Piece image

Cheryl-Anne Millsap: The poetry of Carl Sandburg

From: Spokane Public Radio
Length: 03:00

The poetry of Carl Sandburg, read from a big, well-thumbed volume that belonged to my grandfather, was my ticket to the wider world. Read the full description.

Cam_portrait_copy_small When my grandfather read Sandburg to me I was transported. I was carried away.

I can still hear the sound of my grandfather’s deep voice, the way it vibrated and rumbled through me as I sat tucked under his arm, my head resting on his chest.

I walked down dark, gritty, dangerous city streets, a babble of voices all around me, tall skyscrapers towering overhead. Crowds pushed me down sidewalks and the air was full of interesting smells and sounds.

I stood on the windswept prairie, a hot wind blowing my hair across my face. I rode the rails across a landscape as flat and empty as anything can be, through tall grass that dipped and waved and bowed with the wind.

I saw the world through a poet’s eyes. I heard it in the voice of a man with the heart of a poet.

To hear the full audio, sign up for a free PRX account or log in.

More from Spokane Public Radio

Caption: Produced by Spokane Public Radio

Movies 101 Special: Movies That Made Your Year (29:30)
From: Spokane Public Radio

Just in time for awards show season...SPR's Movies 101 film reviewers give their picks for the 10 best movies of 2012.
Piece image

Movies That Make Your Holidays (28:59)
From: Spokane Public Radio

SPR's Movies 101 film reviewers give their picks for their top holiday rentals, traditional and not-so-traditional.
Caption: Cheryl-Anne Millsap

Cheryl-Anne Millsap N-P-R-E-M testimonial (01:36)
From: Spokane Public Radio

Writer Cheryl-Anne Millsap explains how every morning she goes from R-E-M to N-P-R-E-M.
Caption: Performer Nellie McKay

Nellie McKay 'You're Good To Us' (:58)
From: Spokane Public Radio

Short song with public radio testimonial from performer Nellie McKay.
Caption: Clark Fork River, Missoula MT, Credit: Cheryl-Anne Millsap

Winter: Where the Wild Rivers Run ~ Cheryl-Anne Millsap (04:00)
From: Spokane Public Radio

We crossed the Clark Fork River on our way out of Missoula, Montana. The sun was just coming up and the sky along the horizon was fading, changing from a deep indigo to ...
Caption: Amtrak Empire Builder stops for passengers in Spokane, WA, Credit: Photo by Cheryl-Anne Millsap

Riding the Empire Builder | Cheryl-Anne Millsap (04:00)
From: Spokane Public Radio

The train going east leaves Spokane just after 1 a.m. and winds its way behind downtown buildings and along the edge of the city. The scene from my wide window is a view I ...
Caption: Lake McDonald, Glacier National Park, Credit: Cheryl-Anne Millsap

Winter in Glacier National Park | Cheryl-Anne Millsap (04:08)
From: Spokane Public Radio

We drove into the west entrance of Glacier National Park late in the clear February morning and our tires crunched into the frozen crust of last week’s snowfall. The cold, ...
Piece image

Cheryl-Anne Millsap: Valentine's Day (04:00)
From: Spokane Public Radio

The author reminds her loved ones that the valentines keep coming all year long.
Piece image

Cheryl-Anne Millsap: The Carol of the Bells (04:01)
From: Spokane Public Radio

The Salvation Army bell ringer, bundled up to stay warm in weather that has turned brutal overnight, stands just beside the front door of the busy store. Ringing the bell, ...
Piece image

Cheryl-Anne Millsap: Eyes Wide Open (03:25)
From: Spokane Public Radio

A lot goes on in the darkest part of the night. You miss it if you’re sleeping.

Piece Description

When my grandfather read Sandburg to me I was transported. I was carried away.

I can still hear the sound of my grandfather’s deep voice, the way it vibrated and rumbled through me as I sat tucked under his arm, my head resting on his chest.

I walked down dark, gritty, dangerous city streets, a babble of voices all around me, tall skyscrapers towering overhead. Crowds pushed me down sidewalks and the air was full of interesting smells and sounds.

I stood on the windswept prairie, a hot wind blowing my hair across my face. I rode the rails across a landscape as flat and empty as anything can be, through tall grass that dipped and waved and bowed with the wind.

I saw the world through a poet’s eyes. I heard it in the voice of a man with the heart of a poet.

1 Comment Atom Feed

User image

Sandburg Is SpoCAN Here

For years Cheryl-Anne Millsap has been broadcasting from the Inland Northwest. It’s good to see a hefty bunch of her recent pieces for Spokane Public Radio have been uploaded onto PRX—and good to hear her clear voice again.

In this drop-in, her personal essay about her grandfather has the sentimental warmth of a fireside chat. Her piece is titled “The Poetry of Carl Sandburg,” but it’s more a tribute to her bookish grandpa than to the author of “Chicago Poems.” Millsap begins, “My grandfather was a good man,” and she returns to this line as a refrain and her central theme.

It turns out that one of the main reasons Millsap’s granddad was a good man is that he “gave [Millsap] a good start,” i.e., he gave her Sandburg’s “poetry and steel mills and train cars and ordinary people.” It would have been excellent if Millsap had quoted a few lines from one or two of Sandburg’s poems. Failing this, she leaves us to make the connection between poems like “Fog” or “Gone” and her own plainspoken writing style, as well as her own down-home vision of ordinary life.

Who knows what kind of writer Millsap might have become if her grandpa had read poems to her by T. S. Eliot or Wallace Stevens? Let’s leave that question unanswered for now—and enjoy her words from a place that could hardly be called a “hog butcher for the world,” eastern Washington state’s Lilac City!

Transcript

Cheryl-Anne Millsap
Staff writer

My grandfather was a good man. He worked hard, more than 40 years in the steel mills of the Deep South. He pulled long shifts, double shifts and overtime.

He was a man with many interests, but not a lot of formal education. The Second World War and then a family to support may have interrupted his education, but he knew how to learn whatever it was he wanted to know.

He read books. He was never without a book.

My grandfather always had a book in his pocket, or curled into the domed top of his metal lunchbox. He kept a book by the bed and on the table by his favorite reading chair.

There was usually a book in the car, the latest prize from a trip to the used book store downtown.

He was never without something to read, and whenever I could manage it, he wasn’t far away from me.

At night, after dinner and before I was sent away to bed by my child-...
Read the full transcript

Intro and Outro

INTRO:

OUTRO:

Cheryl-Anne Millsap writes for The Spokesman-Review in Spokane, WA. She is the author of "Home Planet: A Life in Four Seasons" and can be reached at catmillsap@gmail.com