Political Poems
Plato wanted to banish poets from his Republic because they can make lies seem like truth. Shelley thought poets were “the unacknowledged legislators of the world,” and Auden insisted that “poetry makes nothing happen.” This collection of poems point to the many different kinds of political poems, and the reasons for writing them.
JFK requested Frost, Clinton invited Angelou and Miller, and Obama asked Alexander: read the four poems that have been read at presidential inaugurations.
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Elizabeth Alexander
I know there’s something better down the road.
We need to find a place where we are safe.
We walk into that which we cannot yet see. -
Maya Angelou
But today, the Rock cries out to us, clearly, forcefully,
Come, you may stand upon my
Back and face your distant destiny, -
Robert Frost
Something we were withholding made us weak
Until we found out that it was ourselves -
Miller Williams
But how do we fashion the future? Who can say how
except in the minds of those who will call it Now?
Poems about democracy, freedom, wonder, and other ideals that have survived centuries.
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Lawrence Ferlinghetti
and I am waiting
for the lost music to sound again
in the Lost Continent
in a new rebirth of wonder -
Carl Sandburg
Let your laughter come free
remembering looking toward peace:
“We must disenthrall ourselves.” -
David Hernandez
Presidents and senators strut into the nation's capitol and tower monumentally over the masses.
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Gregory Corso
The umbrella’d congressmen; the rapping tires
of big black cars, the shoulders of lobbyists
caught under canopies and in doorways, -
Robert Lowell
We cannot name their names, or number their dates
—circle on circle, like rings on a tree— -
Linda Pastan
Looking at Jefferson now,
I think of the language
he left for us to live by.
These poets reveal the difficulties of the present and hope for different futures.
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Jena Osman
Freedom I said: the enduring ally cells.
Interested in the view, in our aid sensitivities. -
Adrienne Rich
this is not somewhere else but here,
our country moving closer to its own truth and dread, -
Muriel Rukeyser
As the lights darkened, as the lights of night brightened,
We would try to imagine them, try to find each other,
To construct peace, to make love, to reconcile -
Lorenzo Thomas
The land was there before us
Was the land. Then things
Began happening fast. -
Evie Shockley
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Robert Hass
In spite of Auden’s pragmatic truism, poetry insists on a life in politics.
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Fred Marchant
I think that if my tongue alone could talk
it would swear
in any court that poetry
tastes like the iodine in blood, -
Duane Niatum
You said to me that day,
“There’s nothing you can do,”
and spoke of Auden’s line:
“Poetry makes nothing happen.” -
Robert Pinsky
Is peace merely a vacuum, the negative
Of creation, or the absence of war?
The teaching says Peace is a positive energy.
Still something in me resists that sweet milk,
Poems that poke fun at official rhetoric, update beloved national texts, and present political allegories.
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Howard Nemerov
No bars are set too close, no mesh too fine
To keep me from the eagle and the lion, -
Rosmarie Waldrop
We holler these trysts to be self-exiled that all manatees are credited
equi-distant ... -
Evie Shockley
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Dorothy Parker
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Alli Warren
Five poets try to determine what makes a poem political.
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Kwame Dawes
I suspect that one could posit that poets who shatter how we engage the world through the rupture of language, for instance, are engaged in a political act.
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Kwame Dawes
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Forrest Gander
Two very different new books, one by Naomi Shihab Nye and one by Kent Johnson, turn epistolary toward remarkably similar and fierce political ends.
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Eileen Myles
what is a political poem today and how do we describe, experience, understand the intimate balance going on between information, sentiment and aesthetics that determines how we read a poem and whether it even seems political to us
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Rachel Zucker
It’s true that I do not usually sit down to write about something, but more and more I want poems to be about something—something important and meaningful—and I want poetry not just to be something or be about something but to do something.
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Craig Santos Perez
For myself, I am always asking: how can poetry effectively address political issues (particularly related to the decolonization of my home island of Guåhan)? At the same time, I ask: how can poetry and poets engage with the public and political sphere beyond the page/book?
Robert Archambeau and Daisy Fried respond to essays on politics and poetry by David Orr and David Biespiel.
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David Orr
Rare is the poet who doesn't view himself as deeply invested in political life, and yet the sloppy, compromised, and frequently idiotic business of democracy—which is, for all its flaws, the way most political changes occur in this country—rarely attracts the attention of our best poets. Is this the inevitable order of things?
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Robert Archambeau
I have been working on a book that tries to pull together some kind of answer to the question Orr poses. If I'm lucky, all my rooting around in dingy archives in pursuit of an answer will also produce a thesis or two on a related question, one raised not long ago in a post by Lucia Perillo on the Poetry Foundation's "Harriet" blog: why are contemporary poets generally aligned with the political left?
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David Biespiel
America’s poets have a minimal presence in American civic discourse and a minuscule public role in the life of American democracy. I find this condition perplexing and troubling—both for poetry and for democracy.
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Daisy Fried
Is Biespiel advocating for more politics in poems? Fewer arguments about poetics for the good of the nation? Arguments about poetics are good for poetry. And have nothing whatsoever to do with public life, whether your poetics are politically-grounded or not.
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Jack Spicer
There are bosses in poetry as well as in the industrial empire and everything else, and what I want to talk to you about today is simply that—how to manage yourself in your own individual way, I guess, since no poet who’s worthy of the term doesn’t.
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
Robert Lowell's “July in Washington” puts America in a vegetable context.
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
Secret terrorist communications or just plain poetry?
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
Charles Bernstein, Patricia Smith and Forrest Gander offer presidential advice.
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
Elizabeth Alexander on how the Derek Walcott-toting, June Jordan-quoting president will affect poets and poetry.
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
Hear who Elizabeth Alexander would have picked and her thoughts on Frost and other past inaugural poets.
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
How Seamus Heaney defines Ireland's 1972 troubles with a portrait of a drunken seaman blown up in a pub.
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
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From Poetry Off the Shelf