Sunday, November 22, 2020

Paul Henniger rightly credits Clare Harner Lyon

In June 1982 syndicated columnist Paul Henniger correctly identified Clare Harner Lyon as the author of popular eulogy "Do not stand at my grave and weep," alternatively titled "Do not stand by my grave and weep" or "Immortality."

Sun, Jun 13, 1982 – 414 · The San Francisco Examiner (San Francisco, California) · Newspapers.com

From the San Francisco Examiner, June 13, 1982: 

We printed the poem last September, but as word got around about this inspiring eulogy we've received many more requests and are happy to repeat it: 

"Do not stand at my grave and weep;

I am not there. I do not sleep.

I am a thousand winds that blow. 

I am the diamond glints on snow. 

I am the sunlight on ripened grain.

I am the gentle autumn's rain.

When you awaken in the morning's hush,

I am the swift uplifting rush

of quiet birds in circled flight.

I am the soft stars that shine at night.

Do not stand at my grave and cry:

I am not there. I did not die."

The poet is Clare Harner Lyon. John Carpenter, who co-wrote the TV script of the 1979 TV movie, reports that he heard it in 1977, when it was delivered by the late John Wayne as the eulogy at the funeral of director Howard Hawks.  --Paul Henniger

The poem known as "Do not stand at my grave and weep" was first printed under the title "Immortality" in a Cincinnati poetry magazine called The Gypsy, as shown in my 2018 article Clare Harner's 'Immortality' (1934). The tenth line as reprinted in the San Francisco Examiner on June 13, 1982 reads

"I am the soft stars that shine at night."

replacing

"I am the day transcending night."

in the text as originally published December 1934 in The Gypsy  It seems that the later revision to "I am the soft stars that shine at night" may have been made by the author herself--possibly after her marriage to David Haines Lyon in October 1943, which would explain Henniger's use of Clare Harner's married name, Clare Harner Lyon.

In March 1980 and November 1981 Henniger had reprinted the poem without attribution. 

"The identity of the poet is unknown, according to NBC. The writer of the teleplay, John Carpenter, reports that he heard it in 1977 when it was delivered by the late John Wayne at the funeral of film director Howard Hawks."

Sometime during the next six months Henniger must have learned that San Francisco resident Clare Harner Lyon wrote the poem. One year later, rival TV columnist Richard K. Shull launched the dubious and unverifiable claim for Mrs. Mary E. Frye of Baltimore as the admirably unpretentious author of "Do not stand at my grave and weep." Shull's appealing 1983 tale was influentially amplified by Kelly Ryan in a dramatic episode of the Canadian radio program "Ideas" titled A Poetic Journey, first broadcast on CBC in May 2000. 

Paul Henniger's obituary from the Los Angeles Times, May 21, 1999: 

Paul Henniger; Former L.A. Times TV Writer
Paul Henniger, 78, former television writer for Los Angeles Times Syndicate and The Times. Born in San Francisco, Henniger moved to Los Angeles in 1946. He worked for The Times’ sister paper The Mirror from 1948 until it folded in 1961 and then for The Times in its television news section until his retirement in 1994. For many years, Henniger helped create the newspaper’s logs of television listings and wrote a weekly column about sport programs on television. Throughout his career, Henniger also wrote a television column and numerous features for the Times syndicate, which marketed the articles to newspapers throughout the country. On May 9 in Encino of pneumonia. 
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1999-may-21-me-39445-story.html

Monday, August 13, 2018

Let the Surging Waters . . .

From "Choir Practice" (a monthly column of contemporary poetry selected by Ellen M. Carroll) in the Charleston Evening Post (Charleston, South Carolina), February 15, 1936:
Charleston, SC Evening Post - February 15, 1936
via GenealogyBank
LET THE SURGING WATERS . . .
Give him a rugged voyage, Lord,
As he comes to Death's uncharted fiord.

In Life, he loved the rampant gale
   And laughed to watch the jagged dart
   Of lightning tear the clouds apart,
And shouted with joy at the wind and hail.

He never thought that calm was right . . .
   Quarter was given but never sought,
   Nor peace desired by him, who fought
And thrilled to feel the urge to fight.
Lord, give him a plunging ship—
He would not rest on a quiet trip.
—Clare Harner, Kansas.

Monday, August 6, 2018

And There Was Light by Clare Harner

From "Choir Practice" (a monthly column of contemporary poetry selected by Charleston poet Ellen M. Carroll) in the Charleston, South Carolina Evening Post, August 14, 1936:


Charleston, SC Evening Post - August 14, 1936
via GenealogyBank


AND THERE WAS LIGHT
Because I knew the day had passed,
I did not see that the shades were fast:
   For there was no light within
      To keep from shining out.
   Nor light outside coming in—
      And my heart was filled with doubt.

And then one tiny ray, from where
It came, and how, I do not care:
   In whirling, brave advance
      It marched across the floor.
   By some uncanny chance
      My room was dark no more.

Then I lit a candle, pulled the shades
And practiced some lilting serenades.
All at once, my heart was light.
Queer to have been afraid of night!
—Clare Harner, Kansas.

Where You Go

Sat, Aug 8, 1936 – 4 · The Central New Jersey Home News (New Brunswick, New Jersey) · Newspapers.com

WHERE YOU GO
By Clare Harner

I am tired of wandering;
I would have a fire
And I would have a window
Where I could view a spire.

I would have a cottage,
A dog, a Persian cat;
And I would have some chickens
And sparrows' friendly chat.

But I love your restless spirit . . .
You shall never know
That I would want a garden
Where yellow asters grow.

—From The Gypsy
Reprinted from The Gypsy poetry magazine, volume 12 (June 1936) page 15. This is the second of two poems by Clare Harner in The Gypsy. The first was Clare Harner's Immortality, published in the December 1934 issue.

Sigma Delta Chi award

Thu, Apr 16, 1931 – 8 · Manhattan Republic (Manhattan, Kansas) · Newspapers.com

"Esther Rockey, Manhattan, and Clare Harner, Howard, are winners of the Sigma Delta Chi award, announced recently, given to the seniors in the department of journalism at Kansas State, with the highest scholastic standing. Miss Rockey's (left) average is 2.43 points and Miss Harner's 2.27 points." --Manhattan Republic (Manhattan, Kansas), April 16, 1931.

Thu, Jan 15, 1931 – 1 · The Manhattan Mercury (Manhattan, Kansas) · Newspapers.com

WIN JOURNALISM AWARDS.
Sigma Delta Chi Scholarships to Esther Rockey, Clare Harner.

"Miss Esther Rockey, Manhattan, and Miss Clare Harner, Howard, seniors in industrial journalism at the college, have been announced winners of scholarships awarded by Sigma Delta Chi, national journalistic fraternity. The award is made to students having best scholarship record in the highest ten percent of the journalism graduating class." --The Manhattan Mercury (Manhattan, Kansas), January 15, 1931.

Monday, July 30, 2018

Clare Harner in the 1931 Royal Purple

Clare Harner - 1931 Royal Purple
Clare Harner graduated in 1931 from Kansas State College of Agriculture and Applied Science, now Kansas Sate University. As shown in her college yearbook, she majored in Journalism and wrote for the student newspaper (Collegian) as a Junior. In her Senior year Clare Harner worked on the college humor magazine (Brown Bull) and the "Humor" department of the Royal Purple.

CLARE HARNER - - - - - - Howard
Industrial Journalism

Kappa Kappa Gamma, Sigma Delta Chi Scholarship Award,
Quill Club (2, 3, 4), Glee Club (3), Brown Bull Staff (4),
Collegian Staff (3), Royal Purple (4).
--1931 Royal Purple