POETS YOU SHOULD KNOW

1.  What does the title mean?

2.  What does the poem mean? (Content)

Think about the meaning of the poem, not just the obvious meaning of each word

but what they mean beyond the literal. Do these words suggest something else?

• Who is the subject of the poem?

• What are they talking about?

• Why do you think the author wrote the poem?

• When is the poem happening?

• Where is the poem happening?

• What is the poet’s attitude?

• What is the message of the poem?

3.  Poetic devices: Tools of the poet (Form)

Identify different poetic devices and how they convey the poem’s message.

• Simile – comparison using like or as

• Metaphor – a direct comparison

• Personification – giving human qualities to nonhuman things

• Tone – what emotion does the speaker use as he talks

• Point of view – who is the telling the poem

• Imagery – creating pictures with words

• Alliteration – repeating the same letter

• Line/Stanza – how does this exemplify the message or the meaning?

4.  If you were to teach the poem, what are two questions you could ask about the poem?

ALEX DIMITROV

Like a Letter, I'm Never Coming Back


No signs outside my window,
nothing to read into autumn.
The wind with suchvelocity,
it reminds me we’ve said too many things.
Most animals, most animals prefersilence.
The distances at which we know each other
tell us little of how the dead know theearth.
Do you think restraint is a feeling you can aim with
when it’s bloodless at thecenter?
Do you think you havetime?
I’m not sure what’s more importantanymore,
our American past or future. And today is athread
I’ve had in my mouth fortoo long.
Its color has dissolved on mytongue.
It no longer remembers the fabric it camefrom,
it no longer wants to remember atall.

CATE MARVIN

Ocean is a Word in This Poem

One centimeter on the map represents one kilometer on the ground.

River I can cover with a finger, but it's not the water I resent. Ocean—

even the word thinks itself huge, and only because of what it meant.

I remember its lip on a road that ran along the coast of Portsmouth.

Waves tested a concrete brim where people stood to see how far

the water went. Sky was huge, but I didn't mind why. The sea

was too choppy and gray, a soup thick with salt and distance. Look,

sails are white as wedding dresses, but their cut is much cleaner.

No, I never planned to have a honeymoon by water, knew it'd tempt

me to leave your company, drop in. Ocean may allow boats to ride

its surface, but its word cannot anchor the white slip of this paper.

It cannot swallow the poem. Turbulence is on the wall. The map—

I would tear it, forget how I learned land's edge exists. I would sink

into the depth of past tense, more treacherous than the murk into

which our vessel went. Now when I pull down the map, eat its image

and paper, I'll swallow what wedding meant. Salt crusts my lips.

Gabrille Calvocoressi

SAVE ME JOE LOUIS

When I was small no one stopped the fights.
A man could beat you till you died,
the crowd leaning in, you on your knees,
maybe somewhere someone says,No,

but it's like spoons dropping in kitchens:
enough to make someone look up,
not enough to get them moving.
The ref's just glad it isn't him

trying to stand, shading his face
like he's coming out of the movies
into winter sun, shock of the world
made real again — brutal, to be sure,

but America is like that,
unrelenting, you get what you ask for
in the ring or on the kitchen floor.
Someone always wants you to give up,

shake hands, wipe the blood away and talk
of lighter things. And you do
because you've been fighting long enough
to know there's no one here to save you.

BRENDA SHAUGNESSY

ARTLESS

is my heart. A stranger

berry there never was,

tartless.

Gone sour in the sun,

in the sunroom or moonroof,

roofless.

No poetry. Plain. No

fresh, special recipe

to bless.

All I’ve ever made

with these hands

and life, less

substance, more rind.

Mostly rim and trim,

meatless

but making much smoke

in the old smokehouse,

no less.

Fatted from the day,

overripe and even

toxic at eve. Nonetheless,

in the end, if you must

know, if I must bend,

waistless,

to that excruciation.

No marvel, no harvest

left me speechless,

yet I find myself

somehow with heart,

aloneless.

With heart,

fighting fire with fire,

(stanza continued)

fightless.

That loud hub of us,

meat stub of us, beating us

senseless.

Spectacular in its way,

its way of not seeing,

congealing dayless

but in everydayness.

In that hopeful haunting

(a lesser

way of saying

in darkness) there is

silencelessness

for the pressing question.

Heart, what art you?

War, star, part? Or less:

playinga part, staying apart

from the one who loves,

loveless.

TRACY K. SMITH

Sci-Fi

There will be no edges, but curves.

Clean lines pointing only forward.

History, with its hard spine & dog-eared

Corners, will be replaced with nuance,

Just like the dinosaurs gave way

To mounds and mounds of ice.

Women will still be women, but

The distinction will be empty. Sex,

Having outlived every threat, will gratify

Only the mind, which is where it will exist.

For kicks, we'll dance for ourselves

Before mirrors studded with golden bulbs.

The oldest among us will recognize that glow—

But the word sun will have been re-assigned

To a Standard Uranium-Neutralizing device

Found in households and nursing homes.

And yes, we'll live to be much older, thanks

To popular consensus. Weightless, unhinged,

Eons from even our own moon, we'll drift

In the haze of space, which will be, once

And for all, scrutable and safe.

MARK BIBBINS

AND YOU THOUGHT YOU WERE THE ONLY ONE

Someone waits at my door. Because he is

dead he has time but I have my secrets—

this is what separates us from the dead.

See, I could order take-out or climb down

the fire escape, so it's not as though he

is keeping me from anything I need.

While this may sound like something I made up,

it is not; I have forgotten how to

lie, despite all my capable teachers.

Lies are, in this way, I think, like music

and all is the same without them as with.

The fluid sky retains regret, then bursts.

He is still there, standing in the hall, insisting

he is someone I once knew and wanted,

come laden with gifts he cannot return.

If I open the door he'll flash and fade

like heat lightning behind a bank of clouds

one summer night at the edge of the world. -

Ada Limón

THE FIRST

Down to the basics of the basics,
deep star on the horizon, full blown
vision in the mountains. These are the cave
drawings, the beginning of our precious
pieces of self worth, our arms holding
ourselves, our arms made of paper,
our paper arms holding our beating
organs inside our paper selves.

TINA CHANG

Imagine, Refugee

Dream blood, dream red, dream.
Therand then theeaand thedm.
Let the letters ride there, then subtract it.
The roof of a shelter, the grandeur
of smoke, a sun print on a rocket.

I have come to the border town.
Take away theIand put it in a shelter dream,
now fill it up with bullets, now dream
bull. Now take thebout of it which is
the engine that makes it go.

There’s a baby in a basket. There’s a burning
basket lullabye. You know the words.
The words are mixed with the soil when
the soil is lifted with a shovel.

Place the soil on top of the wooden boxes
whose bodies dreamoo’s andah’s,
of fireworks branching out in the sky
on holiday, pots and pans clanging,
children playing by dawn, a dream
nailed down to a box.

MEGHAN O’ROURKE

MEDITATIONS ON A MOTH

How splendid yellow is.-Vincent van Gogh

My poor eye. It has done
so much looking--at the sky, at the dark-fretted
trumpets in the frescoes of the Chrysler Building,
at the opium dens ofHigh and Low,
where bodies sway like white flowers--
amount due, amount due.
Is the blue the blue you think of when I tell you?
Do ghosts have neuroses?
What is the point of the haunting they do?
Here--look. No, look.
I am trying to rid myself of myself;
to see past the tumbling clouds.
All evening drums rumble in the corner park.
The mobsters convene when the cops leave.
What goes down stays down,
the street at three A.M. a fantastic absence of color.
Outside the studio window
a river slides along its dulcimer bed,
aquifers and accordions and Alcatraz.
But you have to get up in the morning.
The brute blind glare of snow in sun.
Look again, and up you may rise
to something quite surprising in the distance.

RANDALL MAN

THE MORTICIAN IN SAN FRANCISCO


This may sound queer,
but in 1985 I held the delicate hands
of Dan White:
I prepared him for burial; by then, Harvey Milk
was made monument—no, myth—by the years
since he was shot.
I remember when Harvey was shot:
twenty, and I knew I was queer.
Those were the years,
Levi’s and leather jackets holding hands
on Castro Street, cheering for Harvey Milk—
elected on the same day as Dan White.
I often wonder about Supervisor White,
who fatally shot
Mayor Moscone and Supervisor Milk,
who was one of us, a Castro queer.
May 21, 1979: a jury hands
down the sentence, seven years—
in truth, five years—
for ex-cop, ex-fireman Dan White,
for the blood on his hands;
when he confessed that he had shot
the mayor and the queer,
a few men in blue cheered. And Harvey Milk?
Why cry over spilled milk,
some wondered, semi-privately, for years—
it meant “one less queer.”
The jurors turned to White.
If just the mayor had been shot,
Dan may have had trouble on his hands—
but the twelve who held his life in their hands
maybe didn’t mind the death of Harvey Milk;
maybe, the second murder offered him a shot
at serving only a few years.
In the end, he committed suicide, this Dan White.
And he was made presentable by a queer.

Mary Ruefle

SENTIMENTAL EDUCATION

Ann Galbraith

loves Barry Soyers.

Please pray for Lucius Fenn

who suffers greatly whilst shaking hands.

Bonny Polton

loves a pug named Cowl.

Please pray for Olina Korsk

who holds the record for missing fingers.

Leon Bendrix loves Odelia Jonson

who loves Kurt who loves Carlos who loves Paul.

Please pray for Cortland Filby

who handles a dead wasp, a conceit for his mother.

Harold loves looking at Londa's hair under the microscope.

Londa loves plaiting the mane of her pony.

Please pray for Fancy Dancer

who is troubled by the vibrissa in his nostrils.

Nadine St. Clair loves Ogden Smythe

who loves blowing his nose on postage stamps.

Please pray for William Shakespeare

who does not know how much we love him, miss him and think of him.

Yukiko Pearl loves the little bits of toffee

that fall to the floor when Jeffrey is done with his snack.

Please pray for the florist Marieko

who wraps roses in a paper cone then punches the wrong code.

Muriel Frame loves retelling the incident

that happened on the afternoon of November third.

Please pray for our teacher Ursula Twombly

who does not know the half of it.

By the radiator in a wooden chair

(stanza continued)

wearing woolen stockings sits a little girl

in a dunce's cap, a paper cone rolled to a point

and inverted on her hair; she's got her hands

in her lap and her head bowed down, her chin

is trembling with having been singled out like this

and she is sincere in her fervent wish to die.

Take it away and give it to the Tartars

who roll gloriously into battle.

Michael Earl Craig

This I Believe

I don’t know how to behave but

I know what I believe. I believe

that if I stick my head in the oven

I won’t take it out. I believe in

corduroy couch cushions. I believe

in digging a tunnel with a small

silver spoon. I believe in tunneling

with this spoon under the city

and never giving up.

I believe in after-breakfast naps

and Russian roulette—

Russian roulette while eating ice cream

as I watch the evening news.

I believe in the evening news.

And I believe in celebrity.

I believe in those photos

on the web of Putin playing doubles

Ping-Pong, outdoors, in his Speedo.

(Find those.) I believe in haircuts

and bubble gum, and putting my face

down into a pillow or cushion,

and that when I do this I will see

the future, plus other cultures, most

of them, and I’ll get work done

that couldn’t be done another way.

I believe in tacos and mortification.

I believe that all people fall

into one of two categories: Doonesbury or Far Side.