Poetry Collection
Beyond the Pages
Calvin community members share their poetic reflections through previously unpublished works. Click on each poet鈥檚 name to read their fresh takes on life, faith and everyday observations.
- David Greendonner
- Ryan Hagerman
- Caroline Higgins
- L. S. Klatt
- Sharon Piwang
- Jacob Schepers
- Tyler Slamkowski
- Chelsea Tanis
David Greendonner 鈥12
David Greendonner was born and raised in southwest Michigan. In 2012 he graduated from Calvin College, where he majored in English and philosophy. He currently lives and works in Grand Rapids.
A Young Monsoon
A bus full of rattled
and rattling
fans. The windows
fog from all the stirred, tepid air.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 even see
where we鈥檙e at,鈥 one buzzes,
obliterating children鈥檚
finger drawings.
鈥淲e鈥檙e in the clouds,鈥 says another,
wizened. She looks to the heavens.
A weather-man breaks in: 鈥淭his鈥檒l
all clear up. Trust me鈥
this will all clear up.鈥
Ryan Hagerman 鈥14
Ryan Hagerman is a senior at Calvin College studying media production and journalism. He has created short films and wedding videos, and has written for The Rapidian鈥攁 hyperlocal online newspaper for Grand Rapids. His poetry has been published in Dialogue, Calvin鈥檚 journal of commentary and the arts.
A Faster Carriage
Her carriage flashed red鈥
always leaving dying embers
In the hearths and minds of men.
Even the Jaws of Life can鈥檛 open her heart.
The last time I saw her,
She was gliding, riding
down dawn鈥檚 break,
Until her fiery brake lights
burned the world upon her.
I heard Death鈥檚 carriage wheels spin slowly
over the wreckage of her spun-out flames.
Caroline Higgins 鈥11
Caroline Higgins graduated from Calvin College in December of 2011 and currently lives in Grand Rapids. She is working as a nanny and freelance photographer and preparing to spend the 2013鈥2014 school year abroad teaching English in Budapest. You can find more of her eclectic musings online at听.
under one roof
Our beds deflate overnight
And couch pillows press paisleys onto reddened cheeks.
This basement has a sunset wall,
featuring gin, a border collie, and Hemingway.
Together we sleep!
United by soup and shared highway miles.
.
I wake to the beeping door,
counting us鈥
adding up our late-night cigarettes,
and semi-private porch conversations,
鈥渢he midwest is good for sounds,鈥 I hear,
and a cicada echoes over a pool of chlorine.
.
At the wedding, we believe in dancing
but haven鈥檛 decided about love.
If we don鈥檛 cheer the cause, will the crickets cry out for us?
.
Slowly, slowly, we begin to scatter.
See this in its original format.
L. S. Klatt
Lew (L. S.) Klatt is an at Calvin College. His poems have appeared in many magazines, including Boston Review, Colorado Review, field, Verse, Chicago Review, Sycamore Review, Denver Quarterly, West Branch, Columbia, The Iowa Review, The Cincinnati Review, The Common, The Michigan Poet, The Believer, Narrative, Northwest Review, New Orleans Review, Crazyhorse, Indiana Review, Mississippi Review, Harvard Review听and Blackbird. His first book, Interloper, won the Juniper Prize for Poetry and was published by the University of Massachusetts Press in 2009. His second collection, Cloud of Ink, won the Iowa Poetry Prize and was published by the University of Iowa Press in 2011. His lyric poem 鈥淎ndrew Wyeth, Painter, Dies At 91鈥 was anthologized in Best American Poetry 2011 and subsequently made into a 90-second animated film. He lives with his wife, Clarke, and their two dogs in the Eastown neighborhood of Grand Rapids.
See his poem "General Motors" in its original format.
Sharon Piwang ex鈥12
Sharon Piwang was born in Lynchburg, Va., and raised across the world in Uganda, the Pearl of Africa. She came to the United States for the second time in her life as a student of Calvin College. As a product of an African home with an input of American culture, Piwang lives on a tightrope strung between an Eastern heritage and a Western mindset. While with this comes the constant danger of falling from a great height, she says, the view has always been magnificent. After a momentous鈥攂ut now forgotten鈥攁dolescent crisis at the age of fourteen, she poured out bitter woes in her first poem on the pages of a journal. Piwang has been reading, writing, dreaming and thinking in poetry ever since. As a freshman at Calvin she learned that poetry was essential for maintaining her balance. Piwang says she will always remember this discovery as one of the best gifts she ever received.
Lemon-Grass Lessons
In the home of my mother
Her children would sit around a yellow wood table
At the end of empty bellied days
Drinking lemon-grass tea
With herbs pulled from the dark soil of my mother's garden
These are words my mother said at that table:
My children
Our tomorrows are always chances to right our yesterdays
Lemon-grass tea would warm the end of empty bellied days
The sunshine strength of my mother's love would warm empty hearts
My mother's child
Now sits at a yellow wood table under different colored skies
At the end of empty bellied days
Drinking still my mother's sunshine-strong love
And my mother's wisdom in lemon-grass tea
Our tomorrows are always chances to right our yesterdays
Jacob Schepers 鈥12
A two-time winner of the Academy of American Poets' Student Poetry Prize, Jacob Schepers is currently a graduate student in English at SUNY Buffalo. His first book has won the 2013 Outriders Poetry Project Competition and will be published in March 2014. His poetry has appeared or will appear in Verse, PANK, Spittoon, The Fiddleback听and REAL, among others. He lives with his wife, Charis, and his two sons, Liam and Oliver, in Amherst, N.Y.
Nawlins
Those brass bands do
something deep, deep in me,
showing me my missteps
through the shape
of my embouchure
No ghosts clamor here:
we stole their banging
pots and pans
but that's only the ghosts
Only the ghosts
听
would go about announcing
their presence as
the second coming
of the good Lord,
so in lieu of them
I'd like to be there
when those saints go听marching in,
which begs the question:
does heaven have a nosebleed section,
and, if so, are they
the best or the worst seats?
Tyler Slamkowski 鈥14
Tyler Slamkowski is a senior double majoring in music and international development studies with a minor in writing. He is the resident assistant on 3rd Schultze; a trumpeter in the wind ensemble; co-founder of the Calvin Jazz Club; a 2013 Jubilee Fellow; a member of the Honors Council; and a former Chimes editor. His poetry has been published in Dialogue and on the cover of听Chimes. In his free time, Tyler enjoys cycling, backpacking, live music, antics with friends and good conversation. Tyler spent the past summer as a Jubilee Fellows Intern at Manito Presbyterian Church in Spokane, Wash.; his home is in Muskegon, Mich., with his family and his dog.
Foresight
The table perseveres, its knots
the eyes of a stranger. It watches
a feast: the clients are eager to confide,
trusting in the prefecture of the table
over the tribunal of their peers.
听
Remember the wine cellar, flesh in blossom
and door closed? The money
bled all over its surface, but with
lights out and mouths sealed, no one
knew but the weathered cherry.
Victims,鈥攖hey stand
as symptoms of trial. To celebrate, a table
may ruminate, and on a day
without heat or softness, pray
and hide the glass from wrath.
Horeb
stone. gold, crafted
by men听听听听听听 split,鈥
a rescue. zeal, or the
sword cleans.
stare down the fire:
Shema.
Chelsea Tanis 鈥13
Chelsea Tanis graduated from Calvin in 2013 with a degree in Writing. She currently lives in Three Rivers, Mich., where she is an intern with the non-profit organization *culture is not optional by day, and Red-E-Coin Laundromat supervisor by night.
I Could Go On
Those birds need to pick a direction,
pick a sound, like the cicadas,
like my grandfather, son of the dirt,
who puts his faith in black palms
and in the hillside beat throbbing in his calves.
When we鈥檝e turned from this trampled sky,
I know he鈥檒l swallow the aftertaste and
say that it鈥檚 enough to have had the early days,
but those birds need a direction,
any direction, if I鈥檓 to live as long as he.