Friday, May 14, 2010

more poems/stinson's doors


David Estey - Stinson's Doors


Stinson's Doors

"The city has given the owners of the former Stinson Seafoods sardine
packing plant three months to tear it down"
- Walter Griffin, Bangor Daily News, Sept. 15, 2009

Checking on the building the morning
after the announcement in the BDN,
the facade looks suspicious,
yellows of the eyes in the sliding door

looking sideways as if
on guard for the demolition crew
covering its ears as if it doesn't want
to hear the order to tear it down.

Place of small fish sorting and canning
lingering on the Belfast waterfront
haunted by generations of cut hands,
reeking aprons, foundation now crumbling,

yet refreshed with a coat of paint
by an artist with a love for the overlooked,
windows newly glowing, doors
bright green again with the promise

of men and women arriving for the morning shift.


for David Estey

Carl Little




Eighty-Five

"Shoo," she says and waves me away
like a big fly, though she's been happy to talk,
her lip sticked mouth taking me word by word
through her life: born in this town, never left,
widowed once, divorced twice, one daughter --
now dead -- and forty years in the fish factory.

She and the girls loved every minute of it,
racing -- piece work, you know. Gossip swooping
through the long room like a flock of starlings
while their hands, separate animals, filled
hundreds of tins day after day. Some days
they'd lift a big icy fish from the crate,

lay it on the boiler to steam, then eat it
with their fingers. There was never anything
so fresh. She fiddles with a button on her robe,
her nails roughly painted to match her mouth,
and, no, she doesn't need help with her shampoo,
washing her creases, soaking her swollen feet.

She looks as though she never could get out
of that chair, but somehow it's easy
to see how she would have stood on a corner
in the South End, her feet in pumps, one hip
cocked, talking to a girlfriend and seeming
not to notice the men from the shipyard loose
on a Saturday night in their clean white shirts.

Elizabeth Tibbetts



Herring Run

Push upstream, water clear brown
blue-green river grass waves them on
through tight walled fish weirs
we crowd in excitement spill
out of round fendered cars
chrome winking fathers and uncles drive
like grizzlies after salmon, grandmothers
with long skirts wrapped around their thighs
babies on rolled legs splash
wade in a swarm of moonlight bodies
tickling legs, slippery stones underfoot
scramble, flip fins escape, fall back
get lost. Caught Nemasket, released
Neponset, some find home; spawn.
Nets and bare hands, catch catch catch
shovel fish; creel abundance.
Hot oil, dredge sizzle fry; feast.
Scrape silver scales fcrom your fingers
peel back the growth rings of each shiny plate
gobbled up in the parking lot
gypsy festival of Coleman stoves
every year when the herring run.

Valerie Lawson



MULLIGAN

Up in Damariscotta Mills
is a fisherman
eyes blue and wet as gurry
from the Thunderbird
that helps him trap rundowns
and passing tourists
alewives for a quarter
five for a dollar
if you're local
if you're not
but willing to linger
he'll talk, knit tales
of the leather board mill torn down
his smokehouse put up quick
by the fish runs
dips them black from the Sheepscot
smokes them to copper, I say
smokes them til done, he says
strung on fish sticks symmetrical
gills lined up like buttons, I say
mouths made for the sticks, he says
laughs and hands the wine around
packed down in brine
dried 800 to the barrel
shipped to the Caribbeans
love 'em! he says
why do you think there's so many?
alewives or Caribbeans, I say
eat one you'll conceive, he says
laughs and hands the wine around
smoked alewives half his life
the other half in Boston
M.I.T. at the Old Howard
fell in love with Ann Corio
"You think you see more
than you actually do" he says
laughs and hands the wine around

Phyllis Merriam
Dec., 1976

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

poems for the plant closing


Ellen Sander photo

The Last Sardine Plant Is Closing

It is afternoon.
Classical trumpets yellow
out of a German radio.
There is a football game,
or about to be,
and I can't remember
if it's on the color set downstairs
that sometimes smokes,
or on the tiny black-and-white
with a screwdriver for the volume.

I am four
and for the first and last time
that I can recall, my father
unkeys the tin,
cranes out to me
something tarnished siver,
dripping oil and so tasty.

I don't know now
if I'd like them anymore.
I've never tried.

Carter Ruff


Poor Prospects in Prospect Harbor

Outside the Stinson plant mute
and motionless stands the giant
seafarer clad in a slicker
holding a tin of Beach Cliff sardines
just like dad used to peel open
after coming home late from
peddling fruits and vegetables
in the streets of Manhattan.

Inside it's all noise and clatter
the women's flashing hands dart
attack schools of silvery cans
conveyed by in a ceaseless stream
paced by buzzers and bells
packing the herring to bed
like too many siblings in cramped
quarters to their final sleep.

Nancy's not ready to retire
just yet at seventy
after forty four fast years
"I could work another ten
I don't know anything else
don't want nothing with computers
don't have one, don't want to learn"
Three daughters and a sister
have been on the same line
paid by the number of cans
you could make 19 bucks an hour

good work found on the Maine coast
not much else to speak of
in Hancock County which once
boasted its own Cannery Row-
my dog eared Bantam paperback
that cost my old man a quarter
Steinbeck's picaresque story
clanked out on his Remington
twice a historical oddity.

The corporate buzz at Bumble Bee
is shuttering this last one
while Ernie fixes everything
takes his cat home a free can
"I'm saving lives here."

Lela's fifty four years had
started when scissors cut fish
before machines offed their heads.
She was looking forward to
celebrating her eightieth
birthday there in two more years.
"I thought this would be here for
generations to come."

The final break is over.
In three hours fifteen minutes
Lulu and Alma packed
five thousand two hundred
and twenty eight sharp cans
some kind of record
for the end of the line.

Michael Bell

Friday, April 2, 2010

bernadette mayer poem

SARDINES

is a yellow, red, orange, black & green
word. I got sardines at the dollar store
where everything except sardines is more
than a dollar, for sixty cents, as they should be
my father used to take sardine sandwiches to work
perhaps therefore, I love sardines. when people
used to talk about the subway, they'd say:
we were packed like sardines which sends a message:
small, cheap, tightly packed, anchovies for the poor
or you too can be both colorful & inexpensive as
a really snappy, tiny bright blue convertible
in which you can enjoy the good things about
feeling like a sardine but maybe you'd rather
be a striped bass or be a manatee with me
or a grand whale, forgetful of nothing even
being so big, the ocean's CEO, you'll take home
a giant amount of cash when the ocean goes bust
so you can share it even with the downtrodden
sardines who get packed in cans in Thailand
& shipped to the family dollar store for Bernadette


Bernadette Mayer

Thursday, March 18, 2010

two sardine poems

Where Are the Stockton Sardines?
(for all who worked at the Stockton sardine factory, 1917)

Folks remember. Wives, mothers, grannies even,
used to sit around the woodstove after supper,
telling about the days of sardines,
how they earned almost a decent day's pay
for "crammin' those silver slipperies
into those damned little tins."
Long hours of lopping off heads, then tails, while
laughing at somebody's bawdy joke or juicy gossip.
But oh those stinging cuts, then chopped off
digits, blood pouring down conveyor belts.
"Not complainin', mind ya," said Maude Brown
or Flora Ellis. "Long as sardines were runnin',
there was money for food at the company store."
But all the lotion, salves, and fancy perfumes,
even bath salts, couldn't drown the stench.

Carolyn Page



Song of Sardines

Returning
We spawn silver
Weaving Whales
We sing dark shadows
Back to the light of day

Joshua O"Donnell

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

herring riddle

Kate Barnes has sent us this herring riddle, from Popular Rhymes of Scotland 1858, also Chapbooks of the Eighteenth Century - 1882, and used by Tolkein in The Lord of the Rings:

Although it's cold, no clothes I wear,
frost and snow I do not fear;
I have no use for hose or shoes
although I travel far and near.
All I eat comes free to me
I need no cider, ale, or sack;
I nothing buy, or sell, or lack.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

sardines from Morocco

Sardines


Swimming against
Atlantic currents
free and disoriented,
eyes freshly powdered
with tons of blocks of ice
to abate the stench
of broken hands
and dreams shoved
in every bay
with crooked masts
they made the catch
to enrich the reckless
brains of steel...

Downstream from
Maine,
wealth migrated
to Casablanca
and the lush
shores of Morocco
sardines and people
saw tides
rise above their necks
and subside
leaving them naked,
as they were
before the sardines
migrated to Maine...


Said Leghlid

Friday, January 22, 2010

Sardine drops in Eastport



On New Year's Eve a giant sardine dropped at midnight in Eastport, opening the official Year of the Sardine!

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Herring Croon

Herring Croon

words and music c 1965 Gordon Bok on his cd Herrings in the Bay
last verse c 2009 Gordon Bok from the 2010 cd Other Eyes

Where do you go, little herring,
what do you see, tail and fin?
"Blue and green, cold and dark, seaweed growing high
hills a hundred fathom deep where the dead men lie
Dogfish eyes and mackerels' eyes and they hunger after me
net or weir, I don't care,
catch me if you can."

Where do you go, little boat,
tar and timber, plank and sail?
"I go to green bays, lift them under me
cold, gray, combing seas come to bury me
rocky jaws and stony claws and they hunger after me
harbors cold, deep and bold, wish that I could see."

What do you see, fisherman,
poor old sailor, blood and bone?
"Mackerel skies, mares' tails, reef and furl and steer
poor haul, and hungry days, rotten line and gear
snow-wind and winter gales and oh, they hunger after me
net or weir, I don't care, catch you if I can."

Where do you go, little herring,
what do you see, tail and fin?
"Blue and green, cold and dark, seaweed growing high
hills a hundred fathom deep where the fishermen lie
dogfish eyes and mackerels' eyes and oh, they hunger after me
net or weir, I don't care,
catch me if you can."

Where have you gone, little herring;
what have you seen, tail and fin?
"Cold and black, dead and dark, bottom torn away,
draggers staving everywhere, drug this garden dry,
pair-trawl, midwater-trawl- God, they hungered after me!
Tore my home to hell and gone
there's no more place for me."

Friday, August 28, 2009

sardine events


Herring Fishing in Castine, Maine
Orrin Dickey Collection
Belfast Historical Society
(see first comment for photo text)


We are hoping to put together a series of events for the summer of 2010. These events would celebrate the sardine, the sardine fishery, and the people and communities whose lives were so interconnected with the sardine fishery. We hope to have events taking place at the sites of sardine canneries, but would like to see the events branch out to libraries, historical societies, galleries, schools...We hope to include poets, musicians, dancers, painters, sculptors and other artists as well as oral history projects, showings of historical photographs, and first person accounts from those who were involved in the sardine industry. We are looking for people, ideas, locations...

Belfast is our epicenter, and the birthplace of our vision. We want to use the postmodern ruin of the sardine plant there, connected to the pedestrian bridge.We can see a sardine procession crossing the bridge, banners on the lightposts, poetry, song and dance all on site. We hope for artists collaborating with the sardine theme. Possibly bringing the sardine carrier Jacob Pike over from the Penobscot Marine Museum in Searsport to tie up in Belfast. There are many possibilities, and we would like to hear your ideas.

In Bass Harbor we hope to work with the Bass Harbor Library and the Tremont Historical Society to have a showing of Eleanor Mayo's photos of women workers at the sardine plant, connected to a reading of work by her cousin Ruth Moore (selections from The Weir and The Night Charlie Tended Weir) as well as readings, music, and art -

In Port Clyde we hope to work with the Herring Gut Learning Center and the Marshall Point Lighthouse and Museum to present a night of readings from our sardine literature and connected historical displays. The Marshall Point Museum has a display
featuring information on the night that the Port Clyde sardine plant burned down, the boiler exploding, sending sardine can shrapnel raining onto the town.

We hope to have other events in Lubec, Prospect Harbor, Rockland... but we want to involve people, and we want to hear your ideas. You can leave ideas, comments, suggestions here at this page, or you can email us:
Gary Lawless chimfarm@gwi.net
Karin Spitfire kspit@gwi.net
We really welcome input!

Current recommendations:
We are really excited about Joe Upton's beautiful book Amaretto, about his time in Penobscot Bay with his 60 year old sardine carrier Amaretto. Beautifully told, this book is now out of print. Get it from your library or buy a used copy.

Gordon Bok's CD Herrings in the Bay, especially the song Herring Croon.

Ruth Moore's novel The Weir. Her father was the last weir fisherman on Gott's Island, and this novel reflects that life.

Loretta Krupinski's show at the Penobscot Marine Museum in Searsport (only on view until early September) A Voyage through Time,Coastal Marine Fishing 1850-1940. She has painted from old historical photos of Maine Coast fishing village scenes, and each painting is displayed next to the photo from which she has painted (adding a few details - a cat, the Rockland breakwater) This work will be presented next summer as a new book from Down East Books: Looking Astern - An Artist's View of Maine's Historic Working Waterfront (from Belfast to Bath) and we hope to include a booksigning event at one of our sardine events.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

new poems

K L Robyn
sent this poem:

THE BIRTH OF HERRING

When the Sun
first saw Oceania
he was smitten.
And she shone
back to him
such gold and silvery
ripples of delight
that he knew
she felt the same.
He made love to her
that morning
and again at the end
of the day.

Later, he came again
as a woman
and spilled a moonshower
so soft and rich
it brought her
ecstasy and comfort
all at once.

It was not long before
Oceania opened her
wide legs and let loose
ten thousand herring.

This is how it is when
you make love to me.
All those fishes
stirring and turning
in my ocean
this way and that
just waiting to flood
the seas.

K L Robyn
09 August 09



and Alan Casline sent this one:

Sardine

sardine small swam with the net

Old Salty says "Nobody baits a hook that small"

We'll build a soul factory
nothing smaller than a soul
mesh so tiny
it'll squeeze
love out like tooth paste

sardine small swam with the waste

for the protection of all beings
the axletrees are taken from the wagon
poets gather on the swale
there was a rainbow
out over the emerald sea

sardine small swam with the directions

only wishful thinking
a taste for fish
How they come back
How they come back
a few lifetimes left alone

sardine small swam with the beauty

Alan Casline
August 4, 2009

Friday, July 31, 2009

sardine songs, herring hymns


(sardines by Kimberly Callas)

This blog will feature a group of poems and visuals collected for a "Herring Hymnal", celebrating sardines and herring and the human cultures of Maine with which they have interacted. These poems will be a part of a series of events in Maine coastal communities, at the sites of former sardine factories/canneries, organized by Karin Spitfire and Gary Lawless.


Sardine Manifesto

I Herring
Atlantic, Alewife, Blueback, Shad
Feed everybody
Striper, Seal, Shorebird, Cornfields, Croatians
I Herring
swim
cross-Atlantic
ubiquitous Cod crashed

Spawn
uncountable volumes
Pacific Herring Fell
School
shimmering speedy millions
Atlantic Salmon collapsed
shift
turn en masse
Red Herring, questioned, endangered
So Too You
I Herring
quicksilver
am the change left in your pocket


Karin Spitfire



(sardine factory, Belfast)

May we be blessed by
the spirits of these fish
swimming through our world
from the world above
from the world below
rising from the depths of the future
blessing the depths of our past

Gary Lawless


waited all night

in the dark they
gather in the cove
nets, in the water,
nets, in the morning,
torn and
gone, all gone.

were there ever any fish?
was there ever any sunrise?
did we dream water full of silver our
pockets full of gold?

Gary Lawless



falling into the soft
sea of darkness
slowly, slowly to bed
wrap me in a blanket of fish
shining in the water like stars
like light from a million years
below some vast ocean of sky
where there is nothing
nothing to hold on to
flashes, and then
gone

Gary Lawless



Song of the Sardines

Returning
We spawn silver
Weaving whales
We sing dark shadows
Back to the light of day.

Joshua O'Donnell




In the sardine factory

There can be no other labor
like the slitting of dead fish into fillets,
no scissors so sharp
they miss and cut off chunks
of fingers and sometimes
missing altogether
you gash your partner at the bloody table,
missing pieces of flesh
with scales and fins.

You smile sardines.
The crease these scissors have worn
moves into your palm like a lifeline.
And more, your apron full of the stench
of fish, the torsos
packed into oil and canned,
bears your body home, smothered
in scales of pearls.

What you cannot see is your mother
and hers, and all the other women in town,
waiting like fishwives
for the tide to turn into weirs
turning into hogsheads of silver herring.
In my dream I see you bending at your sink,
not knowing where or who you are,
becoming part of some awful whale,
cold-blooded, you grind
fish bones into fertilizer.

You do not see yourself
as someone you scarcely know,
working your shift, day after day,
among the hundreds of women
who rise each morning, automatic,
to the factory whistle.

Kathleen Lignell Ellis





from: Amelia, Mrs. Brooks of My Old Childhood

Part III
Great lady of Sardines and
earth and blood of
Blueberryin' years, Clam Factory
years who brought up
children without help, a hopeless
drunk husband beating you in
his futility when the country was smashed.
Amelia, lady of poverty and no hope,
saint of this earth if ever there
is a saint and if not then you
are what was always instilled in us
as what a saint is, woman in the
retinas of God's eyes for your simple courage
and great accomplishment with no money
and from work that kills young, yet
you still live, Amelia, and here we are.

I came to you the day I
went into the army
where sardines stuck
to your hands I came and said
goodbye in the fish smell.

You were beautiful, a
beautiful woman and
I yearned to say goodbye
to a mother.

You worked the Sardine Factories
to feed your children.

No fish contributes
more to the human
race as Herring.

We sneak death again,
kill...take
herring from the sea our
boat circling, the Cannery
boats lifting the sardines
aboard into their holds
through hoses.
A seine around
fish in moon black.

Draw string of net
pulled to close the
net bottom or the
fish sucked through the hose ...

To the Cannery as
soon as fish are
aboard, Herring
through a hose removing
their scales for imitation Pearl
essence on the Market Place
and Cosmetics.

part IV

Amelia, the fish have less
chance than you had
except your death would
be more subtle, you died
from it, Amelia, died from exhausting
survival, your life wearing
out your life.

... no machine can pack sardines
like human hands, Amelia...

Sitting in draughty cold
snipping off dead fish heads and tails
with scissors.

Yet death always a sneak, here
is food to eat but it will decompose
if we do not know that herring who have
just eaten must be allowed to swim it off until
they digest whatever was in them as you catch them...
or whatever they were eating avenges them as
bacteria planktonic form ...

And once caught out of the fresh salt
protecting ocean if the fish are taken
distance of more than four hours they spoil,
Amelia... life is death all spoiled.

Part V

Amelia, did you go north
in the few years of the Winter Fisheries
to Eastport, Lubec, Maine, freezing
nets of two and one half inch mesh
sunk to the bottom in twenty
fathoms of water, fish catch
frozen solid on the market as "boaters".

Amelia, sitting in frigid
cold icy sea water splashing
and wind finding you through
building cracks.

The cooked fish come down
conveyor belts for you to
pick up without breaking them
and put them into cans of
oil or mustard, fast!
You were fast all day
or out of work ...

to feed your children.

Leo Connellan




The Sardine Diaries : Day One

What do I know from sardines?

Smelly little fish cut up and crammed in cans.

I've lived without them for years.

Despite their magical Omega-3 who needs them?

You bring them to work and everyone's mad at you.

"What's that horrible smell? Don't put that can in the garbage!"

And the can itself - there's bound to be bleeding fingers.

But what am I talking? I've seen the exhibit in the Maine State Museum,
the mannequin of the woman with all her fingers bandaged.
Now she would know of bloody fingers - and sons drowned at sea.

Kate tells me she cut sardines growing up in Lubec
one summer in the '70s, although she was never
good at it and made only fifty dollars.

The whole town would hustle down when the whistle
blew to let them know the boats were in.

We talk of how the world has changed so fast
and I remember the nurses smoking in the hospital in 1979
when I had my appendix out.

Now we have cell phones and don't have to worry
spelling appendix because the computer
does it for you.

And we don't really know much about sardines although we do
know there aren't any factories left working in Eastport or Lubec,
yet the cans are still on the shelves at Shop 'N Save.

I wonder do the old women still listen for the whistle?


David Moreau



The Sardine Diaries: Day 2


My wife and I used to go camping a lot
before children. We'd buy hot dogs and beans,
Dinty Moore Beef Stew, Hershey Bars, red wine
and sardines.

We'd stay at Seawall on Mt. Desert Island
and go hiking on the St. Saveur trail along
Somes Sound or Champlain Mountain
or Pretty Marsh. Then we'd settle in for
a Scrabble game at the camp site.

We didn't mind sardines and crackers for supper.
It was cheap and filling and we were young.
Stinky breath never stopped us from hitting
the sleeping bag early.


The Sardine Diaries: Day Three


Why should we be the ones
Whose heads and tails are cut off?
Who are packed into cans?
Who are scorned and mocked?

Why should you say
Packed like Sardines
When we never wanted that?

What you don't know about us
Would fill an ocean.



The Sardine Diaries: Day 4


How much we don't know in this world. Yet,
it doesn't stop the letters in the paper complaining
"Why won't they let us drill for oil in Alaska?"
My wife points out no one ever thinks
about a gallon of gas and the earth's
enormous task in forming it.

It's the same for sardines.
I know from Wikipedia they're pilchard,
like herring, only four inches or less
and in Portugal there's a holiday, St. Anthony's,
where they grill sardines.
But that's not much of a treat for the sardines.
I don't know from Adam how they live
or spawn or what they feel.

There's a quick way to be thought weird -
start talking about what sardines feel.
Human beings turn up their noses at that.
We don't want to admit that anything can feel -
except us - then we'd be responsible
for how we treat the ants and crows and trees -
and sardines. Our brothers and sisters the sardines!


David Moreau




SARDINES

I suppose only a fishing village
would have a game called Sardines.
I never remember playing it on the mainland
Now, these years later
the object is unclear to me
someone was it, of course
and the others ran and hid
crowding in together
like a can of Sardines
in an old bait bin
long rubbed clean
by the storage of longwarps
or in a lobster car henhouse
scrubbed white by lobster claws and salt
of course I remember the object now
it was to get close to one of
the four Jackson girls
who though they did not admit it
sometimes watched us skinnydipping
at Two Pond Beach
and we had to pay them back somehow
it was a twilight game
played while the swallows
gathered the last insects
and the sea air smelt closer and heavier
this was long before frisbee
before modern inventions
took away dark places
it was a kindly game
not known on shore
one could imagine
children playing it
on the isles
in the Sea of Greece
we were only 2,000 years old then.

Kendall Merriam



Song of the Sardine
Robert Service

A fat man sat in an orchestra stall and his cheeks were wet with tears,
As he gazed on the primadonna tall, whom he hadn't seen in years.
"Oh don't you remember" he murmured low "that spring in Montparnasse,
When hand in hand we used to go to our nightly singing class.
Ah me those days so gay and glad, so full of hope and cheer.
And that little supper that we had of tinned sardines and beer.
When you looked so like a little queen with your proud and haughty air,
That I took from the box the last sardine and I twined it in your hair."

Alas I am only a stockbroker now while you are high and great,
The laurels of fame adorn your brow while on you Princes wait.
And as I sit so sadly here and list to your thrilling tones
You cannot remember I sadly fear if my name is Smith or Jones.
Yet oh those days of long ago, when I had scarce a sou
And as my bitter tears down flow I think again of you.
And once again I seem to see that mad of sweet sixteen
Within whose tresses tenderly I twined that bright sardine.

Oh that sardine in your hair, I can see it there,
As I took it from its box, and I twined it in your locks
Silver sardine in your hair, like a jewel rich and rare,
Oh that little silver sardine in your hair.

Robert Service