RANGELEY — On Sunday, Aug. 6, lovers of poetry will gather at 6 p.m. at the Ecopelagicon nature store, 7 Pond St., to honor poet Hugh Ogden, formerly of Poets’ Island, Rangeley (1937-2006). Sidney Wade of Rangeley and Gainesville, Florida, will read from her work. The event is free to all. Light refreshments will be served.
Members of the Ogden family will begin the evening by reading poems written by their father. Community members are invited to read a poem of Ogden’s or one of their own that attends to what meant so much to Ogden: the beauty and mystery of the world, especially Rangeley, and peace among all living things. A sign-up sheet will be available just before the start of the evening, since time will be limited.
During the second part of the evening, poet Sidney Wade will read. She is the author of five volumes of poetry, including “Stroke,” “Empty Sleeves,” and, most recently, “Straits & Narrows.” Her sixth book of poetry, “Bird Book,” forthcoming in September, has received rave reviews. Her publisher, Atelier26, describes “Bird Book” as “a universal song of praise to the mysteries and intricacies of the animal world that surrounds us, and a wide-awake hymn, by a master lyricist, to the delights and surprises of our common language.”
Poet Randall Mann describes Wade as “both the supreme heir to Wallace Stevens and one of the most original poets in our language.” Wade received a Ph.D. in English from the University of Houston, and has served as president of the Association of Writers & Writing Programs. A Fulbright scholar and translator of Turkish poetry, she is professor emerita at the University of Florida. A summer and winter resident of Rangeley since 1963, she also writes of the people and places of western Maine. To read her poetry, visit http://www.sidneywade.com
The wisdom of the natural world links the poetry of Sidney Wade and Hugh Ogden. In “Fir on the Oquossoc Shore,” Ogden wrote: “Year after year I reach straight/ up, my trunk and voice grounded/ in incremental rhythms evergreen.”
FMI: 864-3421, (myocom@gmu.edu) or 864-2771.
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