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Monday, March 28, 2016

Atlantic Elegy by Julie Marie Wade

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March 28, 2016
 

Atlantic Elegy

 
Julie Marie Wade
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About This Poem

 

“Like so many young and aspiring poets, I started reading C. D. Wright in graduate school. Deepstep Come Shining in particular has remained a marvel and a touchstone for me all these years. In 2006, I finished a collection of six, long, experimental poems with Wright’s intellectual and aesthetic capaciousness in mind. Eight years later, she chose that relentlessly rejected volume, SIX, for the A Room of Her Own Foundation’s To the Lighthouse Prize.  I should have written her a letter of gratitude right then, but I waited, thinking I would have the chance to meet her and thank her in person someday. When Wright died, I thought of Donne: ‘Any [poet’s] death diminishes me because I am involved with [poetry].’  Maybe poems are most needed when we feel most powerless, and what makes us feel more powerless than death?  I reread Deepstep Come Shining and wrote this elegy.”
—Julie Marie Wade

 

Julie Marie Wade is the author of the forthcoming collection SIX (Red Hen Press, 2016). She teaches at Florida International University and lives in Hollywood, Florida.

Poetry by Wade

 

When I Was Straight

(A Midsummer Night’s Press, 2014)

"Deep Lane [June 23rd, evening of the first fireflies]" by Mark Doty

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"Night Blooming Jasmine" by Giovanni Pascoli

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"Obscurity and Elegance" by C. D. Wright

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Poem-a-Day

 

Launched during National Poetry Month in 2006, Poem-a-Day features new and previously unpublished poems by contemporary poets on weekdays and classic poems on weekends.

 
 

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