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Friday, April 24, 2015

Trans- by Rita Dove

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April 24, 2015
 

Trans-

 
Rita Dove

About This Poem

 

“How to write an old-fashioned poem to the moon—that luminous orb so swaddled in myth, ensnared in the silvery web of its own symbolism? For eons we have sung to it, shouted at it, wept or frolicked in the shadows or stood under its glow as our spirit howled. Why does the moon call us? Why do we yearn to be called, to step off the hyphen?”
Rita Dove

 

Rita Dove is the author of Sonata Mulattica (W. W. Norton, 2009). She teaches at the University of Virginia and lives in Charlottesville, Virginia.

 

Photo credit: Fred Viebahn

Most Recent Book by Dove

 

Sonata Mulattica

(W. W. Norton, 2009)

"To the Moon [fragment]" by Percy Bysshe Shelley

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"The Distant Moon" by Rafael Campo

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"Untitled [and the moon once it stopped was sleeping]" by Erika Meitner

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Read This Poem

 

For National Poetry Month, we’ve teamed up with 826 National to produce Read This Poem, a celebration of poets in cities with 826 chapters. Read this week’s featured poems by poets from Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, New York City, San Francisco, and Washington D.C.

 
 

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