Sherry Chandler » 2005 » April » 20
There’s still time to catch the end of the Kentucky Author Mountaintop Removal Tour – a reading at EKU’s Posey Auditorium from 2-4 is free and open to the public. Touring authors will read from their works and share reflections on their mountaintop removal tour. Kentuckians for the Commonwealth and Kentucky Riverkeeper took these authors on a tour of mining sites in three counties.
Authors expected to be present include: Erik Reece, Mary Ann Taylor Hall, Bob Sloan, Kristin Johannsen, Gwyn Hyman Rubio, Silas House, Anne Shelby, Ed McClanahan, Bracelen Flood, George Brosi, Artie Ann Bates, Ann Olson and Graham Shelby.
A fund-rasing dinner from 5-7:30 p.m. is $30 per person/$50 per couple. Click here for more details.
This post was written by sherry
I’m not going to try to catch you up on The Family Research Council’s “Justice Sunday” event at Highview Baptist Church , described as a “megachurch,” in Louisville on April 24, at which Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist will simulcast to thousands of churches his argument that “The filibuster was once used to protect racial bias, and now it is being used against people of faith.” If you don’t know about this event, you can read their own publicity here and the NYTimes about it here.
I just want to let you know that there’s an interfaith protest rally at Douglass Boulevard Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), 2005 Douglass Boulevard, Louisville at 2 p.m. Central Presbyterian Church 318 West Kentucky Avenue (4th and Kentucky) Louisville at 2:30 p.m. Co-sponsors are the Clergy & Laity Network, The Clergy & Laity Network of Kentucky, and DriveDemocracy.org.
For more information, contact Richard Mitchell of the Central Kentucky Council for Peace and Justice.
This post was written by sherry
Dorothy M. Sutton ’s bio says she was born in Todd County, Kentucky during the Great Depression, but that would make her older than I am, and I find that hard to believe. Like my own siblings, she began her education in a one-room schoolhouse and she has been publishing poetry in national journals since her days at Georgetown College in the late 1950s.
Dorothy says,
perhaps the most interesting thing I’ve done besides teaching at EKU is teaching Irish lit. in Ireland in ‘96, and having one of my Darwin poems read by Richard Dawkins [Oxford U.] at the Royal Society in London. It’s the same society Issac Newton and Darwin himself belonged to.
You can read some of Dorothy’s Darwin poems yourself in her chapbook Startling Art: Darwin and Matisse (Finishing Line, 1999). In his foreword to this beautiful book, Guy Davenport said:
Mankind has been in a tragic fall all of this century. Our great hope is that the poets will guide us to when it will be “artfully fused together again.” Dorothy Sutton’s firm and careful eloquence makes it seem imperative that we keep winnowing the past for its enduring truths; that we keep entering rooms hung with paintings, poetry, and the other arts and sciences which speak revelations we’d thought “only lovers and nature could say.”
Here is “You Can Be Quite Deprived” from Startling Art:
You Can Be Quite Deprived
Before there was art,
it was something
that only lovers and nature could say.
You can be quite deprived
without realizing it.
One day, a painting, a strain
of music, a poem comes alive
in your eye, your ear, your hand,
whispers an immeasurably sad thing
so beautifully as to make you glad,
talks to you
in a quiet and steady hum,
blooms into a pungent jungle
of colors and sounds,
its resonant rhythms gently,
relentlessly stalking you
into the starkest, gloomiest
corners of your mind.
Admit it.
You were poor beyond measure
until you came into this room.
This post was written by sherry


