“bless the daughter raised by a voice in her head.” ~ warsan shire
“Bless the daughter raised… (shire)
“bless the daughter raised by a voice in her head.” ~ warsan shire
"I am offering this poem to you, since I have nothing else to give." ~Jimmy Santiago Baca
“bless the daughter raised by a voice in her head.” ~ warsan shire
“While looking for the light, you may suddenly be devoured by the darkness and find the true light.”
– Jack Kerouac, from The Scripture of the Golden Eternity (Corinth Books, 1960)
The meaning of poetry is to give courage. A poem is not a puzzle that you the dutiful reader are obliged to solve. It is meant to poke you, get you to buck up, pay attention, rise and shine, look alive, get a grip, get the picture, pull up your socks, wake up and die right. . . .
People complain about the obscurity of poetry, especially if they’re assigned to write about it, but actually poetry is rather straightforward compared to ordinary conversation with people you don’t know well, which tends to be jumpy repartee, crooked, coded, allusive to no effect, firmly repressed, locked up in irony, steadfastly refusing to share genuine experience—think of conversation at office parties or conversation between teenage children and parents, or between teenagers themselves, or between men, or between bitter spouses: rarely in ordinary conversation do people speak from the heart and mean what they say. How often in the past week did anyone offer you something from the heart? It’s there in poetry. Forget everything you ever read about poetry, it doesn’t matter–poetry is the last preserve of honest speech and the outspoken heart. All that I wrote about it as a grad student I hereby recant and abjure—all that matters about poetry to me now is directness and clarity and truthfulness. All that is twittery and lit’ry: no thanks, pal.
~ Garrison Keillor, Good Poems for Hard Times (from Introduction)
“Always learn poems by heart. They have to become the marrow in your bones. Like fluoride in the water, they’ll make your soul impervious to the world’s soft decay.”
– Janet Fitch, White Oleander
“I’m restless. Things are calling me away. My hair is being pulled by the stars again.”
***
She’s talking in her sleep, it’s keeping me awake
And Anna begins to toss and turn
And every word is nonsense but I understand and
oh lord. I’m not ready for this sort of thing
“Anna Begins” by Counting Crows