Two Poems

Lucille Clifton

climbinga woman precedes me up the long rope,her dangling braids the color of rain.maybe i should have had braids.maybe i should have kept the body i started,slim and possible as a boy's bone.maybe i should have wanted less.maybe i should have ignored the bowl in meburning to be filled.maybe i should have wanted less. the woman passes the notch in the ropemarked Sixty.     i rise toward it, struggling, hand over hungry hand. june 20i will be born in one weekto a frowned forehead of a womanand a man whose fingers will itchto enter me. she will crocheta dress for me of silverand he will carry me in it.they will do for each otherall that they canbut it will not be enough.none of us know that we will notsmile again for years,that she will not live long.in one week i will emerge face firstinto their temporary joy.

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Lucille Clifton was born in Depew, New York in 1936, and educated at the State University of New York at Fredonia and at Howard University. She was the Distinguished Professor of Humanities at St. Mary’s College of Maryland and a professor of English at Duke University. Her awards included the National Book Award, the Juniper Prize for Poetry, an Emmy Award, and two nominations for the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry.

The Book of Light Cover

Port Townsend, Washington

Praise for Lucille Clifton "[Lucille Clifton] is a passionate, mercurial writer, by turns angry, prophetic, compassionate, shrewd, sensuous, vulnerable, and funny."—The New York Times Book Review" Clifton's poems are witty, conversational, and self-reflexive."—Dean Rader, Los Angeles Review of Books" Clifton's poems are profound and powerful to behold."—Publishers Weekly" If you like poetry, a poem by Lucille Clifton will eventually track you down. It will stand behind you tapping its foot until you turn around. Twice your height, the poem will fold its arms across its chest and tell you to wipe that silly look off your face and listen up. You will listen up....When you look at the poem, really look at it, you realize that here is a poem that will run into a burning building for you, throw you over its shoulder, and walk you out into cool air."—City Paper" The work of a minimalist artist like Clifton makes empty space resonate....Clifton...defines herself without raising her voice."—American Poetry Review

Praise for The Book of Light "One of the most celebrated and beloved voices in poetry, Clifton brings to vivid life the intersections of the sacred and the secular ('between starshine and clay') and the everyday and the extraordinary with her trademark simplicity and precision. . . . This essential edition is an excellent reminder of the poet's inimitable gifts."—Publishers Weekly, STARRED REVIEW

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