How Poetry Gets Us Through – a review of The Required Dance by W.E. Butts

pitchfork, rocks, plants

W.E. Butts, The Required Dance (1st Edition) (Buy this book)
Review by Deb Ewing

In our age of immediacy, it’s hard to fathom how and why the work of people still living will measure up to the poets of our classrooms–Yeats, Longfellow, Shakespeare’s Sonnets.

Joy Harjo is still America’s poet laureate; she shared a space with A.B. Spellman at the National Book Festival in 2016 when I showed up in my DC AS F*CK tee shirt asking him to sign Things I Must Have Known.

I share my birthday with Sylvia Plath and Dylan Thomas. Sylvia Plath’s now a bot on Twitter. Dylan Thomas needs to up his game.

Poets are historians. They preserve a less comfortable side of life, in case we remember it differently later on. This is what moved me to record myself reading works by W.E. Butts from his collection The Required Dance.

These poems read like an old photo album. Here are someone’s uncles (and nobody’s quite sure which one’s which.) We see their rumpled suits and off-kilter hats while they smile grudgingly for the photographer. Look at the background, though, where the women are shuffled off to the side making meatloaf sandwiches. The vehicles, the absence of traffic lights; this is an America that gave birth to the one we live in now.

Wally was, in his day, the Poet Laureate of New Hampshire. His piece What We Did Wrong, 1956 uses language which is not acceptable today in public format, but which is still spoken in workshops and parking lots. He gives us a clear window through which to view and ask ourselves: Are these people bigots? If not the poet, the poem?

I feel something less pointed, more like a a cold chill through a cracked window; something that, if it’s not stopped up, runs a risk of spreading viruses through the household. It’s uncomfortable. It’s important enough to preserve. Let our future generations look more closely at what was.

my Pitchfork Studio, Annandale, Virginia 2020 photo by debora Ewing

I dropped my phone on a pitchfork, which shattered the screen. To be fair, I’m not sure the phone actually hit the pitchfork, but it makes a better story that way. My flexible phone tripod was twisted around the weathered wooden handle, but that handle snapped as I tried to make an angle adjustment. I moved the tripod to a sturdier shovel and made this video for you.

My friend Gary Mark Bernstein says poetry is meaningless unless it interacts with the senses, mind and emotions of a human being, in which case it is the most important thing in the world.

Further reading:

The Required Dance by W.E. Butts is available through Igneus Press – click here to add it to your cart. Let it play with your emotions.

Sir Patrick Stewart whiled away the early days of his pandemic lockdown by reading us Shakespeare’s Sonnets. When we got really lucky, he’d retake or share musings.

debnation.com: debora Ewing is a writer, artist, oracle operating out of Annandale, Virginia, US. Read more of her musings and short fiction here, and catch spontaneous nonsense on Twitter or Instagram by following @DebsValidation.

Speak Up! at the Walnut Street Cafe

Elizabeth Gorden McKim, featured reader at the Speak Up at Walnut Street Cafe, was also sharing news of her new book from Leapfrog Press, Lovers in the Free Fall.

Only in today’s post-COVID world could you just walk into a virtual space that just starting existing and yet (one feels) you have always belonged to. This is how I felt last Wednesday, Sep 30, when I logged into the Speak Up at Walnut Street Cafe Zoom meeting room broadcast out of West Lynn, MA. Except I was lounging on my deck in Bellingham, WA.

Featured reader Eliz McKim shares a connection with my father, founder and late publisher of Igneus Press. He always told me I needed to ‘get with’ Eliz, and so when I saw her feature and book release advertised on Facebook, I ‘got with’ Eliz. She moved me, made me cry, laugh; transported me to a place in my soul where I hadn’t been since sitting on the porch with my Dad back in June before he died. THE ORAL TRADITION!!! The SPOKEN WORD!!!

David Somerset, who hosted the reading graciously and Zoom-ed effortlessly, asked all who showed up whether they’d like to read. So I joined in, honour of honours, to read poetry in the presence of Eliz. Peter Urkowitz did a live action sketch of features and open mic readers.

Live-action sketch by Peter Urkowitz of the featured readers Nancy Bulger and Elizabeth Gorden McKim at the Walnut St. Cafe Speak Up Wednesday night poetry reading.

I chatted privately with other readers, such as Robert Whelan and Susan Demarest; Susan sent me her poem, ‘Golden Plover,’ and we traded emails. I mean, getting this much action in month eight of stay-at-home quarantine is really a boon! I want to say a big thank you to the Speak Up crowd, and I really look forward to getting over to West Lynn, MA, one day for a cup of coffee and bit of the Vincent Ferrini aura still floatin’ around that neck of the United States…

Nancy Bulger and Elizabeth Gordon Mckim were cofeatures at the Wed 9/30/2020 Speakup! Eliz released her new book from Leapfrog Press, Lovers in the Free Fall. Speak Up is a spoken word open mic a the Walnut Street Cafe in West Lynn. They welcome poets, storytellers, comedians, activist, artists, musicians and others who want to be heard in a supportive community environment. Each Wednesday they welcome a featured performer at approximately 8:30. Before and after the main feature they have five minute slots available for sign up.