This post also appears on the Bryant Park blog.
For me, poetry in the park usually brings to mind small, informal and intimate gatherings of people. Maybe a microphone is involved, but probably not necessary, because there is more listening, and definitely no cell phones. As far back as the late 1960s, poetry readings were staged in parks throughout the city as part of the
Academy of American Poets program Poets in the Parks. Not surprisingly, American modernist poet
Marianne Moore drew an huge crowd with her 1968 Bryant Park appearance. I don't know what works she read that day, but I like to imagine her poem "
An Octopus" was one of them, with all of its incredible imagery and detail. And, I don't know what her voice sounded like, but I like to imagine it too, as full of body and authority as her words.
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Pulitzer Prize winning poet Ms. Marianne Moore at the podium. Behind her is NYC Mayor John V. Linsday, and Mr. August Heckscher, Administrtor of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs.
Photo: copyright Academy of American Poets |
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Photo: copyright Academy of American Poets |
The following year, the poetry season started out with this reading. I don't recognize the poet, but if you do (or even better, if you were there), please
email me (Anne).
* 6/10/2011 update: Thanks to poet Mary Austin Speaker, for identifying activist and poet Muriel Rukeyser in the photo below.
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Photo: NYC Department of Parks |
The park has a strong connection with poetry, starting with its namesake, American romantic poet and newspaper editor William Cullen Bryant, who is also memorialized on the upper terrace with a bronze
monument. In 1884 the park's name was changed from Reservoir Square to Bryant Park in his honor. According to
some, he was the first American writer of verse to accomplish international fame.
A verse from Bryant's poem "A Summer Ramble," first published in 1826 is perfect for bringing in the poetry season and the warm weather:
But now a joy too deep for sound,
A peace no other season knows,
Hushes the heavens and wraps the ground,
The blessing of supreme repose