THROUGH
MOUNTAIN MISTS
Early Settlers of
John Their
Descendants...Their Stories...Their Achievements
Lifting the
Mists of History on Their Way of Life
By: Ethelene Dyer Jones
The
Prairie Schooner, literary magazine of the
Reece, who was still feeling the blunt
of rejection for World War II enlistment because of what he termed a
“nervous
tic in his face,” was feeling lonely and isolated on his Choestoe farm. It was amidst this loneliness, his care for
his sick parents, and the heavy farming duties that he received a
letter from
Poet Jesse Stuart inviting Reece to send him more poems.
Form a picture of another Appalachian
poet sitting on a potato box in the combination store/post office in
Stuart later stated that he considered
“The Ballad of the Rider” one of the best ballads he had read by an
American
poet. Commenting on the ballads and
short lyrical poems Reece had sent him for evaluation, Stuart stated: “He hadn’t written just so many meaningless
lines
but he had written lyrical ballads with beauty and power.
He had written poetry akin to the sixteenth
and seventeenth English and the early Irish poets.” (Quoted on p. 36
in Raymond
Cook’s biography, Mountain Singer,
1980).
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Published poet Jesse Stuart of Kentucky introduced Reece's poems to publisher, E. P. Dutton of New York, and thus assisted Reece to have his first book, Ballad of the Bones, published in 1945. |
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Poet Byron Herbert Reece was mowing hay on his farm when three advance copies of Ballad of the Bones arrived from publisher E. P. Dutton on Reece's 28th birthday, Sept. 14, 1945. |
Dutton Company did accept the
poems for
publication and tried to reach Reece by phone, but there was no
telephone at
the Reece farm. The announcement came by
letter. He completed another long poem
in November, 1942, “Ballad of the Bones,” based on the account in
Ezekiel 37
from the Bible. He showed the ballad to
his mother, Emma. She got a ride to
Blairsville and took the ballad to Charles Bartholomew, editor of The Union County Citizen. Emma
had commented to her son, “It’s
something!” Bartholomew said to Reece’s
mother: “It’s too wonderful to be true!”
(Cook,
p. 40)
The new
ballad became both the title and
the first poem in his first book, Ballad
of the Bones, published by E. P. Dutton. On
his twenty-eighth birthday,
In the afternoon, no doubt with a
lighter heart, he went back to his task of mowing.
In November of that year the book was
released by Dutton and immediately met with national acclaim. Poets such as William Rose Benet, John Gould
Fletcher, John Hall Wheelock, and Alfred Kreyemborg praised his depth
of
perception and lyrical acumen. The book
sold well, in first and second printings, and by January, 1946, Dutton
had
produced a third printing.
Working also in the novel genre, Reece
produced two novels published by Dutton:
Better a Dinner of Herbs
(1950) and The Hawk and the Sun
(1955). In ten years from 1945 through
1955 his publication number for books totaled six, an achievement of
note for
any writer and especially for a farmer-poet in
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