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About The Book
Description
Author(s)
<p><em>Ourigan Oregon</em>&nbsp;is a collection of poems divided into two distinct groups distinct in terms of time and temperament but also wildly different in style influence and purpose. They were written by two different authors over two hundred years apart: William Clark of the Corps of Discovery in 1804-1806 and an anonymous author possibly posthumous and seemingly from Portland Oregon in the years 2017-2019.</p><p><br></p><p>Where the two meet is in the places and things found up and down and along either side of the Columbia River the lifeblood of Oregon from as far east as Dog River (modern-day Hood River) or even the Dalles to the western shores of the U.S. where the Columbia River vomits sweet water into the brine of the great Pacific Octean.</p><p><br></p><p>To say that William Clark of Lewis and Clark fame wrote poetry in his journals sounds far-fetched: he wrote in a prose that is however&nbsp;<em>highly poetic</em>&nbsp;in places. These are the&nbsp;<em>Ourigan</em>&nbsp;poems co-authored or rather edited by Richard Robinson. They are 95% pure Clark: misspellings warts poetry and all; and 5% Robinson: editing meter rhythm and rhyme where it works.</p><p><br></p><p>The anonymous poems - the Oregon poems - are written seemingly as recollections in tranquility by an author whose background and whereabouts are equally uncertain. The poems were written in the same places along the river that Clark visited. But their themes although similar are wildly different. There is in addition a very particular&nbsp;<em>pinch</em>&nbsp;of modernness to them which some might call depravity.</p><p><br></p><p>We leave it to the readers to judge for themselves whether this collection of poetry coheres or abruptly falls apart and dies like water over an edge or like autumnal leaves dropping one by one into the river as they quietly mend their way south and keep far from the strand.</p>