[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 177 (Thursday, December 8, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Page S6908]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING DAVID BUDBILL
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, Vermont is saddened by the death of the
poet David Budbill, whose poetry celebrated the simple pleasures of
life in Vermont and highlighted the lives of working Vermonters. He
died on Sept 25, at the age of 76.
In the State that gave the world Robert Frost, Vermonters know and
love our authentic poets. Through David Budbill's 10 books of poetry, 7
plays, an opera libretto, 2 children's books, and many public
performances and readings, he became the most widely known and loved
Vermont poet since Robert Frost.
He was born in Cleveland, OH, in 1940, and after attending Union
Theological Seminary in New York City and teaching at Lincoln
University in Pennsylvania, he moved to Vermont--to Wolcott--in 1969.
He then learned to use a chainsaw and worked in the woods to make a
living, while also writing poems about the people he met and about his
experiences there. His first book of poems, ``The Chain Saw Dance,''
was published in 1976.
Other poems and books of poems followed, and David gradually created
a fictionalized version of his own community, which he called
Judevine--a place where rough-hewn loggers, sawyers, farm wives, gas
station attendants, and shattered Vietnam veterans struggled to make a
living amid the rugged beauty of rural Vermont. That material was later
shaped into a play, also entitled Judevine, which was widely produced,
both in Vermont and nationally.
Then in the 1990s, Budbill's focus deepened. He began writing poems
about his own life in Walcott, thinly disguising himself as ``Judevine
Mountain,'' an old Chinese sage, who somehow was settled on a nearby
Vermont hillside. He wrote with the spareness, directness and clarity
of the ancient Asian poets he admired. One short example is ``What Issa
Heard.'' Issa is an 18th century Japanese haiku poet. Here is what
David wrote:
``What Issa Heard''
Two hundred years ago Issa heard the morning birds
singing sutras to this suffering world.
I heard them too, this morning, which must mean,
since we will always have a suffering world,
we must also always have a song.
David wrote poetry and plays that tapped into and expressed the
essence of northern Vermont, and he plumbed these subjects so deeply
that they became universal through his pen. His rural characters,
Antoine, Grace, Tommy, and others, are quintessential Vermonters, but
they are also vivid human beings with the same sorts of hopes, fears,
triumphs, and disappointments that we all experience. Similarly, his
``Judevine Mountain'' poems were expressions of his own life, but they
continue to resonate deeply with the lives of everyone who has read and
loved his poems.
In short, David Budbill's poetry and plays accurately, meaningfully
and profoundly depict rural Vermont--his place, that is also our place.
They have a universality that have and will enrich lives in Vermont and
in the larger world forever.
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