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Tom Chaney: The catalpa's white week


Of writers and their bookstores: "The catalpa's white week . . . . " (with apologies to John Ciardi)
By Tom Chaney

What a strange spring this is! Unusual heat followed by freezation.

With memories of last April's ice storm fresh in mind, we held our breath through a warm March -- topping out at ninety.



Maple leaves emerged tiny and green.

Tickled into early bloom, the silly forsythia gave us gold for a while.

Easter hope crystallized in ice.

The maple trees again were stripped. Ice last April, cold this time.

Forsythian gold ended in black frost.

Shrubs in dooryards -- bleak and brown -- may not recover.

We waited -- a tardy spring finally arrived with belated normality.

I have been anxious about the town's old catalpa tree.

Shivering there in the park, confronting destruction by fire and man's depredation, its white week seemed delayed.

Relieved, we watched it slowly leave and hesitantly bloom.

Catalpas are not much use.

John Ciardi catches the essence of catalpa in his poem by that name.
That tree's a nuisance, really. Long before
the summer's out, its beans, long as a stick,
will start to shed. And every year one limb
cracks without falling off and hangs there dead.
But this week our tree again "has its arms full of its own flowering now."

A few days of bloom, then showers of white cascading down, swirling around the town's ruins. It stands -- despite fire and bulldozer -- trying to stem time's malediction.

We have the catalpa for
its one white pass . . .
all else, the world remembering what it was
in the seven days of its visible miracle.
What should I keep if averages were all?
Each year at The Bookstore we post the complete poem by John Ciardi in our window through which one has a full view of the catalpa in its one white pass.

Stop by.

Read the poem as the annual beauty across the way fades -- framed by civic fire and man's cruel ruin.
Tom Chaney can be found telling stories, smoking pipe-weed, and occasionally selling books at:
THE BOOKSTORE
Box 73 / 111 Water Street
Horse Cave, Kentucky 42749
270-786-3084
Email: Tom Chaney bookstore@scrtc.com Visit website: The Bookstore
The Catalpa -by- John Ciardi
The catalpa's white week is ending there
in its corner of my yard. It has its arms full
of its own flowering now, but the least air
spins off a petal and a breeze lets fall
whole coronations. There is not much more
of what this is. Is every gladness quick?
That tree's a nuisance, really. Long before
the summer's out, its beans, long as a stick,
will start to shed. And every year one limb
cracks without falling off and hangs there dead
till I get up and risk my neck to trim
what it knows how to lose but not to shed.
I keep it only for this one white pass.
The end of June's its garden; July, its Fall;
all else, the world remembering what it was
in the seven days of its visible miracle.
What should I keep if averages were all?

Related article:Click Here for related essay about the same Horse Cave Catalpa tree by Rev. Joey N. Welsh


This story was posted on 2007-06-03 06:34:04
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The White Week of the Horse Cave Catalpa Tree



2007-06-03 - US 31 at Main Street, Horse Cave, KY - Photo By Tom Chaney.
One of the most famous catalpas is this beautiful giant on US 31 at Main Street in Horse Cave. It's in full glory right now. Look closely, there's a six foot policeman under the tree, a good reference point to measure the height, extimated at 55-60 ft. The tree was the inspiration for two essays published today in ColumbiaMagazine.com.

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The Horse Cave Catalpa Tree: Do not cut me down



2007-06-03 - Horse Cave, KY - Photo By Tom Chaney.
May-or, May-or, Do Not Cut Me Down. While all others thou art felling, Do Not Cut Me Down: A banner was affixed to the famous old Horse Cave Main Street and US 31-W Catalpa Tree last week.. The White Week of the Catalpa Tree is being celebrated by a lot of folks this week, and, a trio of Catalpa fanciers, Tom Chaney, Rob Stout, and Robert Stone think it's worth a trip to Tom Chaney's Bookstore this week to see it. Tom Chaney writes, to explain the photo, "Cannot identify either party in the picture. They were taking the banner down. This was taken Friday afternoon late after someone had put up the sign. The tree is flanked by the ruins of the Owens Hotel, the Gorin Store and three houses burned or destroyed under the direction of the mayor. I suppose someone thought the tree might be next."

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