Admiring Audubon’s Carolina Parakeets by Rose McLarney Only audio permission has been secured for this poem. Please listen at GarrisonKeillor.com “Admiring Audubon’s Carolina Parakeets” by Rose McLarney from Forage. Penguin Books © 2019. Audio used with permission of the author. (buy now)
It's the birthday of the man who wrote, "Come live with me and be my love / And we will all the pleasures prove" — Christopher Marlowe (books by this author), born in Canterbury, England (1564). He's the author of plays such as The Jew of Malta (c. 1590) and Dr. Faustus (c. 1594), and he was one of the most prominent playwrights of his lifetime. He was a child prodigy and managed to get in to Corpus Christi College in Cambridge, even though he was the son of a shoemaker. His school records show that he was frequently absent from class because he was working for Queen Elizabeth's secret service. There is some evidence that he continued to work as a secret agent for the Queen for the rest of his life. In the 1590s, while he was producing his plays, church officials began to accuse him of espousing atheism, a charge that was punishable by torture. On May 18, 1593, a warrant was issued for his arrest, but he died in a fight over a bar bill before the police could find him.
It's the birthday of poet Deborah Digges (books by this author), born in Jefferson City, Missouri (1950), one of 10 children of a doctor and a nurse. She studied art in college, got married at the age of 19 to an Air Force pilot who went to Vietnam, and had a child when she was 20. It was then that she first began to write poetry. She said, "Kids keep you very close to experiences. You're kind of constantly thrown off track and that's good for a poet." She went back and finished college, and then went on to the Iowa Writers' Workshop. She taught at several universities and published four poetry collections: Vesper Sparrows (1986), Late in the Millennium (1989), Rough Music (1995), and Trapeze (2004) — all of them winning major prizes. She wrote two memoirs, Fugitive Spring (1989) and The Stardust Lounge: Stories from a Boy's Adolescence (2000). She died in April 2009, after falling from bleachers at a stadium. Police ruled it a suicide. Once, she and her husband had been out driving and saw a cow on the side of the road struggling to give birth. The calf was coming out the wrong way — and probably wouldn't have survived, so she and her husband jumped out of the car to help deliver the calf. She wrote a poem about it, "The Birthing," which appeared in The New Yorker magazine in October 2006. She wrote: "With his whole weight he pushed the calf back in the mother and grasped the other leg tucked up like a closed wing against the new one's shoulder. And found a way in the warm dark to bring both legs out into the world together. Then heaved and pulled, the cow arching her back, until a bull calf, in a whoosh of blood and water, came falling whole and still onto the meadow."
It's the birthday of one of the earliest self-help writers, Walter B. Pitkin (books by this author), born in Ypsilanti, Michigan (1878). His books include The Psychology of Happiness (1929) and also, Life Begins at Forty (1932). He wrote: "Life begins at forty. This is the revolutionary outcome of our New Era. Today it is half a truth. Tomorrow it will be an axiom."
It's the birthday of journalist Michael Pollan (books by this author), born on Long Island, New York (1955). He's the author of best-selling books about food: The Botany of Desire (2001), The Omnivore's Dilemma (2006), In Defense of Food (2008), Food Rules (2010), and Cooked: A Natural History of Transformation (2013). Recently he also wrote a book about psychedelic drugs called How to Change Your Mind (2018). His nutrition philosophy is: "Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants." Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.® |