The Red Letters
In ancient Rome, feast days were indicated on the calendar by red letters.
To my mind, all poetry and art serves as a reminder that every day we wake together beneath the sun is a red-letter day.
––Steven Ratiner
Tomorrow, in Arlington. . .
The seventh annual Red Letter LIVE! reading
Saturday, November 8th 2025
Robbins Library, Community Room, 700 Mass Ave, Arlington
1-2:30pm, (music beginning at 12:45pm)
with a reception to follow
Free, and all are welcome!
Featured poets:
Massachusetts’ first Poet Laureate
Regie Gibson
Ukrainian-American poet
Dzvinia Orlowsky &
Red Letter founder
Steven Ratiner
reading from his own work
and a new chapbook by Ted Kooser
benefiting the Red Letter Project
with a musical performance by bassist
Rick McLaughlin
More details in attached flyer.
A reception will follow the reading.
If you’re nearby, we’d love to see you there
Hosted by
Steven Ratiner and Jean Flanagan
Red Letter Poem #276
From the Yangtze to the Mississippi Delta
The acrosswater call of a stringborn song––
inspired by an untitled song by pipa-player WuMan
Li Bai,
As you wandered in exile, did you hear the acrosswater call of the pipa
being played by the slender fingers of a young girl on the other side of the Yangtze?
Was each of her precisely plucked strings a singing mountain?
Was each of her fingerslide and trill the sound of wind spilling down from the hills?
Did you to stop wandering for just a moment to live inside the shimmer of those 4 strings?—
Perhaps pour yourself cup after cup of rice wine until you were nightfall drunk?
I imagine you, Li Bai, a poet smiling, twirling, laughdancing among the falling
blossoms of dove trees— your shameless shadow offering sips to the sober moon.
Decades later, another exiled poet, Bai Juyi, would meet that same girl,
now a woman on that same river—she, too, also an exile from a former life.
Her fingers are now sorrowwise on the pipa’s strings as it sits like a tear in her lap.
Bai Juyi, offers wine, she plays the pipa and in her music the two of you connect across time—
Her music is the splatter of rain…it is the clatter of jumbled notes
Each falling like a pearl on a platter of jade.
Perhaps upon hearing her the both of you imagine the many women you’ve loved.
Perhaps each of you imagines himself to be an emperor forgetting a kingdom
longing to get lost in a woman’s hair—a woman’s hair as black as the insides
of wineshut eyelids.
I wonder if, in that moment, the both of you knew how a millennia from your now
the faint camphorsmoke of that song would be carried to a faraway land and river?
How it would conjure scenes like those you’ve seen along the Yangtze—
scenes of ancient grandfathers sweating and toiling beneath straw hats
their bent backs aching and arching over crops—their sundarkened arms
now made muscularfire from years of planting and chopping and clearing
mile after mile of sugarcane and cotton…
and that, like the two of you, when night finds them, they too will sit down
next to a moving body of slowwater––offer libations beneath that same moon
as in the distance, a stringborn song quivers in the flowercensored dark
—quivers like a woman’s black hair.
––Regie Gibson
There’s no way of explaining it: how can a state like Massachusetts, with perhaps the most storied literary tradition in the country, become one of the very last to establish the official position of Poet Laureate to serve our Commonwealth? If I were to list all of the acclaimed poets who’ve lived and worked here over the centuries, the small space allotted for my commentary would contain nothing else: from Anne Bradstreet and Phyllis Wheatley, through Emerson, Dickinson, Longfellow, Frost, Cummings, Bishop, Lowell, Plath––and enough contemporary luminaries to populate the grandest of anthologies. But fortunately, Governor Maura Healey recently corrected that oversight––and I could not imagine a more perfect selection with whom to inaugurate that position than Regie Gibson: impassioned poet, dynamic performer, musician, actor, educator, community activist.
Let me underscore that last item, a central concern within this poet’s life: community. All poets and artists are engaged in a complex experiment where the I pronoun is pivotal. Alone at the desk or in their studio, each is engaged in that most individual and inward of enterprises: mining the emotional and imaginative ore within the recesses of consciousness. But unlike some, Regie has demonstrated the deepest of commitments to We, that foundational understanding that we are inextricably woven in community, and that artists’ work ought to celebrate and invigorate those bonds. Regie is the author of Storms Beneath the Skin, and the creator of the Shakespeare Time-Traveling Speakeasy —a theatrical/musical/literary performance focusing on the enduring influence of William Shakespeare. He’s lectured and performed widely in the US, Cuba, and Europe. Among a long list of honors, Regie has received the Walker Scholarship from the Providence Fine Arts Work Center; multiple Mass Cultural Council Awards for poetry; the YMCA Writer’s Fellowship; the Brother Thomas Fellowship from the Boston Foundation and two Live Arts Boston (LAB) grants for the production of his first musical, The Juke: A Blues Bacchae. He has served as a consultant for the National Endowment for the Arts’ “How Art Works” initiative and the “Mere Distinction of Colour”—a permanent exhibit examining the legacy of slavery and the U.S. Constitution at President James Madison’s home in Montpelier, Virginia. He teaches at Clark University in Worcester and is an Assistant Professor at Berklee College of Music.
Today’s offering is the embodiment of that impulse toward artistic commonality. Some time back, Regie had the chance to work with renowned Chinese instrumentalist WuMan––she plays the pipa, an ancient lute-like stringed instrument, with the Silk Road ensemble. She later sent him a recording of a solo piece inspired by Regie’s poetry. Her enthusiasm fired up his own, and the poet composed the piece featured above. Thank goodness poetry is not hemmed in by political borders, or even the laws of time and space. Not only did Regie’s poem bridge the distance between their homes and their separate cultural backgrounds, but it opened a path back to 8th century China where its most famous poet, Li Bai (formerly known in the West as Li Po), could remind them both of the primal poetry and art-making impulse that unites them across millennia. I was even fortunate enough to see a video Regie created where poet and musician, in their separate studios, could at least seem to be performing this duet side by side. WuMan’s sometimes frenetic strums on the pipa are wonderfully echoed by Regie’s invented word-compounds and long, spirited lines. Rereading the poem, the mind can’t help but stop and linger on such marvelous phrases: the “acrosswater call” of the music; the musician’s fingers “sorrowwise on the pipa’s strings”; and, in a metaphor I think every poet will relate to, “the faint camphorsmoke of that song” rising into the sky of an attentive mind. This epistolary poem is not only directed to his literary forebears, its aim is to conjure the sort of muse that could have as easily visited Homer’s cottage as Li Bai’s––been as welcomed in WuMan’s living room as Regie’s, yours, and mine, accompanied perhaps by the scent of rice wine warming. In such consciousness, all the rivers by which civilization was created flow from one into another. At a time when the political discourse across the planet seems more determined to divide people than discover their shared purpose, the gift from artists like Regie is considerable and utterly necessary.
The Red Letters
* If you would like to receive these poems every Friday in your own in-box – or would like to write in with comments or submissions – send correspondence to:
steven.arlingtonlaureate@gmail.com
* To learn more about the origins of the Red Letter Project, check out an essay I wrote for Arrowsmith Magazine:
https://www.arrowsmithpress.com/community-of-voices
and the Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene
http://dougholder.blogspot.com
* For updates and announcements about Red Letter projects and poetry readings, please follow me on BlueSky
@stevenratiner.bsky.social
and on Twitter
@StevenRatiner
All Red Letter installments and videos will be archived at:
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