Getting sealed in a time capsule

Hi everyone,

I have been given a 9″x12″ envelope that will be included in a time capsule to be buried on April 30 during the Birthplace of Route 66 Plaza Dedication Ceremony. At 4:00 that afternoon I’ll stand where the Colonial Hotel stood 100 years ago and read my poem to commemorate the occasion. Then, on the spot where the new highway was named, a time capsule will be sealed and not reopened for 100 years. I am honored to be given this opportunity to greet those who will examine its contents a century from now and two centuries since Route 66 first attracted the interest of our nation. I have until April 27 to decide what to put in my envelope. This picture of Sandy and me for sure!

What else should I include? My Route 66 poems for sure. I’m thinking about adding “My Book!” from Somebody Catch My Homework. That’s the one sandblasted on the Burton Barr Library in Phoenix. What else? I can only squeeze so much into a 9×12 envelope. Sticking in a bio probably won’t mean much to people 100 years ago. Everything will be different by then. I might include two other favorite pictures.

I think I’ll write a brief letter to folks of the future. Not sure yet. What would you say to someone who will be reading your words 100 years from now? Hmm. This will be my third time to be sealed in a time capsule. The first is located at David Harrison Elementary School. In that one I included the speech I gave for the grand opening of the school. The second is in Phelps Grove Park and includes a copy of Cave Detectives, a book about a Springfield cave (Riverbluff Cave). I need to get seriously back to the gym.

I have nothing to say today

Hi everyone,

This is one of those mornings when I have nothing to say. Any right thinking person would say, “I have nothing. See you tomorrow.” But a writer writes. A blog isn’t exactly like, “Dear Diary” or jotting notes in a journal. It’s a blank space. Blank spaces need words on them. And so I respond to my need (obsession?) to put something down.

This is a rabbit hole in front of our son’s house in Canon Beach, Oregon. I was looking for the picture of me holding up a coffee mug like I’m toasting you to put here but ran across the hole and went with it instead. I’ve always been intrigued by holes. I wrote a poem once about holes for the book, The Purchase of Small Secrets.

A Hole in the Ground

What creature
tilled the grass
to tunnel here?

A hole in the ground
always makes me wonder.

Is this one empty,
choked with dirt
that trickles through the roof
and rattles down abandoned halls?

Or is something there,
heart pounding,
sniffing me
down in the dark?

A hole in the ground
always makes me wonder.

(c) 2005 David L. Harrison

Later on I wrote a book about creatures that live underground, The Dirt Book. I like trees. I wrote a book about trees, A Tree is a Community. I like insects. I wrote a book about insects, Poems About Creeping Things. I don’t like midges. I wrote a book about them called Now You See Them Now You Don’t. I don’t like chiggers. I wrote a poem about them. That one became the namesake for Bryon Biggers Band, has been performed many times, and recorded on a CD

A Sad Tale

Nothing frightened Bryon Biggers,
Not even lions, not even tiggers,
He spent his life exploring this land,
Knew these hills like the back of his hand.

Striding down the path he came
Always looking for bigger game
But in the end he met his match
In a lowly Ozarks chigger patch.

Byron laughed, “Ha ha!” cried he,
“No bug could be the death of me!”
But halfway through that patch of chiggers
And it was over for Byron Biggers.

He clawed those bites till his dying breath,
Sighing, “I’ve scratched myself to death.
Someday they’ll find me here alone
With chiggers gnawing on my bones.”

He died the way he lived – brave,
And few have seen poor Byron’s grave.
He’s buried high on a lonely hill
Where to this day he itches still.

Here lie the bones of Byron Biggers,
Eaten alive by hungry chiggers,
So if you see poor Byron twitch,
Scratch his bones ‘cause they still itch.

(c) 1998 David L. Harrison

Looks like I wound up making a point for others who write or think about it, that we often start with something we like (or don’t like) and take off from there. Might be a poem. Might be a song. Might be a collection of related poems. Might be a story. Might be a subject that stays with you and reoccurs in your writing, a go-to theme or subject. But first, you have to put some words down in that blank space.

If the wine is sour…

Hi everyone,

Last week I decided it was time to get a new story going. I’ve been talking lately about the need for more children’s stories. I wrote an article about it for a reading journal. I’m been reminded of the power of stories in young lives by some recent fan letters about books I wrote decades ago. Got another one three days ago, from a woman who loved The Huffin Puff Express when her dad read it to her 39 years ago and is now reading it to young ones in her family. But I didn’t have an idea for a new story. What to do?

I had a thought. Many of my poems are small stories. It’s my nature. MARY JO FRESCH and I have a title coming out later this year that features 101 of my poems. I would scroll through them in search of a story-starter for a new picture book. When I finished, I had three candidates. The most promising was about a dancing pig. “Hot diggity-dig, I see a dancing pig, he isn’t very big, hot diggity-dig.” I seem to have an affinity for feisty pigs a la Piggy Wiglet and the Great Adventure. I started roughing in a story inspired by the hot diggity-dig pig but stopped after a bit. It didn’t feel right to pull from material that will soon be in the new book. I started over by making a list of words that rhymed with tail, hoping that approach might produce a different telling about a dancing pig. But I would still be plagiarizing myself.

One of the words in the tail-rhyming list was mail. A totally new idea. I went whistling off down a new road about a boy who finds mysterious messages in his mailbox. Great! Except that I really didn’t have a convincing beginning, kids probably don’t pay much attention to their mailbox, and the ending was, frankly, weak. I started over, switching from mailbox to phone (technology don’t you know) improved on the first and last of the story, salvaged most of the middle pages, and what did I have? A boring, weak, trite, who-would-ever-want-to-read-this story. I showed it to Sandy. If she reads this, I think she will agree with what I am saying. Over the course of a week I’d gone from a dancing pig to a boy receiving strange messages on his cellphone, and a beginning that telegraphed the ending.

As a sweaty, wined-up Michelangelo, played by Charlton Heston, epiphanized on a problem he was having with the Sistine Chapel, “If the wine is sour, pour it out.” Simple advice that writers as well as artists should take to heart. I have symbolically poured the story out. It’s time to write one that tastes sweeter.

I wish you warm

Hi everyone,

During the coming days I wish you well as the expected storm hits in the area where you live. If you lose power, I hope you can find ways to stay comfortable. Looks like it will take quite some time for the snows and ice to melt. I’m sure that internet outages will be widespread. In case we lose ours, today I may work on a few posts in advance and hope I will have opportunities to get them released as the days tick by.

I hate winter, always have. I’ve posted this poem before but it comes back to me today. It’s in my autobiographical collection, Connecting Dots (2004) When I was 8, my family moved from Ajo, Arizona back to Springfield in the winter of 1945 so my dad and a partner could start a block company. That December ranked as the 9th coldest up to that time since the weather bureau started keeping records in 1895. The average low nightly temperature was 17.5 degrees. The only place we could find to rent was little more than a shack located on the Roberson farm on Oak Grove Lane, a mile from the school I would attend. No electricity. Privy out back. We heated with coal in a small potbelly stove. If the fire went out, the temperature inside dropped to roughly what it was outside. Water left in a glass beside my bed sometimes froze to ice during the night. Mom papered the windows with newspapers to help block the cold air coming in around the casings and on windy nights the loose linoleum floor covering made spooky noises flapping up and down at the threshold of the only door. We slept with our clothes on and all available sheets and blankets piled on our beds. One morning walking to school my hands became frostbitten. The janitor ran cold water over them and rubbed them until the pain subsided enough for me to go to class. Here’s the poem.

Welcome to Missouri

Cold surrounds my warm spot.
Rolling over
is like touching snow.
I think of snow angels.

With extra clothes
piled on the bed,
I think of chalk outlines.
“This is where we found
the frozen body.”

I miss my friends.
I hate this house,
the coal stove
with its belly full
of cold ashes.

Dad says soon
we’ll find something better.

A prisoner inside
my own outline,
I wait for morning.


(c) 2004, David L. Harrison, all rights reserved

			

Need to update my website

Hi everyone,

I was just looking at my website (https://www.davidlharrison.com/). I don’t go there everyday. Mostly I send my host, KATHY TEMEAN, a note when something needs to be changed. Have you been there lately? I used to have a guest registry, which was great for keeping track of visitors to the site. Like a lot of “improvements” to technology, the registry was removed from the site at some point. This picture has nothing to do with anything. I just like to throw it in now and then. It was taken in Stone Chapel at Drury University when I was Missouri Poet Laureate as well as Drury Poet Laureate (which I still am). Where was I?

Oh yes, the need to update my website. There aren’t many tweaks to be made but I like to be accurate. Few people care in the least how many books I’ve published, how many awards they’ve received, etc. But I do. I’ve always been a counter. (Ask my old friend, SANDY ASHER. She kids me about that.) For one thing, I need to ask Kathy to remove the crawling banner across the top of the page that says I’m Missouri Poet Laureate. That title now belongs to my successor, JUSTIN HAMM.

I think I need to edit my autobio page. It implies that I still visit lots of schools, as I did every year for decades. I’m going on 89 now. Many of the educators who invite authors to speak in their schools are a third of my age. I understand. Their loss though. I’m really very good with kids.

One thing I’ve given up on is keeping track of how many times something of mine has been reprinted in anthologies. I know it’s over 200 and I’m going to let it go at that. I like to count but chasing after titles that I’m in is a lot of work and I’m content with an estimate. I still love those translations though. When Kathy was creating my website, I wish I had known to have a category for online interviews, podcasts, videos, Zoom visits, and such. I’ve done tons of those over the years. Same with education books that I have co-authored. The titles are all there but they are listed according to publisher rather than in a stand-alone category. I’m proud of those collaborations and am coming up on #20. That’s sort of a career within a career and not many have done it. But again, that probably falls into the who-cares folder. I’ll let you know when the tweaks are tweaked.