Monday, June 9, 2008

First Anniversary

Tomorrow, Tuesday, June 10, is a sort of anniversary for me. Tomorrow marks my second appearance before the Alexandria City Council--my first since my official appointment as the City of Alexandria's Poet Laureate at a meeting last year. At that first meeting, I was competing for attention with the Recycling Squirrel from the local elementary school. This time, I've hesitated to look up who else shares the agenda. All I know is that I am #7, and there is a proclamation marking the first anniversary of my appointment.

Some might ask what I have done in the intervening months. In fact, if I were to tabulate the questions I've received since becoming the Poet Laureate, that question would top the list: what does a poet laureate do?

Initially, the office received a lot of attention. I was interviewed (TWICE!!) by the Washington Post, and also by local newspapers like The Gazette-Packet, and the local cable TV show, Maturity. I've appeared occasionally in articles and letters to the editor, with subscribers and/or reporters urging other communities to initiate similar positions. We are currently a small and select group, we poets laureate. Only about ten cities actually have us on their books.

But, setting fame aside, what I have been doing mostly is writing and reading poetry. There are apparently many groups out there who espouse the writing of poetry as a pastime. Of course, there are the schools, where that encouragement comes from the curriculum, but despite the usual wet blanket effect of classroom assignments, there is enthusiasm for poetry and surprise that an ordinary person (i.e. not someone in a classroom) might want to write it.

What it boils down to is that, in my thirteen-month tenure, I have (in no particular order) participated in, by means of either reading or writing poetry-- or both-- the following activities:
  • the rededication of the Freedmen's Cemetery (original poem)
  • the annual Alexandria Birthday Celebration

  • a Writers' Walking Workshop

  • a poetry workshop for developmentally disabled kids

  • poetry reading at a local nursing home

  • the rededication of T.C.Williams High School (original poem)

  • a poetry cafe at a Fairfax County high school

  • a poetry slam for an Alexandria elementary school

  • an elementary school 'opera' about the city's role in the Revolution, the Civil War, and Reconstruction

  • Stories in the Park--a library program for toddlers and their parents during the summer

  • two poetry workshops for the Hollin Hall Senior Center

  • The Alex Awards (original poem)

  • the Alexandria Library's Alexandria Authors evening

  • Poetry Month speaker at an Alexandria elementary school assembly

  • a poetry workshop with 2nd graders

  • an event at the German Embassy initiating a program of poetry cards in the Metro

  • a reading by the former poet laureate of Pennsylvania at a local university

  • a reading by our Virginia poet laureate, Carolyn Foronda, at GMU

  • the City's PTA Reflections contest, as judge and speaker at the awards ceremony

  • the City's elementary school poet laureate contest

  • an event sponsored by the Del Ray Artisans celebrating the arts

  • a panel discussion on Gerard Manley Hopkins and his work sponsored by a local church

  • an appearance at the National Convention of the League of American Penwomen, held here in Alexandria

  • Read Across America program at Hammond Middle School

  • the Yockadot Poetics Festival

  • a painting class at the Torpedo Factory...

Well, you get the idea. People call with all sorts of requests, and, if at all possible, I try to oblige them, and work toward my goal of promoting poetry within the city, as well as promoting the city through poetry. I write poetry for occasions, when asked--and read my work, sometimes whether or not I'm asked. All in all, it's been a fairly busy year. I have certainly not been bored, and I most certainly have been amazed at the interest exhibited by Alexandria's citizens, and have learned a great deal about my own community. I am constantly relating stories to my family and friends about inquiries I receive, and saying about the groups and people and events I've discovered, "Who knew?"

Obviously, the City of Alexandria did--or else they would not have gone to the trouble of seeking out a Poet Laureate for the city.

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