainy bark climbing trunk,
smooth bark stretching
across tabletop branches
above a seam where
grafted skins touch;

Blue Atlas Cedar,
blue-gray needles
falling light
as snowflakes
to Paumanok ground
far from mountains
in African home.

We look, we read, we say,
we lay hands on ancient trunk;
what we feel lies beyond
palms, fingertips & words.

2.
We walk through a formal garden
where late roses bloom,
into a woods where chipmunks
chip & squirrels scamper.

What we see comes
to us so fast we step
outside ourselves, untie
our tongues & let them
sing praise to what stands
on either side of us like
familiar spirits happy
to have their names
on this earth invoked:

White Oak, Red Oak, you say.
Scarlet Oak, Black Oak, I reply.

Black Locust, Tulip Poplar, you sing.
Red Maple, Sugar Maple, I answer.

Sweet Gum, you chant.
Black Birch, I conclude.

(c) Norbert Krapf, 2004

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ON THE STEPS IN A GARDEN

On this last day of term we gather
near a half-timbered building with
a slate roof in the formal garden
with magnolia and crab apple
blossoms wide open above.
We find places to sit on the steps
leading up from rosebushes
and boxwoods and take turns
reading poems of place from
different times and countries.
About how to connect and stay
connected with where we live.
How to draw nourishment
from what grows and breathes
beside and above us. How to
give ourselves to our place
so it can give back to us
and sustain us wherever we go.
Some of us keep our eyes closed
as someone else reads. Each voice
has a different tone and pitch
and speaks a different rhythm.
Some of us choose to add
a comment, some of us allow
nuance and innuendo to ripen
and blossom in silence.
The sunlight lies like the hand
of a deft mentor on heads
and shoulders. Pollen floats
in the air. I think to myself
my life has come to the right
place at just the right time.
I want to reach out and touch
the beautiful young plants
opening on these steps before
me as each new poem assumes
shape and texture but settle
for what I feel in what I hear
on these steps in this garden
on this campus on this island
in this state in this world
where I came to be born.

(c) Norbert Krapf, 2004

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 DINÉ DEGREE
—for Christie Cooke & her family—

When you climb these Eastern
steps to the stage in buckskin
moccasins, woven black
and red dress, turquoise
and silver squash blossom
necklace that your grandmother
once wore and the sliver concha
belt that once wrapped around
the waist of another woman in your
family many come with you

and when you walk in such beauty
across the hardwood floor to
receive your certificate and have
your picture taken all those who
came before walk in beauty,
light shining in dark eyes

and although you are
the very first in your family
to take this particular walk
you know you shall
not be the last

for when one Navajo
walks in beauty all Navajos
past, present and future
walk with her and many
shall follow in your graceful
footsteps and you shall lead
sisters and brothers and daughters
and sons to walk in balance
up a series of steps

and one day you shall
turn to look back and see
a long line of Diné people
who descend from you
as well as your mother
and father and grandmother
and grandfather and their
ancestors walking in beauty

behind you and they
shall be looking up to you
and singing your name
in a hymn of praise
that will bless all who
follow in your footsteps.

(c) Norbert Krapf, 2004

About the Author

Dr. Norbert Krapf is a nationally regarded author of 12 volumes of poetry who serves as Poet Laureate for the C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University. Recently retired after 34 years of teaching English at C.W. Post, Dr. Krapf served as director of the C.W. Post Poetry Center for almost two decades. His collection of poems, "The Country I Come From," was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize and his latest work, "Looking for God's Country," will be released in April 2005 by Time Being Books. He is the recipient of the David Newton Award for Excellence in Teaching, the Trustees Award for Scholarly Achievement from Long Island University for both a single work and lifetime achievement, and the Lucille Medwick Memorial Award from the Poetry Society of America. He has been a U.S. Exchange Teacher at West Oxon Technical College, England, and twice a Fulbright Professor of American Poetry in Germany, at the Universities of Freiburg and Erlangen/Nuremberg. Libraries across the country, including University of Rochester, house many of Dr. Krapf’s literary papers and correspondence.

 

 
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