February 2014 FEATURES The Southwest Portland Post • 5 Community celebrates life of William Stafford at centennial gathering By Lee Braymen-Cleary The Southwest Portland Post On Jan. 15, Annie Bloom’s Books in Multnomah Village was one of the first to celebrate the centennial birthday of Oregon’s soft-spoken and highly ac- claimed poet, author and photographer, William Stafford. This winter thousands of other admirers from Portland to Bend to Roseburg, from Seattle to Tucson to New York and points in between and beyond will follow suit, offering po- etry readings, lectures, poetry writing classes, even television biographies like one Oregon Public Broadcasting aired on Jan. 16. You might say that since Stafford served as Oregon’s poet laureate for 17 years, we Oregonians have made him our poet, our champion of peace regard- less of his Midwestern background. The narrator of Stafford’s well known poem, “Traveling through the Dark,” speaks of a hard choice. He sets the stage in the first stanza: Traveling through the dark I found a deer Dead on the edge of the Wilson River road. It is usually best to roll them into the canyon: That road is narrow; to swerve might make more dead. Next he dramatically includes a softer approach in stanza three: My fingers touching her side brought me the reason— Her side was warm; her fawn lay there waiting, Alive, still, never to be born. Beside that mountain road I hesitated. And in stanza five leads a reader to a painful conclusion: I thought hard for us all—my only swerving-- Then pushed her [the deer] over the edge into the river. Sometimes dubbed the “Robert Frost of Oregon,” Stafford, though, also served as the 20th consultant to the Library of Congress in 1970 before the term “poet laureate” existed; thus his heart and mind belong to the nation. The Annie Bloom’s event honor- ing Stafford had its own flavor. The bookstore’s casual, intimate space was tinged with a spiritual—though not religious—calm. Several local poets including Anmarie Trimble, Tom Hogan, Barbara Drake and Susan des Freitas read from their own works as well and some of their long-time Stafford favorites such as “The Farm on the Great Plains,” “Voca- tion,” and “A Bird inside a Box.” It is well known that Stafford was a pacifist, that he lived out that philoso- phy during World War II as a conscien- tious objector. He worked on active duty then in church-sponsored camps, committing himself to forestry and soil conserva- tion, actions that may have sparked his life long reverence for nature and its preservation. Following that war and for the rest his life, Stafford rose most mornings as early as 3:00 a.m. to write and reflect on life, on the nature of war, and on seeking paths to peaceful conflict resolution. Mountain Park resident and birth- day celebrant Fraser Rasmussen is a Vietnam veteran who years ago found truths and consolation in one of Staf- ford’s 57 published works, “War has Two Losers.” Stafford wrote such lines as “Can injustice one way be corrected without the interim reaction that tries to impose injustice the other way?” and “A speech is something you say so as to distract attention from what you do say.” These lines demonstrate that soft- spoken Stafford was not a soft thinker but a keen viewer of the way of things are, even with those behind the vast political curtain. Stafford was born in Kansas on Jan. 17, 1914 into a close family inordinately fond of words. By the time he was a teenager during the Depression, his life was demanding. He worked to help pro- vide for his family and moved with them from place to place so his father, Earl, could find work. Perhaps those hard ex- periences contributed in part to his plain speech and wisdom, to his ability to separate what is from what is not important in life, and to make the hard choices. It has been said that Staf- ford sought a publisher for his poem “Traveling through the Dark” more than 30 times. But it has been anthologized many times now. Is it the harsh ending that put publishers off at first? How fortunate we are that some publisher had the courage, and that Stafford William Stafford as pictured on the cover of his book The was comfortable with the Way It Is: New & Selected Poems, Graywolf Press, 1998. notion “one can be different (Photo by Kim Stafford) and apart.” It was in 1948 that Stafford moved Anmarie Trimble, a poet and Portland to Oregon to join the Lewis and Clark State University instructor who offered College faculty. With the exception her works at Annie Bloom’s that night, of two years, he remained there until concurs with the notion of Stafford retirement in 1980. toughness. For 30 years he imparted his philoso- “I think Stafford is a master of every- phies and thoughts on literature and po- day sublime—and by sublime I mean etry to young thinkers and wordsmiths. the true Romantic notion,” said Trimble. If our world found Stafford a patient “But he doesn’t strike me as being man, a thoughtful and courageous man, idealistic about it. His poems appreci- his students found him more. ate how things are, and it’s his ability to He was open, kind and supportive. look squarely in the face of what is real Stafford was known for maxims like that I find so empathetic and generous.” “Your job is to find out what the world Trimble adopts Stafford’s notion that is trying to be” and “If you’re writing individuality is acceptable, more than and you get stuck, lower your standards acceptable, for she is taking her poetry and keep on going.” in different directions. If you are interested in attending In honor of Stafford’s birthday she more William Stafford celebratory read one of her poems, “In the Garden,” events, you can find a complete list of then strummed her guitar to accom- them at www.williamstafford.org. pany her second poem, “Lullaby.” Try a Little Television Internet Phone TENDERNESS ® Save 74% on Omaha Steaks TV prices start at: for 12 months for 12 months (regular price $32.99/mo.) The Family Value Combo 2 (5 oz.) Filet Mignons 2 (5 oz.) Top Sirloins 4 Boneless Chicken Breasts (1 lb. pkg.) 4 (4 oz.) Omaha Steaks Burgers 4 (3 oz.) Gourmet Jumbo Franks 4 Stuff ed Baked Potatoes 39 99 49381KWK $ Reg $ 154.00 | Now Only ... PLUS, 4 More Burgers FREE! to every shipping address in your order from this ad. ©2014 OCG | 20142 | Omaha Steaks, Inc. Limit 2 of each selection at these special prices. Your 4 (4 oz.) burgers will ship free per address and must ship with your order of $39 or more. Not valid with other off ers. Standard S&H will be applied per address. Expires 4/30/14. Call 1-800-803-7951 and ask for 49381KWK www.OmahaSteaks.com/mbos17 Call Today & Start Saving! SE HABLA ESPAÑOL 1-800-251-4936 Requires 24-month commitment and credit qualification. All prices, fees, packages, features, functionality and offers subject to change without notice.