Sacramento Poet Laureate Bob Stanley penned this poem dedicated to James in 2011. Stanley has a new book Miracle Shine and he will be the guest of honor at a book signing on May 27th (7:30pm) at the Sacramento Poetry Center.
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
In celebration if Jim’s birthday (he would have been 74 today), here’s an early unpublished poem from the archive. You can also hear Jim reading the poem (recorded in 1968 in Marshalltown, Iowa). Listen.
A Letter to One of My Poetry Students
Sure
poetry is
bigger than
you
Simply
so
is life
But go after it
try for more
Who put you in charge
anyway?
Grab a hold
Let it
come; let
it come
It’s there
Open
your eyes
Look out
blink once or
twice
concentrate
touch
yourself
Feel
something different
for a change
Surprise yourself
Work at a
solution
Plant something and
help it
grow
Can you hear
me in
there?
I'll love you, if
you'll love
me
Jump aboard
It’s
great from
here
Let’s swim in
cold, clear
water
Build a fire
Eat clams
drink
wine
Let the ghosts go
this time
out
And leave the rainbows
where they
belong
Laugh a little —
blossom
Thinking
before sleep —
warm
in each other’s
arms
How the whole
world could
love like
this
But for God’s
sake,
quit crying about
how rotten it
is
for
you
You’ve too much
to lose this
way
And so little to
gain —
even
if
you
never
write
another
poem
for
as
long
as
you
live
James Humphrey
Marshalltown, Iowa, 1968
©James Humphrey Trust
A Letter to One of My Poetry Students
poetry is
bigger than
you
so
is life
anyway?
Let it
come; let
it come
Open
your eyes
twice
yourself
something different
for a change
Work at a
solution
help it
grow
me in
there?
you'll love
me
It’s
great from
here
cold, clear
water
Eat clams
drink
wine
this time
out
where they
belong
blossom
before sleep —
warm
in each other’s
arms
world could
love like
this
sake,
quit crying about
how rotten it
is
for
you
to lose this
way
gain —
Marshalltown, Iowa, 1968
©James Humphrey Trust
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Each time I venture into the world of creative endeavor to share my husband's legacy, I feel elated and renewed. This time I would be sharing several appropriate poems I chose from Naked, and three of Jim's earlier works (In Pursuit of Honour, Paying the Price and The Athlete) with young adults from the Sacramento County Youth Detention Facility. I brought 21 copies of each of the titles to be added to a cheery new library space both male and female juveniles could borrow from on a weekly basis. Eleven young women came single-file into the setting of plastic chairs, while I faced them in a padded swivel chair, a bare table beside me with Jim's books selectively displayed offering me comfort and likewise offering kindness and friendship to my audience. During the 40 minutes of talking serious biography and reading what I sensed the most moving, life-sustaining poems from Jim's imagination, I heard not a pin drop. Afterward, there were sensitive questions and even signs of personal caring. An hour later, twelve young men from maximum security were ushered into the same area for a 40-minute session and again I shared Jim's life and poetry with these sensitive incarcerated human beings. When the final boy was strip-searched on exiting, I felt weak all over, but gratified that only God knows how, if, or when any minuscule piece of life or love I imparted will make a positive difference in those precious teenage lives.
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