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**CLRA scripts are working drafts for recording sessions. Recorded
performances may vary due to editing for broadcast.**
Ina Coolbrith (1842-1928) | 4 Scripts
From Songs from the Golden Gate, 1895 The Spanish language is so deeply embedded in California culture we often don't think twice about the lovely metaphors it gives to us. Sometimes it takes the sensibility of a poet to show them to us. In her 1895 collection of poems Songs from the Golden Gate Ina Coolbrith included the sonnet "The Mariposa Lily," a gracious meditation upon the delicate wildflower so like a butterfly. Insect or blossom? Fragile fairy thing,A central figure in early California's literary world, in 1915, Ina Coolbrith organized a World Congress of Authors for the Panama-Pacific Exposition. For this service she was named California's first poet laureate.
From Songs of the Golden Gate, 1895 Most Californians probably know that the brilliant orange California poppy is our state flower. But many of us don't know that this familiar wildflower was immortalized in verse by our state's first poet laureate, Ina Coolbrith. With her family, ten-year old Coolbrith came to gold-rush California in the company of famous scout James P. Beckwourth. Eventually, she worked on the Overland Monthly with Bret Harte and Charles Warren Stoddard where she wrote poems like this lovely sonnet, "The California Poppy": Thy satin vesture richer is than loomsToday, Coolbrith's poetry finds few readers, but in her time she was a strong presence in California's literary community, an important mentor for Jack London and other writers.
From Songs of the Golden Gate, 1895 The insistent busyness of our fast-paced urban world can be more than overwhelming. So it's nice to know that the quiet allure of the California countryside can provide just the right sanctuary for leisurely dreaming. Ina Coolbrith, the first Poet Laureate of California, was enticed by Bay Area woodlands and in the poem "Siesta" described her own version of urban renewal in the branches of a tree. If I lie at ease in the cradling trees,Originally from Missouri, Ina Coolbrith came to California in a covered wagon when she was just ten years old. She grew up to become a vital member of the San Francisco literary community. –Contributed by Lauren Busto.
From Songs of the Golden Gate, 1895 For many writers, it's been the ethereal muse who provides inspiration. California poets, however, have often been inflammed by more earthly characters. Ramona, the title character of Helen Hunt Jackson's 1884 novel, moved California poet Ina Coolbrith to verse in her poem "Helen Hunt Jackson." There, with her dimpled, lifted hands,A true California writer, Ina Coolbrith arrived in the state at the young age of 10. Eventually she was dubbed the "loved, laurel-crowned poet of California" when in 1915 she was named California Poet Laureate. |
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© 2008 California Legacy Project, Santa Clara University English Department, Santa Clara University, 500 El Camino Real, Santa Clara, CA 95053. For more information: Terry Beers, 408 554 4335, or . |
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