Lucille Clifton
Photo from:
http://likeawhisper.wordpress.com/2010/02/13/bhm-lucille-clifton/
It is fitting in some way
that she died so close to Valentine’s Day, a day that is graphically depicted
with hearts and a day devoted to the sharing of declarations of love,
appreciation and affection. It is also a day when gifts are exchanged. Her valentine
and legacy to all of us was the rich and lasting canon of her beautiful body of
work.
In her poem “heaven,” from The Terrible Stories, Copyright © 1996, BOA Editions, Ltd., she talks about her deceased brother:
looking down.
he has gathered a circle
of cloudy
friends around him
and they are watching the
world.”
She recalls how he used to
laugh at her when she tried to explain to him about the afterlife. And she
imagines him pointing toward her saying, “’she was my sister,” as she “feels”
him saying that “even when she was right, she was wrong.”
Perhaps on the other side, her brother will greet her with pride in all that his brilliant sister accomplished during her time here. And perhaps as he watched the decades of her life unfold, he will have gained a new perspective and appreciation of the remarkable talents of such a strong and gifted sister who shared her indomitable spirit with the world.
My hope is that he will welcome her and honor just how “right” she was about all manner of things and value, as so many others do, her wonderful contributions to the landscape of American poetry and her incalculable gifts to all who read her works.
After going through many trials with
illness throughout her life, Clifton ultimately died of a bacterial
infection. She slipped off the limiting bonds of her body – a body that suffered
injustices and hardships, much illness and pain – enabling her brilliant spirit
to soar to new and limitless heights. She loved that her name Lucille meant
“light.” I hope that the “light” to which she has returned is beyond any and
all expectations and beyond even the beauty and luminescence of her own exquisite
poetry.
A return to "the light" - Photo by Donna Poler, Copyright © 2010, all rights reserved.
The Joy of Hearing Her Voice Again
I just listened to a few
clips of her reading some of her poems and her spirit came so alive for me in
those readings. Just check out her reading of a well-known poem entitled “homage
to my hips” from Good Woman, Copyright © 1987, BOA Editions, Ltd., at http://poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/15599.
What fun she must have had writing and reading that one. How wonderful that her
miraculous voice and the conviction and courage that it always conveyed will
still be with us to make listeners laugh and cry and dig deep into their own souls.
Just listen to her amazing
intonations as she speaks her poem “my dream about being white” from Next:
New Poems, Copyright © 1989, BOA Editions, Ltd. There is something so special just in the way
she says “hey.” History becomes “his – story.” And listen to how she reads the
last lines with such playfulness. Here is the link:
In “sisters,” from Good
Woman: Poems and a Memoir 1969-1980, Copyright © 1987, she wrote a poem for a friend on her friend's birthday. Check
out her reading and the fun she has sharing it at http://poets.org/viewmedia.php/pprmMID/21307.
Listen to her dramatic emphasis on the word “loving” and her plaintive and
emphatic voice in the repeat of the phrase “loving ourselves.”
The Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival -- A Place to Fall in Love with Poets
I met Lucille Clifton several
times at The Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival held in beautiful
At each poetry festival I
have attended, I have fallen in love with one or two new poets – new for me
that is -- whose poetry resonated deeply for me. That year I fell in love with both
Lucille Clifton and Mark Doty, whose poem “Beau” and his love of dogs endeared
him to me along with his brilliant gifts for writing both poetry and prose. For
anyone who loves dogs, I highly recommend his beautifully written, poignant
book called Dog Years. It’s
especially wonderful for anyone who has loved and lost a cherished dog. And, of
course, I would recommend all his poetry.
At an earlier poetry
festival, I fell in love with the incomparable Stanley Kunitz, whose powerful,
resonant voice filled the huge poetry tent with power and grace despite his
slender build and advanced age. His brilliance was extraordinary, and he, too,
shared many deep secrets of his heart. Like
I felt sad at his passing, but there was also a kind of joy and fondness I felt at all he had achieved in his fruitful and lengthy life. He died when he was 100 years old. A framed picture of him within a gorgeous lavender garden graces one of the shelves in my office.
Photo by Donna Poler, Copyright © 2010, all rights reserved.
At the festival, poets
give workshops and talks during the day. Then at night, there are readings. On Saturday
evening, the highlight of the festival, some of the brightest and best poetic stars are
selected to share a sampling of their works.
That night, shortly after Clifton climbed the stairs to the stage, I fell in love with her voice, her rich sense
of humor, the range of subject in her poetry and the simple, yet graceful way
she shared her deep hurts and huge insights. As she read her poetry, each like
a petal on a gorgeous flower, listeners began to understand how magnificently
she had spun heart-wrenching pain into such golden works of art. She was
uncovering hurts and secrets, grief and longing, and so much pain, petal-by-petal and poem-by-poem. And of course, in her montage, there was always humor
nestled within to lighten the darkness and soften the blows.
Petal-by-petal and poem-by-poem - Photo by Donna Poler, Copyright © 2010, all rights reserved.
Perhaps the poem she read that day that whispered the loudest to me was “moonchild” from New Poems, Copyright © 2000, BOA Editions, Ltd. In “moonchild” she is talking about the moon, her childhood and some dark and haunting remembrances of her father:
"the moon understands dark places,
the moon has secrets of her own.
she holds what light she can."
Dark places and dark
secrets indeed. In the penultimate paragraph of the poem,
“we girls were ten years
old and giggling
in our hand-me-downs. we
wanted breasts,
pretended that we had
them, tissued
our undershirts. jay johnson
is teaching
me to french kiss, ella
bragged, who
is teaching you? how do
you say; my father?”
And she concludes:
“the moon is queen of
everything.
She rules the oceans,
rivers, rain.
I always blame the moon.”
In her poem “what did she
know, when did she know it,” from The
Terrible Stories, Copyright © 1996, BOA Editions, Ltd., Clifton wonders what her mother knew and when in a
chilling recollection:
“in the evenings
what it was the soft tap
tap
into the room the cold curve
of the sheet arced off
the fingers sliding in
She talks about the “cold air” and “cold edges” and why she never smiled as a little girl as she thinks about how mothers are “supposed to know everything” and wonders what her mother did know and “when did she know it.”
It was one of her
daughters, Alexis, who donated her kidney to
In her poem “dialysis,” from
New Poems, Copyright © 2000, BOA Editions,
Ltd., Clifton writes:
“we are not supposed to
hate
the dialysis unit. we are not
this is not supposed to
happen to me.
after the cancer the body
refused
to lose any more. Even the poisons
were claimed and kept.”
She dreams that “a house is burning” and that “something crawls out of the fire cleansed and purified.” In her dream, she calls it “light.” After suffering with cancer, she was “so grateful to be alive.” And she still has great passion and spirit: “I am alive and furious.” But she wonders in the final line of the poem about this latest blow to her health: “blessed be even this?”
Cleansed and purified by "light" - "I am alive and furious" - Photo by Donna Poler, Copyright © 2010, all rights reserved.
In a wonderful interview
with English Professor Hilary Holladay, on April 11, 1998, Clifton responded to Holladay's comments about the anger, sorrow and uncertainty in her poetry
along with its affirmations and celebrations. Clifton talked about her then upcoming book of poetry that
friends were saying sounded very dark.
(To see the full interview, go to
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/journal/article.html?id=179624.)
In her poem “donor,” from New Poems, Copyright © 2000, BOA
Editions, Ltd.,
“i think of the pills, the
everything
i gathered against
your inconvenient bulge;
and you
my stubborn baby child,
refusing my refusal.”
And Clifton worries:
to yours. again, again i feel you
buckled in despite me,
lex,
fastened to life like the
frown
on an angel’s brow.”
The Persistent Red Fox that Followed, Scared and Inspired Clifton -- Her Totem Animal
In the interview with
Holladay asked, "Was the fox coming here?" Clifton responds, “No, it was in St.
Mary’s County. I have an apartment there when I’m teaching in southern
Holladay then asked, "What happened to that fox?"Said Clifton, "I don't know. I finally moved, since I could not bear this fox! My friend was moving, my dear friend who’s just had her first book
published; she had been a student of mine. Her name is Anne Caston. She’s a
wonderful poet, an amazing poet. Anyway, she was moving, too. So we decided to
move to this new apartment complex in St. Mary’s County. And she moved so that
her apartment backed up to mine. But at the last moment, I said, ‘Well, Anne, I’ve
got a fireplace in mine, and you don’t have one.’ She has children, so I
thought the fireplace would be nicer for a family with kids. And so we changed
apartments; we exchanged.
"Well! The first night we were there, the fox comes to her apartment! A fox.
Who knows if . . . I choose to believe it was the same fox. And Anne -- this is
why I love this woman -- she came out of the door and said, “She moved around
there!” And the fox got up and trotted around to my apartment and spent the
night there and then left and was never seen again."
Like so many poets, Clifton's life was filled with many sorrows. Yet despite
all the hardships and extraordinarily difficult experiences in her life, she,
like a Phoenix, not only rose above them as best she could, but she gave voice
to them and wove them into lustrous poems, like pearls on a necklace, for all
to see. And those pearls of wisdom provided deep inspiration for others to
conjure up similar strength, tenacity and hope even in the face of such
daunting challenges to overcome. In her poem “sorrows,” from Poetry, Copyright ©2007, she writes:
“who would believe them
winged
who would believe they
could be
they could fall so in love
with mortals
that they would attach
themselves
as scars attach and ride
the skin”
And as she cries into her “cupped hands,” saying “enough,” she wonders how, oh how, she could be chosen yet again for another deep sorrow. To see the full text of the poem, go to http://www.poetryfoundation.org/archive/poem.html?id=180005.
Some Personal Encounters with Lucille Clifton
The first time I met
Lucille Clifton, I had gone through a very difficult life experience several
years before when I almost lost my lifemate to a near-fatal stroke. A professor
of English, he had made it through about a year later to a near perfect
recovery. He was with me, enjoying the glorious September day at Waterloo
When my turn in line came
to have
I saw her again a few years
later not too long after my lifemate’s sudden death on a New York City subway on his way to teach a graduate Shakespeare
class. Still fragile at the time, I went up to her and reminded her of our
brief conversation years before and told her of my recent loss. She opened her
arms and gave me a beautiful hug that I will never forget.
Moving Forward in the Face of Life's Challenges
and Riding Triumphantly Down the Highway of Her Life
Illuminating the mysteries of foxes and fears, dreams and
nightmares, surmounting challenges of both her past and present and finding the
courage and will to keep moving on despite all that had been thrown on her
extraordinary path – all of that propelled her forward. I think she said it
best in her magical poem “hag riding,” from The
Terrible Stories, Copyright ©1996, BOA Editions, Ltd.:
“why
is what I ask myself
maybe it is the afrikan in
me
still trying to get home
after all these years”
When she wakes “to the
heat of morning,” she envisions herself “galloping down the highway” of her life.
And she concludes with her bold and inspirational images:
“something hopeful rises
in me
rises and runs me out into
the road
and i lob my fierce thigh
high
over the rump of the day
and honey
i ride i ride”
The hope of a new day - Photo by Donna Poler, Copyright © 2010, all rights reserved.
I still can get tears in
my eyes when I read it because that short poem packs such power. I feel the
heat and intensity of her day and her deep longings. She has been around for
awhile as she shares in her phrase “all these years.” Yet she is not tired.
Her spirit and enthusiasm for life are still so powerful.
She takes all of us
with her as she gallops down the highway of her life. Life is happening quickly and passing very fast. She is taking the reins of her life and not sitting back passively or resting on her laurels. No, she is galloping through for the ride of her life. Despite so many life challenges, there is something “hopeful” that
emerges within her. And it is strong.
With that line, she
uplifts the heart of the reader. Suddenly there is not only heat, but light
shining in. And with both physical and emotional power and the sturdy structure
of her rich verse, she takes us all on her ride as she “lobs” her “fierce thigh
high over the rump of the day.”
And together we cheer her on as we watch her
galloping away. We are left awed and
inspired to take our own daring rides with passion and gusto despite life’s
hardships and our intermittent longing “to get home.”
Wherever she is, I hope
she is continuing to “lob her fierce thigh high” and “ride” oceans of clouds
and light as she continues to explore the mystical meaning of light and dark
and of life and death. I am so grateful to have met her and to have heard her read her
poetry aloud. I am glad, too, that her inimitable voice has been captured for
all to still savor and enjoy. As she wished for me, I, too, wish her “Joy!”
My heart goes out to her
family members and close friends whose hearts must be broken at losing such a
brilliant light in their lives. My hope is that they will find some consolation in
knowing how many lives and hearts she touched in her lifetime and what an
inspiration she has been to so many.
For me, the world is not quite the same without her physically in it. And it is sad for me to think that she has written her final poem. In some ways, her life and how she lived it with such honesty and passion is her final poem for the world to savor. I believe that wherever her spirit is, Clifton is finding great joy in her new-found freedom and final release from pain and illness.
"Water, water, waving forever" - Photo by Donna Poler, Copyright © 2010, all rights reserved.
Donna Poler, M.A.
Alternative Health
Consultant for People and their Pets
Certified Tellington
TTouch® Practitioner
Certified Usui Reiki Master
Animal Communicator
Angel Energy Lightworker
Intuitive Oracle Card
Reader
Writer and Author of
forthcoming E-book, “100 Plus Tips for Maintaining a Happy and Healthy Dog”
Dearest Donna, I am in awe of your exquisite writing and the gentle ways you have introduced us to the heart and soul of Lucille. Your heart offers a perspective that honors her life so eloquently.
I hope that some day I will be honored in this way...that we all are honored in this way.
You are an amazing woman. Never turn from your gifts as a writer. Your healing nature (it's true - healing is your nature) comes through with each word.
I think we should send this to Oprah. She should do a show about Lucille...and have you on it. love, Ani
Posted by: Anita Pathik Law | 03/06/2010 at 05:28 AM
Dearest Ani,
Your beautiful comments mean so much to me. And, of course, whatever good you saw in my post is just a reflection of the brilliance that is in you. ;-)
Actually, you are honored every day for all your great and extraordinary gifts as a healer and teacher. All your students and those around the world who have been helped by you and your amazing heart, and your strong and vibrant connection to Source, honor you every day in their hearts. And I and others have expressed our deep gratitude to you for all the many ways you have helped us grow and bloom. We are all so grateful for the blessing of knowing you.
I love Oprah for all the ways in which she has helped so many people and for the remarkable woman she is. So it is a great honor just for you to even have thought about sending this blog post to her. And the fact that you did (wow!), no matter what comes of it, was such a blessing and honor for me -- especially coming from a teacher and friend I so respect and admire.
I think Lucille Clifton will be smiling if my post helps or inspires any who read it. For all she has given the world, it was my great pleasure and joy to have spent time thinking about her, her amazing poetry and my connection to her her. And it is a joy, too, to be the one to send others to sites where they can hear and experience her readings of some of her poems.
So it turns out again -- in some way we are all connected.
Taku wakan ska ska. Something sacred is always in motion when you are involved, my dearest Ani.
Love, hugs and namaste,
Donna
Posted by: Donna Poler | 03/07/2010 at 12:29 PM