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        <description>On this theme-based show, host Brian Dillon reads and comments on poems from the ancient world to the present. Topics include Unlived Lives, Inanimate Objects, Swimming, Advice, and Unrequited love, among many others.</description>
        <lastBuildDate>Mon, 27 Apr 2026 18:31:21 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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                <title>Poems for Company</title>
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                <itunes:subtitle>On this theme-based show, host Brian Dillon reads and comments on poems from the ancient world to the present. Topics include Unlived Lives, Inanimate Objects, Swimming, Advice, and Unrequited love, among many others.</itunes:subtitle>
        <itunes:author>KMUN</itunes:author>
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        <itunes:summary>On this theme-based show, host Brian Dillon reads and comments on poems from the ancient world to the present. Topics include Unlived Lives, Inanimate Objects, Swimming, Advice, and Unrequited love, among many others.</itunes:summary>
        <itunes:owner>
            <itunes:name>KMUN</itunes:name>
            <itunes:email>podcasts@kmun.org</itunes:email>
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                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - April 27, 2026]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 27 Apr 2026 18:31:21 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
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                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2438534</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-april-27-2026</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Wake Up: Modern Aubades”: Traditionally, aubades are lyrics announcing the arrival of dawn all too soon for lovers who want the night to be prolonged.  The twentieth-century poems featured here take some liberties with that tradition.  After an excerpt from John Donne’s “The Sun Rising” (1633), Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill, “Aubade,” from Pharaoh’s Daughter (Wake Forest U. Press, 1993; Pharaoh’s Daughter by Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill | WFU Press ).  Philip Larkin, “Aubade,” from Collected Poems (Farrar Straus and Giroux, 2001). The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
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                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Wake Up: Modern Aubades”: Traditionally, aubades are lyrics announcing the arrival of dawn all too soon for lovers who want the night to be prolonged.  The twentieth-century poems featured here take some liberties with that tradition.  After an excerpt from John Donne’s “The Sun Rising” (1633), Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill, “Aubade,” from Pharaoh’s Daughter (Wake Forest U. Press, 1993; Pharaoh’s Daughter by Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill | WFU Press ).  Philip Larkin, “Aubade,” from Collected Poems (Farrar Straus and Giroux, 2001). The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
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                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - April 27, 2026]]>
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                    <![CDATA[“Wake Up: Modern Aubades”: Traditionally, aubades are lyrics announcing the arrival of dawn all too soon for lovers who want the night to be prolonged.  The twentieth-century poems featured here take some liberties with that tradition.  After an excerpt from John Donne’s “The Sun Rising” (1633), Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill, “Aubade,” from Pharaoh’s Daughter (Wake Forest U. Press, 1993; Pharaoh’s Daughter by Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill | WFU Press ).  Philip Larkin, “Aubade,” from Collected Poems (Farrar Straus and Giroux, 2001). The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
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                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Wake Up: Modern Aubades”: Traditionally, aubades are lyrics announcing the arrival of dawn all too soon for lovers who want the night to be prolonged.  The twentieth-century poems featured here take some liberties with that tradition.  After an excerpt from John Donne’s “The Sun Rising” (1633), Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill, “Aubade,” from Pharaoh’s Daughter (Wake Forest U. Press, 1993; Pharaoh’s Daughter by Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill | WFU Press ).  Philip Larkin, “Aubade,” from Collected Poems (Farrar Straus and Giroux, 2001). The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
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                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - March 16th, 2026]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2026 17:00:18 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
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                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2393710</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-march-16th-2026</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Neighbors”: When you recall the places where you lived, do you inevitably reflect on who else was in close proximity?  This episode presents three distinct ways of thinking about one’s neighbors.  Robert Frost, “Mending Wall.”  John Heywood, “A Quiet Neighbour.”  Robert Wrigley, “Praise Bob,” from The True Account of Myself as a Bird (Penguin Books, 2022), used with the kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Neighbors”: When you recall the places where you lived, do you inevitably reflect on who else was in close proximity?  This episode presents three distinct ways of thinking about one’s neighbors.  Robert Frost, “Mending Wall.”  John Heywood, “A Quiet Neighbour.”  Robert Wrigley, “Praise Bob,” from The True Account of Myself as a Bird (Penguin Books, 2022), used with the kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
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                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - March 16th, 2026]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
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                    <![CDATA[“Neighbors”: When you recall the places where you lived, do you inevitably reflect on who else was in close proximity?  This episode presents three distinct ways of thinking about one’s neighbors.  Robert Frost, “Mending Wall.”  John Heywood, “A Quiet Neighbour.”  Robert Wrigley, “Praise Bob,” from The True Account of Myself as a Bird (Penguin Books, 2022), used with the kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
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                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Neighbors”: When you recall the places where you lived, do you inevitably reflect on who else was in close proximity?  This episode presents three distinct ways of thinking about one’s neighbors.  Robert Frost, “Mending Wall.”  John Heywood, “A Quiet Neighbour.”  Robert Wrigley, “Praise Bob,” from The True Account of Myself as a Bird (Penguin Books, 2022), used with the kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - February 23rd, 2026]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 23 Feb 2026 17:30:37 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
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                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2369796</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-february-23rd-2026</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Revised Bible Stories”: Poets give voice to characters who are silent in the Bible, and they speculate on what the Bible left out.  They allow us to imagine less conventional roles for certain characters, as these three poems suggest.  Molly Twomey, “Noah’s Wife,” from Raised Among Vultures, and used by kind permission of the author and The Gallery Press, 2022 (www.gallerypress.com).  J. Estanislao Lopez, “Alternate Ending: The Escape of Jephthah’s Daughter,” from We Borrowed Gentleness (Alice James Books, 2022).  Brian Doyle, “The Second Letter of Lazarus to His Sisters,” from A Shimmer of Something, copyright by Brian Doyle (Liturgical Press, Collegeville, Minnesota, 2014), and...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Revised Bible Stories”: Poets give voice to characters who are silent in the Bible, and they speculate on what the Bible left out.  They allow us to imagine less conventional roles for certain characters, as these three poems suggest.  Molly Twomey, “Noah’s Wife,” from Raised Among Vultures, and used by kind permission of the author and The Gallery Press, 2022 (www.gallerypress.com).  J. Estanislao Lopez, “Alternate Ending: The Escape of Jephthah’s Daughter,” from We Borrowed Gentleness (Alice James Books, 2022).  Brian Doyle, “The Second Letter of Lazarus to His Sisters,” from A Shimmer of Something, copyright by Brian Doyle (Liturgical Press, Collegeville, Minnesota, 2014), and...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - February 23rd, 2026]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Revised Bible Stories”: Poets give voice to characters who are silent in the Bible, and they speculate on what the Bible left out.  They allow us to imagine less conventional roles for certain characters, as these three poems suggest.  Molly Twomey, “Noah’s Wife,” from Raised Among Vultures, and used by kind permission of the author and The Gallery Press, 2022 (www.gallerypress.com).  J. Estanislao Lopez, “Alternate Ending: The Escape of Jephthah’s Daughter,” from We Borrowed Gentleness (Alice James Books, 2022).  Brian Doyle, “The Second Letter of Lazarus to His Sisters,” from A Shimmer of Something, copyright by Brian Doyle (Liturgical Press, Collegeville, Minnesota, 2014), and...]]>
                </content:encoded>
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                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Revised Bible Stories”: Poets give voice to characters who are silent in the Bible, and they speculate on what the Bible left out.  They allow us to imagine less conventional roles for certain characters, as these three poems suggest.  Molly Twomey, “Noah’s Wife,” from Raised Among Vultures, and used by kind permission of the author and The Gallery Press, 2022 (www.gallerypress.com).  J. Estanislao Lopez, “Alternate Ending: The Escape of Jephthah’s Daughter,” from We Borrowed Gentleness (Alice James Books, 2022).  Brian Doyle, “The Second Letter of Lazarus to His Sisters,” from A Shimmer of Something, copyright by Brian Doyle (Liturgical Press, Collegeville, Minnesota, 2014), and...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - January 26th, 2026]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 26 Jan 2026 17:30:45 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2335487</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-january-26th-2026</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Parents Viewed Unconventionally”: Three contemporary female poets comment on one or more parents in somewhat unexpected ways.  Molly Twomey, “The Drop Off,” from Raised Among Vultures, and used by kind permission of the author and The Gallery Press, 2022 (www.gallerypress.com).  Kathleen Flenniken, “Married Love,” from Post Romantic, used by kind permission of the author (U. of Washington Press, 2020).  Ada Limon, “Joint Custody,” from The Hurting Kind (Milkweed, 2022).  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Parents Viewed Unconventionally”: Three contemporary female poets comment on one or more parents in somewhat unexpected ways.  Molly Twomey, “The Drop Off,” from Raised Among Vultures, and used by kind permission of the author and The Gallery Press, 2022 (www.gallerypress.com).  Kathleen Flenniken, “Married Love,” from Post Romantic, used by kind permission of the author (U. of Washington Press, 2020).  Ada Limon, “Joint Custody,” from The Hurting Kind (Milkweed, 2022).  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - January 26th, 2026]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Parents Viewed Unconventionally”: Three contemporary female poets comment on one or more parents in somewhat unexpected ways.  Molly Twomey, “The Drop Off,” from Raised Among Vultures, and used by kind permission of the author and The Gallery Press, 2022 (www.gallerypress.com).  Kathleen Flenniken, “Married Love,” from Post Romantic, used by kind permission of the author (U. of Washington Press, 2020).  Ada Limon, “Joint Custody,” from The Hurting Kind (Milkweed, 2022).  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </content:encoded>
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                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Parents Viewed Unconventionally”: Three contemporary female poets comment on one or more parents in somewhat unexpected ways.  Molly Twomey, “The Drop Off,” from Raised Among Vultures, and used by kind permission of the author and The Gallery Press, 2022 (www.gallerypress.com).  Kathleen Flenniken, “Married Love,” from Post Romantic, used by kind permission of the author (U. of Washington Press, 2020).  Ada Limon, “Joint Custody,” from The Hurting Kind (Milkweed, 2022).  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:28:59</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - December 22nd, 2025]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 22 Dec 2025 17:30:42 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2301638</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-december-22nd-2025</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Friendship”: Three poems consider the shared activities, the camaraderie, the tensions, and the goofiness of friendships.  Ada Limon, “Blowing on the Wheel,” from The Hurting Kind (Milkweed, 2022).  Delmore Schwartz, “Do the Others Speak of Me Mockingly, Maliciously?” from Selected Poems, copyright 1959 by Delmore Schwartz.  Used by permission of New Directions Publishing Corp.  Sharon Olds, “Best Friends,” from The Dead and the Living (Knopf, 1991), and used with the kind permission of the poet.  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Friendship”: Three poems consider the shared activities, the camaraderie, the tensions, and the goofiness of friendships.  Ada Limon, “Blowing on the Wheel,” from The Hurting Kind (Milkweed, 2022).  Delmore Schwartz, “Do the Others Speak of Me Mockingly, Maliciously?” from Selected Poems, copyright 1959 by Delmore Schwartz.  Used by permission of New Directions Publishing Corp.  Sharon Olds, “Best Friends,” from The Dead and the Living (Knopf, 1991), and used with the kind permission of the poet.  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - December 22nd, 2025]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Friendship”: Three poems consider the shared activities, the camaraderie, the tensions, and the goofiness of friendships.  Ada Limon, “Blowing on the Wheel,” from The Hurting Kind (Milkweed, 2022).  Delmore Schwartz, “Do the Others Speak of Me Mockingly, Maliciously?” from Selected Poems, copyright 1959 by Delmore Schwartz.  Used by permission of New Directions Publishing Corp.  Sharon Olds, “Best Friends,” from The Dead and the Living (Knopf, 1991), and used with the kind permission of the poet.  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/2301638/c1e-wmxkh35x21c58wgm-0v76rqzwirn4-fmx1ax.mp3" length="69540048"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Friendship”: Three poems consider the shared activities, the camaraderie, the tensions, and the goofiness of friendships.  Ada Limon, “Blowing on the Wheel,” from The Hurting Kind (Milkweed, 2022).  Delmore Schwartz, “Do the Others Speak of Me Mockingly, Maliciously?” from Selected Poems, copyright 1959 by Delmore Schwartz.  Used by permission of New Directions Publishing Corp.  Sharon Olds, “Best Friends,” from The Dead and the Living (Knopf, 1991), and used with the kind permission of the poet.  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:28:59</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - November 24th, 2025]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 24 Nov 2025 17:30:13 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2236849</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-november-24th-2025</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Narrative Poems”: These poems offer at least an outline of a story, with a plot and some time references.  Like many successful stories, substantial relevant questions may remain unanswered, requiring some speculation on our part.  John Greenleaf Whittier, “Telling the Bees.”  Edwin Arlington Robinson, “Mr. Flood’s Party.”  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Narrative Poems”: These poems offer at least an outline of a story, with a plot and some time references.  Like many successful stories, substantial relevant questions may remain unanswered, requiring some speculation on our part.  John Greenleaf Whittier, “Telling the Bees.”  Edwin Arlington Robinson, “Mr. Flood’s Party.”  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - November 24th, 2025]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Narrative Poems”: These poems offer at least an outline of a story, with a plot and some time references.  Like many successful stories, substantial relevant questions may remain unanswered, requiring some speculation on our part.  John Greenleaf Whittier, “Telling the Bees.”  Edwin Arlington Robinson, “Mr. Flood’s Party.”  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/2236849/c1e-wmxkh3pmo4b58wgm-jpngdqd3f57j-gddq15.mp3" length="69573484"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
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                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Narrative Poems”: These poems offer at least an outline of a story, with a plot and some time references.  Like many successful stories, substantial relevant questions may remain unanswered, requiring some speculation on our part.  John Greenleaf Whittier, “Telling the Bees.”  Edwin Arlington Robinson, “Mr. Flood’s Party.”  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - October 27th, 2025]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 27 Oct 2025 16:30:07 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2171302</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-october-27th-2025</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Remembering the First World War”: Our first poem details the life of a veteran who managed to survive the carnage and reflects on–or tries not to reflect on–his specific experiences during the war.  The next two poems depict civilians beginning to come to terms with their memories of the suffering shared throughout England.  Edmund Blunden, “The Veteran.”  Ursula Roberts, “The Cenotaph.”  Philip Johnstone, “High Wood.”  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from his CD Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Remembering the First World War”: Our first poem details the life of a veteran who managed to survive the carnage and reflects on–or tries not to reflect on–his specific experiences during the war.  The next two poems depict civilians beginning to come to terms with their memories of the suffering shared throughout England.  Edmund Blunden, “The Veteran.”  Ursula Roberts, “The Cenotaph.”  Philip Johnstone, “High Wood.”  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from his CD Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - October 27th, 2025]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Remembering the First World War”: Our first poem details the life of a veteran who managed to survive the carnage and reflects on–or tries not to reflect on–his specific experiences during the war.  The next two poems depict civilians beginning to come to terms with their memories of the suffering shared throughout England.  Edmund Blunden, “The Veteran.”  Ursula Roberts, “The Cenotaph.”  Philip Johnstone, “High Wood.”  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from his CD Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/2171302/c1e-2knzimd9z5uvq37j-5zdo6jr9tqk6-qa16vw.mp3" length="69570350"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Remembering the First World War”: Our first poem details the life of a veteran who managed to survive the carnage and reflects on–or tries not to reflect on–his specific experiences during the war.  The next two poems depict civilians beginning to come to terms with their memories of the suffering shared throughout England.  Edmund Blunden, “The Veteran.”  Ursula Roberts, “The Cenotaph.”  Philip Johnstone, “High Wood.”  Our theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun” from his CD Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Mr. Aaberg.]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - September 22nd, 2025]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 22 Sep 2025 16:30:08 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2145322</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-september-22nd-2025</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Unrequited Love (Part Two)”: A previous episode in March ’23 dealt with this same theme and featured poems by both men and women.  This episode considers unrequited love primarily from the woman’s point of view.  Guys in my audience may need to listen in.  Ellen Bass, “Can’t Get Over Her,” from Mules of Love (BOA Editions, 2002).  Sappho, “Fragment # 31 (Ode to Anactoria),” translator Michael R. Burch (thehypertexts.com/Sappho Longer Poems in Translations by Michael R. Burch.htm), and read with the kind permission of the translator.  Sharon Olds, “Crazy,” from Stag’s Leap (Knopf 2012), and read with the kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Unrequited Love (Part Two)”: A previous episode in March ’23 dealt with this same theme and featured poems by both men and women.  This episode considers unrequited love primarily from the woman’s point of view.  Guys in my audience may need to listen in.  Ellen Bass, “Can’t Get Over Her,” from Mules of Love (BOA Editions, 2002).  Sappho, “Fragment # 31 (Ode to Anactoria),” translator Michael R. Burch (thehypertexts.com/Sappho Longer Poems in Translations by Michael R. Burch.htm), and read with the kind permission of the translator.  Sharon Olds, “Crazy,” from Stag’s Leap (Knopf 2012), and read with the kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - September 22nd, 2025]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Unrequited Love (Part Two)”: A previous episode in March ’23 dealt with this same theme and featured poems by both men and women.  This episode considers unrequited love primarily from the woman’s point of view.  Guys in my audience may need to listen in.  Ellen Bass, “Can’t Get Over Her,” from Mules of Love (BOA Editions, 2002).  Sappho, “Fragment # 31 (Ode to Anactoria),” translator Michael R. Burch (thehypertexts.com/Sappho Longer Poems in Translations by Michael R. Burch.htm), and read with the kind permission of the translator.  Sharon Olds, “Crazy,” from Stag’s Leap (Knopf 2012), and read with the kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/2145322/c1e-02kgtkv8zdtj64m3-5zo6mzx7a5gq-jfklfl.mp3" length="69546317"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Unrequited Love (Part Two)”: A previous episode in March ’23 dealt with this same theme and featured poems by both men and women.  This episode considers unrequited love primarily from the woman’s point of view.  Guys in my audience may need to listen in.  Ellen Bass, “Can’t Get Over Her,” from Mules of Love (BOA Editions, 2002).  Sappho, “Fragment # 31 (Ode to Anactoria),” translator Michael R. Burch (thehypertexts.com/Sappho Longer Poems in Translations by Michael R. Burch.htm), and read with the kind permission of the translator.  Sharon Olds, “Crazy,” from Stag’s Leap (Knopf 2012), and read with the kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:28:59</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - August 25th, 2025]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 25 Aug 2025 16:30:58 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2118307</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-august-25th-2025</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Wandering and Roving”: When you wander in the woods, how do you decide which way to go when you arrive at a fork in your path?  The first of today’s poems offers a playful response to that question, and the other poems also reflect in various ways on the act of wandering.  Robert Frost, “The Road Not Taken.”  John Clare, “The Moors.”  Lord Byron, “So We’ll Go No More a Roving.”  Edna St. Vincent Millay, “Recuerdo.”  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg.  If you have...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Wandering and Roving”: When you wander in the woods, how do you decide which way to go when you arrive at a fork in your path?  The first of today’s poems offers a playful response to that question, and the other poems also reflect in various ways on the act of wandering.  Robert Frost, “The Road Not Taken.”  John Clare, “The Moors.”  Lord Byron, “So We’ll Go No More a Roving.”  Edna St. Vincent Millay, “Recuerdo.”  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg.  If you have...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - August 25th, 2025]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Wandering and Roving”: When you wander in the woods, how do you decide which way to go when you arrive at a fork in your path?  The first of today’s poems offers a playful response to that question, and the other poems also reflect in various ways on the act of wandering.  Robert Frost, “The Road Not Taken.”  John Clare, “The Moors.”  Lord Byron, “So We’ll Go No More a Roving.”  Edna St. Vincent Millay, “Recuerdo.”  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg.  If you have...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/2118307/c1e-02kgtkqjgnfj64m3-gpz0vdg8s69o-p8wttc.mp3" length="69590203"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Wandering and Roving”: When you wander in the woods, how do you decide which way to go when you arrive at a fork in your path?  The first of today’s poems offers a playful response to that question, and the other poems also reflect in various ways on the act of wandering.  Robert Frost, “The Road Not Taken.”  John Clare, “The Moors.”  Lord Byron, “So We’ll Go No More a Roving.”  Edna St. Vincent Millay, “Recuerdo.”  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg.  If you have...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - July 28th, 2025]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 28 Jul 2025 16:30:55 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2097601</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-july-28th-2025</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Exile and Return”: What is it like to try to enter and exit Middle Eastern countries, especially Palestine?  Today’s poems offer glimpses, even before the most recent spasm of violence that ripped it apart in October 2023.  Lena Khalaf Tuffaha, “Upon Arrival” and “Immigrant,” from Water and Salt (Red Hen Press, 2017).  Mosab Abu Toha, “Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear” and “Forever Homeless,” from Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear (City Lights Books, 2022). The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg.  If you have any...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Exile and Return”: What is it like to try to enter and exit Middle Eastern countries, especially Palestine?  Today’s poems offer glimpses, even before the most recent spasm of violence that ripped it apart in October 2023.  Lena Khalaf Tuffaha, “Upon Arrival” and “Immigrant,” from Water and Salt (Red Hen Press, 2017).  Mosab Abu Toha, “Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear” and “Forever Homeless,” from Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear (City Lights Books, 2022). The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg.  If you have any...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - July 28th, 2025]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Exile and Return”: What is it like to try to enter and exit Middle Eastern countries, especially Palestine?  Today’s poems offer glimpses, even before the most recent spasm of violence that ripped it apart in October 2023.  Lena Khalaf Tuffaha, “Upon Arrival” and “Immigrant,” from Water and Salt (Red Hen Press, 2017).  Mosab Abu Toha, “Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear” and “Forever Homeless,” from Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear (City Lights Books, 2022). The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg.  If you have any...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/2097601/c1e-rd48hwo04xtd73kw-rk3p4p85bn20-rao8xe.mp3" length="69550497"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Exile and Return”: What is it like to try to enter and exit Middle Eastern countries, especially Palestine?  Today’s poems offer glimpses, even before the most recent spasm of violence that ripped it apart in October 2023.  Lena Khalaf Tuffaha, “Upon Arrival” and “Immigrant,” from Water and Salt (Red Hen Press, 2017).  Mosab Abu Toha, “Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear” and “Forever Homeless,” from Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear (City Lights Books, 2022). The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg.  If you have any...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:28:59</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - June 23rd, 2025]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 23 Jun 2025 16:30:38 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2071014</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-june-23rd-2025</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“One Word”: The poems on today’s show implicitly urge us to consider how strange language is when we examine it up close.  Each of today’s poems puzzle over an individual word.  Billy Collins, “Tension,” from Aimless Love: New and Selected Poems (Random House, 2013).  Shakespeare, “Sonnet 135.”  Robert Wrigley, “Lovely,” from The True Account of Myself as a Bird (Penguin Books, 2022), used by kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg.  If you have any suggestions, corrections, questions regarding the show, please contact me, Brian...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“One Word”: The poems on today’s show implicitly urge us to consider how strange language is when we examine it up close.  Each of today’s poems puzzle over an individual word.  Billy Collins, “Tension,” from Aimless Love: New and Selected Poems (Random House, 2013).  Shakespeare, “Sonnet 135.”  Robert Wrigley, “Lovely,” from The True Account of Myself as a Bird (Penguin Books, 2022), used by kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg.  If you have any suggestions, corrections, questions regarding the show, please contact me, Brian...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - June 23rd, 2025]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“One Word”: The poems on today’s show implicitly urge us to consider how strange language is when we examine it up close.  Each of today’s poems puzzle over an individual word.  Billy Collins, “Tension,” from Aimless Love: New and Selected Poems (Random House, 2013).  Shakespeare, “Sonnet 135.”  Robert Wrigley, “Lovely,” from The True Account of Myself as a Bird (Penguin Books, 2022), used by kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg.  If you have any suggestions, corrections, questions regarding the show, please contact me, Brian...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/2071014/c1e-rd48hwj6qwid73kw-ndn8pmq8uqk7-vd3vnd.mp3" length="69580799"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“One Word”: The poems on today’s show implicitly urge us to consider how strange language is when we examine it up close.  Each of today’s poems puzzle over an individual word.  Billy Collins, “Tension,” from Aimless Love: New and Selected Poems (Random House, 2013).  Shakespeare, “Sonnet 135.”  Robert Wrigley, “Lovely,” from The True Account of Myself as a Bird (Penguin Books, 2022), used by kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg.  If you have any suggestions, corrections, questions regarding the show, please contact me, Brian...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - May 26th, 2025]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 26 May 2025 16:30:26 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2045320</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-may-26th-2025</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Three Controversial Musicians”: Today’s three poems spotlight three individuals known for their musical talents, as well as the controversy they provoked.  Naomi Shihab Nye, “Cross That Line,” from You and Yours (BOA Editions, 2011), used by kind permission of the author.  Frank O’Hara, “The Day Lady Died,” from Lunch Poems (City Lights Books, 1964).  William Matthews, “Mingus at the Half Note,” from Search Party: Collected Poems, Sebastian Matthews and Stanley Plumly, eds. (Houghton Mifflin, 2004), read with kind permission of the William Matthews estate.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg. ...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Three Controversial Musicians”: Today’s three poems spotlight three individuals known for their musical talents, as well as the controversy they provoked.  Naomi Shihab Nye, “Cross That Line,” from You and Yours (BOA Editions, 2011), used by kind permission of the author.  Frank O’Hara, “The Day Lady Died,” from Lunch Poems (City Lights Books, 1964).  William Matthews, “Mingus at the Half Note,” from Search Party: Collected Poems, Sebastian Matthews and Stanley Plumly, eds. (Houghton Mifflin, 2004), read with kind permission of the William Matthews estate.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg. ...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - May 26th, 2025]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Three Controversial Musicians”: Today’s three poems spotlight three individuals known for their musical talents, as well as the controversy they provoked.  Naomi Shihab Nye, “Cross That Line,” from You and Yours (BOA Editions, 2011), used by kind permission of the author.  Frank O’Hara, “The Day Lady Died,” from Lunch Poems (City Lights Books, 1964).  William Matthews, “Mingus at the Half Note,” from Search Party: Collected Poems, Sebastian Matthews and Stanley Plumly, eds. (Houghton Mifflin, 2004), read with kind permission of the William Matthews estate.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg. ...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/2045320/c1e-d5zqhmvpgxi5wkd4-wwx501w7s68x-ibwceo.mp3" length="69526464"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Three Controversial Musicians”: Today’s three poems spotlight three individuals known for their musical talents, as well as the controversy they provoked.  Naomi Shihab Nye, “Cross That Line,” from You and Yours (BOA Editions, 2011), used by kind permission of the author.  Frank O’Hara, “The Day Lady Died,” from Lunch Poems (City Lights Books, 1964).  William Matthews, “Mingus at the Half Note,” from Search Party: Collected Poems, Sebastian Matthews and Stanley Plumly, eds. (Houghton Mifflin, 2004), read with kind permission of the William Matthews estate.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with the kind permission of Philip Aaberg. ...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:28:59</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - April 28th, 2025]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 28 Apr 2025 16:30:30 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/2020181</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-april-28th-2025</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Gifts”: One poet recalls her complex strategies as a teen gift-giver, a second recalls the gift his parents bestowed on him when he was eleven and about to move away from home, and the third imagines the circumstances in which her father gave a gift to her mother before they were married, before they became her parents.  Brenda Shaughnessy, “A Mix Tape: ‘Don’t You (Forget About Me),'” from So Much Synth (Copper Canyon Press, 2016).  Seamus Heaney, “The Conway Stewart,” from Selected Poems 1988-2013 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014).  Eavan Boland, “The Black Lace Fan My Mother Gave Me,” from Outside History: Selected Poems 1980-1990 (W, W....]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Gifts”: One poet recalls her complex strategies as a teen gift-giver, a second recalls the gift his parents bestowed on him when he was eleven and about to move away from home, and the third imagines the circumstances in which her father gave a gift to her mother before they were married, before they became her parents.  Brenda Shaughnessy, “A Mix Tape: ‘Don’t You (Forget About Me),'” from So Much Synth (Copper Canyon Press, 2016).  Seamus Heaney, “The Conway Stewart,” from Selected Poems 1988-2013 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014).  Eavan Boland, “The Black Lace Fan My Mother Gave Me,” from Outside History: Selected Poems 1980-1990 (W, W....]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - April 28th, 2025]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Gifts”: One poet recalls her complex strategies as a teen gift-giver, a second recalls the gift his parents bestowed on him when he was eleven and about to move away from home, and the third imagines the circumstances in which her father gave a gift to her mother before they were married, before they became her parents.  Brenda Shaughnessy, “A Mix Tape: ‘Don’t You (Forget About Me),'” from So Much Synth (Copper Canyon Press, 2016).  Seamus Heaney, “The Conway Stewart,” from Selected Poems 1988-2013 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014).  Eavan Boland, “The Black Lace Fan My Mother Gave Me,” from Outside History: Selected Poems 1980-1990 (W, W....]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/2020181/c1e-90rdidwqdnb4wqv6-qdmv0dxvuk8g-enhgip.mp3" length="69575574"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Gifts”: One poet recalls her complex strategies as a teen gift-giver, a second recalls the gift his parents bestowed on him when he was eleven and about to move away from home, and the third imagines the circumstances in which her father gave a gift to her mother before they were married, before they became her parents.  Brenda Shaughnessy, “A Mix Tape: ‘Don’t You (Forget About Me),'” from So Much Synth (Copper Canyon Press, 2016).  Seamus Heaney, “The Conway Stewart,” from Selected Poems 1988-2013 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014).  Eavan Boland, “The Black Lace Fan My Mother Gave Me,” from Outside History: Selected Poems 1980-1990 (W, W....]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - March 24th, 2025]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 24 Mar 2025 16:30:43 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/1994719</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-march-24th-2025</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“A Redwood, an Ancient Orchard, a Sequoia”: Do you have a favorite tree you pay special attention to when you take a routine walk?  Is it older than you?  We project so many attributes on to trees, including longevity and strength.  We develop an emotional attachment to trees.  Today’s episode considers such attachments and features two poems by Dana Gioia: “Becoming a Redwood” and “Planting a Sequoia.”  Both are included in Dana Gioia’s 99 Poems: New and Selected (Graywolf Press, 2016) and used with the kind permission of the author.   Also included are brief passages from the final book of Homer’s Odyssey, translated by Robert...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“A Redwood, an Ancient Orchard, a Sequoia”: Do you have a favorite tree you pay special attention to when you take a routine walk?  Is it older than you?  We project so many attributes on to trees, including longevity and strength.  We develop an emotional attachment to trees.  Today’s episode considers such attachments and features two poems by Dana Gioia: “Becoming a Redwood” and “Planting a Sequoia.”  Both are included in Dana Gioia’s 99 Poems: New and Selected (Graywolf Press, 2016) and used with the kind permission of the author.   Also included are brief passages from the final book of Homer’s Odyssey, translated by Robert...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - March 24th, 2025]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“A Redwood, an Ancient Orchard, a Sequoia”: Do you have a favorite tree you pay special attention to when you take a routine walk?  Is it older than you?  We project so many attributes on to trees, including longevity and strength.  We develop an emotional attachment to trees.  Today’s episode considers such attachments and features two poems by Dana Gioia: “Becoming a Redwood” and “Planting a Sequoia.”  Both are included in Dana Gioia’s 99 Poems: New and Selected (Graywolf Press, 2016) and used with the kind permission of the author.   Also included are brief passages from the final book of Homer’s Odyssey, translated by Robert...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/1994719/c1e-2knzimrq9qb67jx5-okwvp9n4b04o-trfrwl.mp3" length="27821034"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“A Redwood, an Ancient Orchard, a Sequoia”: Do you have a favorite tree you pay special attention to when you take a routine walk?  Is it older than you?  We project so many attributes on to trees, including longevity and strength.  We develop an emotional attachment to trees.  Today’s episode considers such attachments and features two poems by Dana Gioia: “Becoming a Redwood” and “Planting a Sequoia.”  Both are included in Dana Gioia’s 99 Poems: New and Selected (Graywolf Press, 2016) and used with the kind permission of the author.   Also included are brief passages from the final book of Homer’s Odyssey, translated by Robert...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:28:59</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - February 24th, 2025]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2025 20:29:08 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/1991787</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-february-24th-2025</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Running on Empathy”: Three authors display various degrees of empathy in their depictions of Abraham Lincoln.  Walt Whitman, prose passages from Specimen Days, and “O Captain! My Captain.”  Kathleen Flenniken, “To Ease My Mind,” from Famous (U. of Nebraska Press, 2006), and used with kind permission of the author.  Leigh Stein, “Lincoln, Abraham, Melancholy Of,” from What To Miss When (New York: Soft Skull, 2021), and used with kind permission of the author.  Some historical background information provided by Joshua Wolf Shenk, Lincoln’s Melancholy: How Depression Challenged a President and Fueled His Greatness (2005); David Reynolds, Abe: Abraham Lincoln in His Times (2020); Ron Chernow, Grant (2017).  The show’s theme music is...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Running on Empathy”: Three authors display various degrees of empathy in their depictions of Abraham Lincoln.  Walt Whitman, prose passages from Specimen Days, and “O Captain! My Captain.”  Kathleen Flenniken, “To Ease My Mind,” from Famous (U. of Nebraska Press, 2006), and used with kind permission of the author.  Leigh Stein, “Lincoln, Abraham, Melancholy Of,” from What To Miss When (New York: Soft Skull, 2021), and used with kind permission of the author.  Some historical background information provided by Joshua Wolf Shenk, Lincoln’s Melancholy: How Depression Challenged a President and Fueled His Greatness (2005); David Reynolds, Abe: Abraham Lincoln in His Times (2020); Ron Chernow, Grant (2017).  The show’s theme music is...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - February 24th, 2025]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Running on Empathy”: Three authors display various degrees of empathy in their depictions of Abraham Lincoln.  Walt Whitman, prose passages from Specimen Days, and “O Captain! My Captain.”  Kathleen Flenniken, “To Ease My Mind,” from Famous (U. of Nebraska Press, 2006), and used with kind permission of the author.  Leigh Stein, “Lincoln, Abraham, Melancholy Of,” from What To Miss When (New York: Soft Skull, 2021), and used with kind permission of the author.  Some historical background information provided by Joshua Wolf Shenk, Lincoln’s Melancholy: How Depression Challenged a President and Fueled His Greatness (2005); David Reynolds, Abe: Abraham Lincoln in His Times (2020); Ron Chernow, Grant (2017).  The show’s theme music is...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/1991787/c1e-6wo5sog5mwtndomz-gpwn4k4qf6nx-xezqh1.mp3" length="27829393"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Running on Empathy”: Three authors display various degrees of empathy in their depictions of Abraham Lincoln.  Walt Whitman, prose passages from Specimen Days, and “O Captain! My Captain.”  Kathleen Flenniken, “To Ease My Mind,” from Famous (U. of Nebraska Press, 2006), and used with kind permission of the author.  Leigh Stein, “Lincoln, Abraham, Melancholy Of,” from What To Miss When (New York: Soft Skull, 2021), and used with kind permission of the author.  Some historical background information provided by Joshua Wolf Shenk, Lincoln’s Melancholy: How Depression Challenged a President and Fueled His Greatness (2005); David Reynolds, Abe: Abraham Lincoln in His Times (2020); Ron Chernow, Grant (2017).  The show’s theme music is...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - January 27th, 2025]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 27 Jan 2025 17:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/1950795</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-january-27th-2025</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Mysterious Encounters”: Three sing-songy poems are featured on today’s episode.  All three depict encounters between two individuals: all three resist our efforts to make total sense of their motives and actions.  We may think we know what happens between the couples, but the poems seem to run ahead of our ability to catch up to them and make complete sense of them.  Robert Burns, “Coming Through the Rye.”  John Keats, “La Belle Dame sans Merci: A Ballad.”  Padraic Colum: “She Moved Through the Fair.”  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana, available at sweetgrassmusic.com and used with Mr. Aaberg’s...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Mysterious Encounters”: Three sing-songy poems are featured on today’s episode.  All three depict encounters between two individuals: all three resist our efforts to make total sense of their motives and actions.  We may think we know what happens between the couples, but the poems seem to run ahead of our ability to catch up to them and make complete sense of them.  Robert Burns, “Coming Through the Rye.”  John Keats, “La Belle Dame sans Merci: A Ballad.”  Padraic Colum: “She Moved Through the Fair.”  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana, available at sweetgrassmusic.com and used with Mr. Aaberg’s...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - January 27th, 2025]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Mysterious Encounters”: Three sing-songy poems are featured on today’s episode.  All three depict encounters between two individuals: all three resist our efforts to make total sense of their motives and actions.  We may think we know what happens between the couples, but the poems seem to run ahead of our ability to catch up to them and make complete sense of them.  Robert Burns, “Coming Through the Rye.”  John Keats, “La Belle Dame sans Merci: A Ballad.”  Padraic Colum: “She Moved Through the Fair.”  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana, available at sweetgrassmusic.com and used with Mr. Aaberg’s...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/1950795/c1e-z92jhmrgk5tokrxn-gpw985ovbpv5-havsid.mp3" length="27826885"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Mysterious Encounters”: Three sing-songy poems are featured on today’s episode.  All three depict encounters between two individuals: all three resist our efforts to make total sense of their motives and actions.  We may think we know what happens between the couples, but the poems seem to run ahead of our ability to catch up to them and make complete sense of them.  Robert Burns, “Coming Through the Rye.”  John Keats, “La Belle Dame sans Merci: A Ballad.”  Padraic Colum: “She Moved Through the Fair.”  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana, available at sweetgrassmusic.com and used with Mr. Aaberg’s...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - December 23rd, 2024]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 23 Dec 2024 17:30:42 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/1924761</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-december-23rd-2024</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Why Serve?: First World War Poems of Internal Conflicts”: Young men in the 19 teens attempted to rationalize whether serving in the military during wartime was the right thing to do.  What’s in it for them?  Are they under peer pressure to enlist?  What do they see as the likely outcome if they do enlist?  Their answers are not predictable.  W.B. Yeats, “An Irish Airman Foresees His Death,” Edward Thomas, “As the Team’s Head Brass,” Wilfred Owen, “Disabled.”  Various anthologies of First World War Poetry or devoted to work by the individual author include these poems.  The show’s theme music...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Why Serve?: First World War Poems of Internal Conflicts”: Young men in the 19 teens attempted to rationalize whether serving in the military during wartime was the right thing to do.  What’s in it for them?  Are they under peer pressure to enlist?  What do they see as the likely outcome if they do enlist?  Their answers are not predictable.  W.B. Yeats, “An Irish Airman Foresees His Death,” Edward Thomas, “As the Team’s Head Brass,” Wilfred Owen, “Disabled.”  Various anthologies of First World War Poetry or devoted to work by the individual author include these poems.  The show’s theme music...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - December 23rd, 2024]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Why Serve?: First World War Poems of Internal Conflicts”: Young men in the 19 teens attempted to rationalize whether serving in the military during wartime was the right thing to do.  What’s in it for them?  Are they under peer pressure to enlist?  What do they see as the likely outcome if they do enlist?  Their answers are not predictable.  W.B. Yeats, “An Irish Airman Foresees His Death,” Edward Thomas, “As the Team’s Head Brass,” Wilfred Owen, “Disabled.”  Various anthologies of First World War Poetry or devoted to work by the individual author include these poems.  The show’s theme music...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/1924761/c1e-02kgtjnjgqigm3d1-7zkpjogptwow-3lotot.mp3" length="27815600"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Why Serve?: First World War Poems of Internal Conflicts”: Young men in the 19 teens attempted to rationalize whether serving in the military during wartime was the right thing to do.  What’s in it for them?  Are they under peer pressure to enlist?  What do they see as the likely outcome if they do enlist?  Their answers are not predictable.  W.B. Yeats, “An Irish Airman Foresees His Death,” Edward Thomas, “As the Team’s Head Brass,” Wilfred Owen, “Disabled.”  Various anthologies of First World War Poetry or devoted to work by the individual author include these poems.  The show’s theme music...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:28:59</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - October 28th, 2024]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 28 Oct 2024 16:30:19 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/1867716</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-october-28th-2024</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Children Thinking”: This episode features the voices of children–filtered through adult poets–in three poems that express a variety of insights.  These poems may prompt you to wonder, did you once think like these three children?  The poems are read in this order: William Wordsworth, “We Are Seven” (originally published in 1798).  Elizabeth Bishop, “In the Waiting Room,” from The Complete Poems 1927-1979 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1979, 1983).  Seamus Heaney, “Death of a Naturalist,” from Opened Ground: Selected Poems 1966-1996 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998).  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (available at Sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with kind permission of Philip...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Children Thinking”: This episode features the voices of children–filtered through adult poets–in three poems that express a variety of insights.  These poems may prompt you to wonder, did you once think like these three children?  The poems are read in this order: William Wordsworth, “We Are Seven” (originally published in 1798).  Elizabeth Bishop, “In the Waiting Room,” from The Complete Poems 1927-1979 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1979, 1983).  Seamus Heaney, “Death of a Naturalist,” from Opened Ground: Selected Poems 1966-1996 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998).  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (available at Sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with kind permission of Philip...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - October 28th, 2024]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Children Thinking”: This episode features the voices of children–filtered through adult poets–in three poems that express a variety of insights.  These poems may prompt you to wonder, did you once think like these three children?  The poems are read in this order: William Wordsworth, “We Are Seven” (originally published in 1798).  Elizabeth Bishop, “In the Waiting Room,” from The Complete Poems 1927-1979 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1979, 1983).  Seamus Heaney, “Death of a Naturalist,” from Opened Ground: Selected Poems 1966-1996 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998).  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (available at Sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with kind permission of Philip...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/1867716/c1e-o3mghv1g75s8n0wm-v6zw1kddunjp-gye6xp.mp3" length="27829811"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Children Thinking”: This episode features the voices of children–filtered through adult poets–in three poems that express a variety of insights.  These poems may prompt you to wonder, did you once think like these three children?  The poems are read in this order: William Wordsworth, “We Are Seven” (originally published in 1798).  Elizabeth Bishop, “In the Waiting Room,” from The Complete Poems 1927-1979 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1979, 1983).  Seamus Heaney, “Death of a Naturalist,” from Opened Ground: Selected Poems 1966-1996 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998).  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (available at Sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with kind permission of Philip...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - September 23rd, 2024]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 23 Sep 2024 16:30:40 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/1840444</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-september-23rd-2024</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Desk Jobs”: Did you ever have a job you abruptly quit soon after it began?  Why did you do that?  The first three lines of our first poem refer to a job the speaker quit after just one shift.  The next two poems feature office interactions between the speaker and a work colleague and boss.  Dorianne Laux, “What I Wouldn’t Do,” from What We Carry (BOA Editions, 1994), and used with the kind permission of the author.  Deborah Garrison, “Superior,” from A Working Girl Can’t Win (Random House, 1998), and used with kind permission of the author.  Stephen Dunn, “The Last Hours,” from Different Hours (Norton,...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Desk Jobs”: Did you ever have a job you abruptly quit soon after it began?  Why did you do that?  The first three lines of our first poem refer to a job the speaker quit after just one shift.  The next two poems feature office interactions between the speaker and a work colleague and boss.  Dorianne Laux, “What I Wouldn’t Do,” from What We Carry (BOA Editions, 1994), and used with the kind permission of the author.  Deborah Garrison, “Superior,” from A Working Girl Can’t Win (Random House, 1998), and used with kind permission of the author.  Stephen Dunn, “The Last Hours,” from Different Hours (Norton,...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - September 23rd, 2024]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Desk Jobs”: Did you ever have a job you abruptly quit soon after it began?  Why did you do that?  The first three lines of our first poem refer to a job the speaker quit after just one shift.  The next two poems feature office interactions between the speaker and a work colleague and boss.  Dorianne Laux, “What I Wouldn’t Do,” from What We Carry (BOA Editions, 1994), and used with the kind permission of the author.  Deborah Garrison, “Superior,” from A Working Girl Can’t Win (Random House, 1998), and used with kind permission of the author.  Stephen Dunn, “The Last Hours,” from Different Hours (Norton,...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/1840444/c1e-2knzi8d081t67jx5-pk91mr1os088-fz70pm.mp3" length="27817690"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Desk Jobs”: Did you ever have a job you abruptly quit soon after it began?  Why did you do that?  The first three lines of our first poem refer to a job the speaker quit after just one shift.  The next two poems feature office interactions between the speaker and a work colleague and boss.  Dorianne Laux, “What I Wouldn’t Do,” from What We Carry (BOA Editions, 1994), and used with the kind permission of the author.  Deborah Garrison, “Superior,” from A Working Girl Can’t Win (Random House, 1998), and used with kind permission of the author.  Stephen Dunn, “The Last Hours,” from Different Hours (Norton,...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:28:59</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company August 26, 2024]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 26 Aug 2024 16:00:27 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/1817660</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-august-26-2024-1</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Manual Labor”: What do you remember from your first paid job? Did you develop any work-habits that you carried into adulthood? From your twenties on, has much of your identity been shaped by your work? Poems on this and next month’s episodes offer a variety of perspectives on work. Three poems are featured: Jericho Brown’s “Labor”, from The New Testament (Copper Canyon Press, 2016). Seamus Heaney’s “Thatcher,” from  Opened Ground: Selected Poems 1966-1996 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998). Mary Robinson, “London’s Summer Morning.” The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Manual Labor”: What do you remember from your first paid job? Did you develop any work-habits that you carried into adulthood? From your twenties on, has much of your identity been shaped by your work? Poems on this and next month’s episodes offer a variety of perspectives on work. Three poems are featured: Jericho Brown’s “Labor”, from The New Testament (Copper Canyon Press, 2016). Seamus Heaney’s “Thatcher,” from  Opened Ground: Selected Poems 1966-1996 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998). Mary Robinson, “London’s Summer Morning.” The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company August 26, 2024]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Manual Labor”: What do you remember from your first paid job? Did you develop any work-habits that you carried into adulthood? From your twenties on, has much of your identity been shaped by your work? Poems on this and next month’s episodes offer a variety of perspectives on work. Three poems are featured: Jericho Brown’s “Labor”, from The New Testament (Copper Canyon Press, 2016). Seamus Heaney’s “Thatcher,” from  Opened Ground: Selected Poems 1966-1996 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998). Mary Robinson, “London’s Summer Morning.” The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/1817660/c1e-d5zqh6118qspd490-z3zm93zmt9rq-thcd0k.mp3" length="27856978"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Manual Labor”: What do you remember from your first paid job? Did you develop any work-habits that you carried into adulthood? From your twenties on, has much of your identity been shaped by your work? Poems on this and next month’s episodes offer a variety of perspectives on work. Three poems are featured: Jericho Brown’s “Labor”, from The New Testament (Copper Canyon Press, 2016). Seamus Heaney’s “Thatcher,” from  Opened Ground: Selected Poems 1966-1996 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1998). Mary Robinson, “London’s Summer Morning.” The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:02</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - July 22nd, 2024]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 22 Jul 2024 16:30:15 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/1787813</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-july-22nd-2024</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Swimming”: We dive in with two action-packed excerpts from ancient poetic narratives. Both depict heroic swimmers moving through dangerous waters. This episode concludes with a contemporary American poet’s solitary naked swim in a pond in the early morning mist. Homer, The Odyssey (trans. Robert Fitzgerald), from Book V, lines 403-408, 415-437, 441-486. Beowulf (trans. Seamus Heaney), lines 506-510, 515-518, 532-581 (Norton, 2000). Maxime Kumin, “Morning Swim,” from Selected Poems 1960-1990 (Norton), used by kind permission of the Maxine Kumin Literary Trust. {Splash!, by Howard Means, provided useful, entertaining context.} The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with kind permission of...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Swimming”: We dive in with two action-packed excerpts from ancient poetic narratives. Both depict heroic swimmers moving through dangerous waters. This episode concludes with a contemporary American poet’s solitary naked swim in a pond in the early morning mist. Homer, The Odyssey (trans. Robert Fitzgerald), from Book V, lines 403-408, 415-437, 441-486. Beowulf (trans. Seamus Heaney), lines 506-510, 515-518, 532-581 (Norton, 2000). Maxime Kumin, “Morning Swim,” from Selected Poems 1960-1990 (Norton), used by kind permission of the Maxine Kumin Literary Trust. {Splash!, by Howard Means, provided useful, entertaining context.} The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with kind permission of...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - July 22nd, 2024]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Swimming”: We dive in with two action-packed excerpts from ancient poetic narratives. Both depict heroic swimmers moving through dangerous waters. This episode concludes with a contemporary American poet’s solitary naked swim in a pond in the early morning mist. Homer, The Odyssey (trans. Robert Fitzgerald), from Book V, lines 403-408, 415-437, 441-486. Beowulf (trans. Seamus Heaney), lines 506-510, 515-518, 532-581 (Norton, 2000). Maxime Kumin, “Morning Swim,” from Selected Poems 1960-1990 (Norton), used by kind permission of the Maxine Kumin Literary Trust. {Splash!, by Howard Means, provided useful, entertaining context.} The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with kind permission of...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/1787813/c1e-pj41h5owr5bmo984-mk048nogim15-y78b0i.mp3" length="27819780"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Swimming”: We dive in with two action-packed excerpts from ancient poetic narratives. Both depict heroic swimmers moving through dangerous waters. This episode concludes with a contemporary American poet’s solitary naked swim in a pond in the early morning mist. Homer, The Odyssey (trans. Robert Fitzgerald), from Book V, lines 403-408, 415-437, 441-486. Beowulf (trans. Seamus Heaney), lines 506-510, 515-518, 532-581 (Norton, 2000). Maxime Kumin, “Morning Swim,” from Selected Poems 1960-1990 (Norton), used by kind permission of the Maxine Kumin Literary Trust. {Splash!, by Howard Means, provided useful, entertaining context.} The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from his CD Live from Montana (available at sweetgrassmusic.com) and used with kind permission of...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:28:59</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - June 24th, 2024]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 24 Jun 2024 16:30:11 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/1769738</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-june-24th-2024</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Meta-Verse”: The four poems on this episode make a virtue out of being self-conscious.  Each poem comments on the very poem we’re reading.  The poem pulls back the curtain and reveals the composing process.  Or at least that’s what the poem pretends to do.  Billy Collins, “The Suggestion Box,” from Aimless Love: New and Selected Poems (Random House, 2013).  Stephen Dunn, “Bad,” from The Not Yet Fallen World: New and Selected Poems (Norton, 2022).  W. B. Yeats, “When You Are Old.”  Lawrence Raab, “Request,” from Visible Signs (Penguin, 2003) and used with kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Meta-Verse”: The four poems on this episode make a virtue out of being self-conscious.  Each poem comments on the very poem we’re reading.  The poem pulls back the curtain and reveals the composing process.  Or at least that’s what the poem pretends to do.  Billy Collins, “The Suggestion Box,” from Aimless Love: New and Selected Poems (Random House, 2013).  Stephen Dunn, “Bad,” from The Not Yet Fallen World: New and Selected Poems (Norton, 2022).  W. B. Yeats, “When You Are Old.”  Lawrence Raab, “Request,” from Visible Signs (Penguin, 2003) and used with kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - June 24th, 2024]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Meta-Verse”: The four poems on this episode make a virtue out of being self-conscious.  Each poem comments on the very poem we’re reading.  The poem pulls back the curtain and reveals the composing process.  Or at least that’s what the poem pretends to do.  Billy Collins, “The Suggestion Box,” from Aimless Love: New and Selected Poems (Random House, 2013).  Stephen Dunn, “Bad,” from The Not Yet Fallen World: New and Selected Poems (Norton, 2022).  W. B. Yeats, “When You Are Old.”  Lawrence Raab, “Request,” from Visible Signs (Penguin, 2003) and used with kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/1769738/c1e-d5zqh69w17upd490-49v2mqjxf008-620zvs.mp3" length="27800972"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Meta-Verse”: The four poems on this episode make a virtue out of being self-conscious.  Each poem comments on the very poem we’re reading.  The poem pulls back the curtain and reveals the composing process.  Or at least that’s what the poem pretends to do.  Billy Collins, “The Suggestion Box,” from Aimless Love: New and Selected Poems (Random House, 2013).  Stephen Dunn, “Bad,” from The Not Yet Fallen World: New and Selected Poems (Norton, 2022).  W. B. Yeats, “When You Are Old.”  Lawrence Raab, “Request,” from Visible Signs (Penguin, 2003) and used with kind permission of the author.  The show’s theme music is Philip Aaberg’s “Going-to-the-Sun,” from...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:28:58</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - May 27th, 2024]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 27 May 2024 16:30:18 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/1749142</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-may-27th-2024</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Where Is My Home?” (Part 2): The four poems on this episode address this question from a variety of perspectives: home as an imaginary place; home valued for the quality of one’s neighbors; home as a portable existence, a van; and home as the indoor / outdoor zone where multiple generations in a family live together over many years.  W. B. Yeats, “The Lake Isle of Innisfree.”  T’ao Ch’ien, “Moving House,” from A Hundred and Seventy Chinese Poems, translated by Arthur Waley (Knopf, 1919).  Linds Sanders, “Those Places We Melt Into,” from Quibble Lit, Issue 4: Muddle, Summer 2022 (see lindssanders.com), and used...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Where Is My Home?” (Part 2): The four poems on this episode address this question from a variety of perspectives: home as an imaginary place; home valued for the quality of one’s neighbors; home as a portable existence, a van; and home as the indoor / outdoor zone where multiple generations in a family live together over many years.  W. B. Yeats, “The Lake Isle of Innisfree.”  T’ao Ch’ien, “Moving House,” from A Hundred and Seventy Chinese Poems, translated by Arthur Waley (Knopf, 1919).  Linds Sanders, “Those Places We Melt Into,” from Quibble Lit, Issue 4: Muddle, Summer 2022 (see lindssanders.com), and used...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - May 27th, 2024]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Where Is My Home?” (Part 2): The four poems on this episode address this question from a variety of perspectives: home as an imaginary place; home valued for the quality of one’s neighbors; home as a portable existence, a van; and home as the indoor / outdoor zone where multiple generations in a family live together over many years.  W. B. Yeats, “The Lake Isle of Innisfree.”  T’ao Ch’ien, “Moving House,” from A Hundred and Seventy Chinese Poems, translated by Arthur Waley (Knopf, 1919).  Linds Sanders, “Those Places We Melt Into,” from Quibble Lit, Issue 4: Muddle, Summer 2022 (see lindssanders.com), and used...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/1749142/c1e-o3mghv254zb8n0wm-njpk9000f9vz-wzdmmp.mp3" length="27819780"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Where Is My Home?” (Part 2): The four poems on this episode address this question from a variety of perspectives: home as an imaginary place; home valued for the quality of one’s neighbors; home as a portable existence, a van; and home as the indoor / outdoor zone where multiple generations in a family live together over many years.  W. B. Yeats, “The Lake Isle of Innisfree.”  T’ao Ch’ien, “Moving House,” from A Hundred and Seventy Chinese Poems, translated by Arthur Waley (Knopf, 1919).  Linds Sanders, “Those Places We Melt Into,” from Quibble Lit, Issue 4: Muddle, Summer 2022 (see lindssanders.com), and used...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:28:59</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - April 22nd, 2024]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 22 Apr 2024 16:30:48 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/1725599</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-april-22nd-2024</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[“Where Is My Home?”: Do you carry in your mind images of a former landscape you lived in, an extended area you called home?  The first poem is spoken in the voice of Robinson Crusoe as a old man back in England, wondering if this island of his origin, the place where his life will come to a close, is truly his home.  Or was he more at home when cast away on his other unnamed, totally remote island?  Elizabeth Bishop, “Crusoe in England,” from The Complete Poems 1927-1979 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1979, 1983).  Our second poem depicts Irish expatriates in...]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA[“Where Is My Home?”: Do you carry in your mind images of a former landscape you lived in, an extended area you called home?  The first poem is spoken in the voice of Robinson Crusoe as a old man back in England, wondering if this island of his origin, the place where his life will come to a close, is truly his home.  Or was he more at home when cast away on his other unnamed, totally remote island?  Elizabeth Bishop, “Crusoe in England,” from The Complete Poems 1927-1979 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1979, 1983).  Our second poem depicts Irish expatriates in...]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - April 22nd, 2024]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[“Where Is My Home?”: Do you carry in your mind images of a former landscape you lived in, an extended area you called home?  The first poem is spoken in the voice of Robinson Crusoe as a old man back in England, wondering if this island of his origin, the place where his life will come to a close, is truly his home.  Or was he more at home when cast away on his other unnamed, totally remote island?  Elizabeth Bishop, “Crusoe in England,” from The Complete Poems 1927-1979 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1979, 1983).  Our second poem depicts Irish expatriates in...]]>
                </content:encoded>
                                    <enclosure url="https://episodes.castos.com/coastradio/1725599/c1e-7k37i43ppdad6vz2-ddkxd5p0urz7-4ldnyi.mp3" length="27833154"
                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA[“Where Is My Home?”: Do you carry in your mind images of a former landscape you lived in, an extended area you called home?  The first poem is spoken in the voice of Robinson Crusoe as a old man back in England, wondering if this island of his origin, the place where his life will come to a close, is truly his home.  Or was he more at home when cast away on his other unnamed, totally remote island?  Elizabeth Bishop, “Crusoe in England,” from The Complete Poems 1927-1979 (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1979, 1983).  Our second poem depicts Irish expatriates in...]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
                            </item>
                    <item>
                <title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - February 26th, 2024]]>
                </title>
                <pubDate>Mon, 26 Feb 2024 17:30:03 +0000</pubDate>
                <dc:creator>KMUN</dc:creator>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">
                    https://permalink.castos.com/podcast/46542/episode/1669897</guid>
                                    <link>https://poems-for-company.castos.com/episodes/poems-for-company-february-26th-2024</link>
                                <description>
                                            <![CDATA[<p>"Frederick and Anna Murray Douglass": Though Frederick Douglass grew up not knowing his exact birthdate and even uncertain just how old he was, historians presume he was born in February 1818.  Douglass wrote, "I do not remember to have ever met a slave who could tell of his birthday."  His master "deemed all such inquiries on the part of a slave improper and impertinent, and evidence of a restless spirit."  The first poem sampled on this episode, Paul Dunbar's 1896 "Frederick Douglass," depicts the former slave turned writer, orator, and powerful force for a wide range of civil rights in a heroic light.  The following two poems lower the pedestal on which Dunbar had placed him and offer insights into the private lives of Frederick and his first wife Anna Murray Douglass.  What would it have been like to be the overlooked wife to a man so frequently absent from home and so immersed in the historical moment?  Both are persona poems, the first in the voice of Anna: M. Nzadi Keita, "Stirring," from Brief Evidence of Heaven: Poems from the life of Anna Murray Douglass (Whirlwind Press, 2014), available at <a href="http://spdbooks.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">spdbooks.org</a> and used with kind permission of the author.  The second poem is in the voice of Frederick Douglass himself: Evie Shockley, "from The Lost Letters of Frederick Douglass," from the new black (Wesleyan UP, 2011), and used with kind permission of the author.  (The show's theme music is Philip Aaberg's "Going-to-the Sun," from his CD Live from Montana, available at <a href="http://sweetgrassmusic.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">sweetgrassmusic.com</a>, and used with kind permission of Philip Aaberg.)    </p>]]>
                                    </description>
                <itunes:subtitle>
                    <![CDATA["Frederick and Anna Murray Douglass": Though Frederick Douglass grew up not knowing his exact birthdate and even uncertain just how old he was, historians presume he was born in February 1818.  Douglass wrote, "I do not remember to have ever met a slave who could tell of his birthday."  His master "deemed all such inquiries on the part of a slave improper and impertinent, and evidence of a restless spirit."  The first poem sampled on this episode, Paul Dunbar's 1896 "Frederick Douglass," depicts the former slave turned writer, orator, and powerful force for a wide range of civil rights in a heroic light.  The following two poems lower the pedestal on which Dunbar had placed him and offer insights into the private lives of Frederick and his first wife Anna Murray Douglass.  What would it have been like to be the overlooked wife to a man so frequently absent from home and so immersed in the historical moment?  Both are persona poems, the first in the voice of Anna: M. Nzadi Keita, "Stirring," from Brief Evidence of Heaven: Poems from the life of Anna Murray Douglass (Whirlwind Press, 2014), available at spdbooks.org and used with kind permission of the author.  The second poem is in the voice of Frederick Douglass himself: Evie Shockley, "from The Lost Letters of Frederick Douglass," from the new black (Wesleyan UP, 2011), and used with kind permission of the author.  (The show's theme music is Philip Aaberg's "Going-to-the Sun," from his CD Live from Montana, available at sweetgrassmusic.com, and used with kind permission of Philip Aaberg.)    ]]>
                </itunes:subtitle>
                                <itunes:title>
                    <![CDATA[Poems for Company - February 26th, 2024]]>
                </itunes:title>
                                                <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
                <content:encoded>
                    <![CDATA[<p>"Frederick and Anna Murray Douglass": Though Frederick Douglass grew up not knowing his exact birthdate and even uncertain just how old he was, historians presume he was born in February 1818.  Douglass wrote, "I do not remember to have ever met a slave who could tell of his birthday."  His master "deemed all such inquiries on the part of a slave improper and impertinent, and evidence of a restless spirit."  The first poem sampled on this episode, Paul Dunbar's 1896 "Frederick Douglass," depicts the former slave turned writer, orator, and powerful force for a wide range of civil rights in a heroic light.  The following two poems lower the pedestal on which Dunbar had placed him and offer insights into the private lives of Frederick and his first wife Anna Murray Douglass.  What would it have been like to be the overlooked wife to a man so frequently absent from home and so immersed in the historical moment?  Both are persona poems, the first in the voice of Anna: M. Nzadi Keita, "Stirring," from Brief Evidence of Heaven: Poems from the life of Anna Murray Douglass (Whirlwind Press, 2014), available at <a href="http://spdbooks.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">spdbooks.org</a> and used with kind permission of the author.  The second poem is in the voice of Frederick Douglass himself: Evie Shockley, "from The Lost Letters of Frederick Douglass," from the new black (Wesleyan UP, 2011), and used with kind permission of the author.  (The show's theme music is Philip Aaberg's "Going-to-the Sun," from his CD Live from Montana, available at <a href="http://sweetgrassmusic.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">sweetgrassmusic.com</a>, and used with kind permission of Philip Aaberg.)    </p>]]>
                </content:encoded>
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                        type="audio/mpeg">
                    </enclosure>
                                <itunes:summary>
                    <![CDATA["Frederick and Anna Murray Douglass": Though Frederick Douglass grew up not knowing his exact birthdate and even uncertain just how old he was, historians presume he was born in February 1818.  Douglass wrote, "I do not remember to have ever met a slave who could tell of his birthday."  His master "deemed all such inquiries on the part of a slave improper and impertinent, and evidence of a restless spirit."  The first poem sampled on this episode, Paul Dunbar's 1896 "Frederick Douglass," depicts the former slave turned writer, orator, and powerful force for a wide range of civil rights in a heroic light.  The following two poems lower the pedestal on which Dunbar had placed him and offer insights into the private lives of Frederick and his first wife Anna Murray Douglass.  What would it have been like to be the overlooked wife to a man so frequently absent from home and so immersed in the historical moment?  Both are persona poems, the first in the voice of Anna: M. Nzadi Keita, "Stirring," from Brief Evidence of Heaven: Poems from the life of Anna Murray Douglass (Whirlwind Press, 2014), available at spdbooks.org and used with kind permission of the author.  The second poem is in the voice of Frederick Douglass himself: Evie Shockley, "from The Lost Letters of Frederick Douglass," from the new black (Wesleyan UP, 2011), and used with kind permission of the author.  (The show's theme music is Philip Aaberg's "Going-to-the Sun," from his CD Live from Montana, available at sweetgrassmusic.com, and used with kind permission of Philip Aaberg.)    ]]>
                </itunes:summary>
                                                                            <itunes:duration>00:29:00</itunes:duration>
                                                    <itunes:author>
                    <![CDATA[KMUN]]>
                </itunes:author>
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