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         Clifton Lucille:     more books (100)
  1. I'd Like Not to Be a Stranger in the World: A Conversation/Interview with Lucille Clifton.(Interview): An article from: The Antioch Review by Michael S. Glaser, 2000-06-22
  2. Everett Anderson's Friend by Lucille Clifton, 1992-10-15
  3. Lucille Clifton
  4. Lucille Clifton, Volume II, (#79) VHS (Lannan Literary Videos) by Lucille Clifton, 2001
  5. Everett Anderson's Nine Months Long by Lucille Clifton, 1978-01-01
  6. Lucille Clifton Vol. 1 (Lannan Literary Video #54)
  7. Poets Laureate of Maryland: Lucille Clifton, Michael Collier, Reed Whittemore, Linda Pastan, Michael Glaser, Roland Flint
  8. State University of New York at Fredonia Alumni: Neil Postman, Mary Mcdonnell, Lucille Clifton, Bennett Reimer, Marcus M. Drake, Clint Holmes
  9. Biography - Clifton, Lucille (1936-): An article from: Contemporary Authors Online by Gale Reference Team, 2007-01-01
  10. Some of the Days of Everett Anderson by Lucille Clifton, 1970
  11. In Clifton's poems, the truth hurts.(Arts & Literature): An article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
  12. Three Wishes --1994 publication. by Lucille Clifton, 1994-01-01
  13. Some of the Days of Everett Anderson -- First 1st Edition by Lucille Clifton, 1970
  14. Book of Light by Lucille Clifton, 1993-01-01

61. Lucille Clifton Quotes
lucille clifton quotes,lucille, clifton, author, authors, writer, writers, people, famous people.
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62. Creative Quotations From Lucille Clifton (1936-____)
lucille clifton in quotations to inspire creative thinking.
http://famouscreativewomen.com/one/2214.htm
Home Search Indexes Browse ... creative
Famous Creative Women Quotations from . . . Lucille Clifton
1936-) born on Jun 27 US poet, educator. She has written more than twenty books for children and adults, one of which was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. Search millions of documents for Lucille Clifton
Creative Hats
Time For Creativity Poetry is a matter of life, not just a matter of language.
children
when they ask you
why your mama so funny
say
she is a poet
she don't have no sense. i keep hearing
tree talk water words and i keep knowing what they mean. . . . even when the universe made it quite clear to me that I was mistaken in my certainties, in my definitions, I did not break. The shattering of my sureties did not shatter me. Stability comes from inside, not outside.... People wish to be poets more than they wish to write poetry, and that's a mistake. One should wish to celebrate more than one wishes to be celebrated. Published Sources for Quotations Above:
F: In "Listen to Their Voices," ch. 9, by Mickey Pearlman, 1993. R: A: N: In "The Black Woman's Gumbo Ya-Ya," by Terri L. Jewell, 1993.

63. Lucille Clifton Wins Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize » The Burnt Ones: Literary Awards
The latest news related to literary awards and literary prizes, from around the world.
http://literaryawards.vertebratesilence.com/2007/05/18/lucille-clifton-wins-ruth

64. Lucille Clifton Quotes
2 quotes and quotations by lucille clifton. lucille clifton Poetry is a matter of life, not just a matter of language. lucille clifton
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Date of Birth:
June 27
Nationality: American Find on Amazon: Lucille Clifton Related Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson Robert Frost Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Walt Whitman ... T. S. Eliot People wish to be poets more than they wish to write poetry, and that's a mistake. One should wish to celebrate more than one wishes to be celebrated. Lucille Clifton Poetry is a matter of life, not just a matter of language. Lucille Clifton Quotes RSS Feeds About Us Inquire Privacy Terms

65. Ironic Points Of Light: Lucille Clifton On
lucille clifton on Family Guy. I m watching a Family Guy episode entitled Fast Times at Buddy Cianci Junior High . Early in the episode, Chris s English
http://nomojo.blogspot.com/2008/01/lucille-clifton-on-family-guy.html
Family Guy skip to main skip to sidebar
ironic points of light
Lucille Clifton on ... Family Guy I'm watching a Family Guy episode entitled "Fast Times at Buddy Cianci Junior High". Early in the episode, Chris's English Comp teacher " Ms. Clifton " wins the lottery and quits her job during parent-teacher night. "One of the four surviving children Clifton's oldest daughter, Sid, works in Hollywood. . . . 'Sid's husband is a television writer who writes for . . . Family Guy That's up there with the Word Loaf Simpsons and Pinsky on Colbert Posted by A. D. at 6:35 PM
3 comments:
A. J. Patrick Liszkiewicz said...
Whoa. 12:22 AM, January 08, 2008
A. D. said...
Fact: Bears eat beets. 12:28 AM, January 08, 2008
Steven D. Schroeder said...
The poetry thing I remember most from the Simpsons is Moe's flabbergasted "Maya Angelou is black?!" after she reads her poem about the Stealth bomber. Uh, I think it's Moe anyway. 11:53 PM, January 14, 2008
Post a Comment Newer Post Older Post ... Home Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom) . . . We can so easily slip back from what we have struggled to attain, abruptly, into a life we never wanted; can find that we are trapped, as in a dream, and die there, without ever waking up. This can occur. Anyone who has lifted his blood into a years-long work may find that he can't sustain it, the force of gravity is irresistable, and it falls back, worthless. For somewhere there is an ancient enmity between our daily life and the great work. trans. Stephen Mitchell

66. Writers N. Scott Momaday, Lucille Clifton, Nancy Huddleston Packer To Speak To I
Finally, lucille clifton s Pulitzer Prizenominated Good Woman describes a world of dissolving tradition, Fields said. The book, a volume of poetry
http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2007/june6/three-053007.html
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  • Home News By Topic Search Stanford Report, May 31, 2007
    Writers N. Scott Momaday, Lucille Clifton, Nancy Huddleston Packer to speak to incoming freshmen; public invited
    BY CYNTHIA HAVEN English Professor Kenneth Fields, a poet whose recent collection Classic Rough News was published in 2005, selected this year's books. The Way to Rainy Mountain , a short book by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author N. Scott Momaday, is told in three voices, comparing historical commentary, Kiowa oral tradition and personal reminiscence. New York Times Momaday received his PhD in English from Stanford in 1963 under the guidance of poet and critic Yvor Winters. (Fields also was a student of Winters.) Jealous-Hearted Me , by Nancy Huddleston Packer, is a collection of hilarious and heart-breaking stories about greed, midlife restlessness, sibling rivalry, aging and misplaced pride in an Alabama family. The stories stand alone yet together read like a novel. Packer, the Melvin and Bill Lane Professor in the Humanities, Emerita, and professor emerita of English, was director of Stanford's Creative Writing Program for four years. Finally, Lucille Clifton's Pulitzer Prize-nominated

67. Please Come Flying: Lucille Clifton: Slaveship
Talking about the song reminded me of this stunning poem by lucille clifton (it can be found in the anthology Every Shut Eye Ain t Asleep).
http://www.pleasecomeflying.com/2007/10/lucille-clifton-slaveship.html
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Please Come Flying
www.josephinecameron.com
Monday, October 29, 2007
Lucille Clifton: slaveship
For the past two weeks, I've been teaching the kids in our Sunday School children's choir the traditional slave song Didn't My Lord Deliver Daniel? After some silliness and playing around with what the song might mean (one boy pointed out that the postage must have been pretty expensive for such a heavy delivery!) the kids really started to get into it.
The simple lines of the chorus (Didn't my Lord deliver Daniel/Then why not every man?) are so gripping. You can imagine both a hopeful singer (if God delivered Daniel, he'll certainly deliver me!) and a singer who may be losing that hope (why hasn't God delivered *me*?) The verses lean toward hope, but I can't help but focus on that hint of doubt. I think about the origins of this song, of cotton, the whip, deprivation, the hot sun. How could you sing the song and *not* wonder, even for a minute...if God exists, why is there all this suffering in the world?
Talking about the song reminded me of this stunning poem by Lucille Clifton (it can be found in the anthology Every Shut Eye Ain't Asleep ). Jesus, Angel, and Grace of God were names of ships that delivered slaves from Africa to the Americas. The picture above is a diagram of how the slaves were loaded into the ships...literally, as Lucille Clifton writes, "like spoons."

68. Poetry Beat: Lucille Clifton Wins Poetry Prize
At an ceremony held Wednesday night in Chicago, Buffalo area native lucille clifton accepted the 2007 Ruth Lilly Prize for lifetime achievement in American
http://buffalonews.typepad.com/poetry_beat/2007/05/buffalo_native_.html
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    Poetry Beat
    « Nobel Prize winners to visit Buffalo Main ... Why is Lucille Clifton under appreciated? »
    May 24, 2007
    Lucille Clifton wins poetry prize
    At an ceremony held Wednesday night in Chicago, Buffalo area native Lucille Clifton accepted the 2007 Ruth Lilly Prize for lifetime achievement in American poetry from the Poetry Foundation.
    Clifton is the first African-American woman to receive the prestigious award in its 21 year history.
    The three-person selection committee issued a statement that read in part: “ Her poems are local and funny, and have their own particular idiom; they speak big things in quiet ways, and she’s voracious in the subject matter she takes on, spanning city and country, speaking for the unspoken, the sacred, and the invisible. Clifton has added enormously to the representation of the African-American experience in poetry and has been a kind of historical consciousness for her people and a public consciousness for us all.” Clifton was born in 1936 as Thelma Lucille Sayles into working class family in Depew. She was raised in Buffalo (her family lived on Purdy Street).

69. News Room
News releases, campus report, calendar of events, and information from SUNY Fredonia.
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70. Poems By Lucille Clifton
Poems by lucille clifton. Good Times. my daddy has paid the rent and the insurance man is gone and the lights is back on and my uncle brud has hit
http://www.literacyrules.com/Weekly_Poem/bylucilleclifton.htm
Poems by Lucille Clifton Good Times
my daddy has paid the rent
and the insurance man is gone
and the lights is back on
and my uncle brud has hit
for one dollar straight
and they is good times
good times
good times my mama has made bread
and grampaw has come
and everybody is drunk and dancing in the kitchen and singing in the kitchen of these is good times good times good times oh children think about the good times blessing the boats at St. Mary's) may the tide that is entering even now the lip of our understanding carry you out beyond the face of fear may you kiss the wind then turn from it certain that it will love your back may you open your eyes to water water waving forever and may you in your innocence sail through this to that Weekly Poem Archives Home Just for Teachers Weekly Poem ... WebQuests

71. Bi-Co News: Lucille Clifton Visits BMC
lucille clifton is one of the United State’s most renowned living poets. Raised in upstate New York, her first book of poetry, entitled “Good Times,” ranked
http://www.biconews.com/article/view/6393
WWW.BICONEWS.COM Bryn Mawr and Haverford Colleges JANUARY 26, 2008 ARCHIVES DECEMBER 11, 2007 ARTS > Article View
Lucille Clifton Visits BMC
By Julie M. O'Neil STAFF WRITER Thursday night, Wyndham Alumni House was packed with people coming in from the snowy night to a stranding-room-only poetry reading from esteemed poet Lucille Clifton. The evening, sponsored by the Marianne Moore Fund for the Study of Poetry, drew quite the crowd, with admirers sitting on staircases, on the floors, and even listening from an adjacent room.
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Print this article View a PDF of this issue Lucille Clifton is one of the United State’s most renowned living poets. Raised in upstate New York, her first book of poetry, entitled “Good Times,” ranked as one of The New York Times’ best books in 1969. In this book and in her numerous others, she celebrates her African-American heritage and her feminist beliefs.
Clifton has been nominated for two Pulitzer Prizes in the same year for her books “Good Woman: Poems And A Memoir 1969-1980” and “Next: New Poems.” She is currently the Distinguished Professor of Humanities at St. Mary’s College in Maryland.
Tonight, Clifton held court seated at the front of the Ely Room. Her voice was quiet but captivating as she read her poetry and shared anecdotes from her life as a poet and an educator. While it felt far less intimate than I think it would have if the event had only been open to members of the community rather than making it open to the public, I was impressed by Clifton’s presentation, having only read her work in books before. My personal favorite was a poem entitled “Aunt Jemima” in which she ponders what it’s like to long for somewhere to call home. This theme speaks to her overall tendencies as a writer. Her poems exude this almost heartbreaking combination of anguish and hope.

72. Internet Archive: Details: Writers Uncensored - Lucille Clifton And Sonia Sanche
Lewis MacAdams and John DorrWriters Uncensored lucille clifton and Sonia Sanchez Good Women. Internet Archive s in-browser video player requires
http://www.archive.org/details/ddtv_64_lucille_clifton_sonia_sanchez
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73. A Wolf Angel Is Not A Good Angel » Lucille Clifton, Untitled Poem
i didn’t ask their names. they had no names worth knowing. now i watch myself whenever i enter a room. i never know what i might do. lucille clifton
http://wolfangel.calltherain.net/archives/2004/07/18/lucille-clifton-untitled-po
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Lucille Clifton, untitled poem
Filed under: Sunday poem
or what i am capable of. when i wanted the roaches dead i wanted them dead
and i killed them. i took a broom to their country and smashed and sliced without warning
without stopping and i smiled all the time i was doing it. it was a holocaust of roaches, bodies,
parts of bodies, red all over the ground.
they had no names worth knowing. now i watch myself whenever i enter a room.
i never know what i might do. -Lucille Clifton
a post that might be related to this one: Adrienne Rich, XIII (Dedications)
  • Shahidha Says:
    April 5th, 2005 at 10:30 am
    HI, is this lucille cliftons website? Laura Says:
    February 12th, 2007 at 12:10 pm
  • 74. AntSaint: May 4, 2006, Lucille Clifton Poetry Reads
    lucille clifton will read from her work, as well as speak to her sense of story and its relationship to community. Followed by a brief Q A.
    http://www.antsaint.com/ant/2006/05/may_4_2006_luci.html
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    75. Poet Lucille Clifton Headlines Second Annual CommUNITY Week Celebration, Oct. 8-
    Dr. Lawrence Potter announces the second annual CommUNITY Week Celebration, with a theme of.
    http://www.stthomas.edu/bulletin/news/200739/Wednesday/pottercolumn9_26_07.cfm
    University of St. Thomas, Minnesota USA
    This article was published: Wednesday, September 26, 2007
    Go to Bulletin: Today This Week Archive Poet Lucille Clifton headlines second annual CommUNITY Week Celebration, Oct. 8-12 It is a pleasure to welcome all students, faculty and staff back to another exciting year. The University of St. Thomas has made tremendous strides over the past year toward integrating diversity and inclusion across the institution. The Office of Institutional Diversity is grateful for your continued support, input and patience. We can only be successful as a campus when everyone accepts responsibility for diversity and change. I am pleased to announce that Oct. 8-12 begins the second annual CommUNITY Week Celebration. Our theme is purposeful: "Respecting, Affirming, and Valuing the Greater Mosaic." In the spirit of unity, a number of individuals, offices, clubs and organizations once again have come together to support programs designed to embrace the dignity of all men and women, and to celebrate the human mosaic and cultural diversity on our campus. These programs are intended to promote civility, community and collective responsibility. Last year, I created a credo for CommUNITY Week – "CommUNITY is a state of being and practice, where human dignity and individuality are respected, affirmed and valued; where inclusion is visible, not invisible; where diversity and inclusion are everyone’s responsibility!"

    76. Lucille Clifton First Black Woman To Win Lilly Poetry Prize
    Black poet lucille clifton has won the 2007 Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, one of the most prestigious honors awarded American poets.
    http://newsblaze.com/story/20070511074309tsop.nb/newsblaze/TOPSTORY/Top-Stories.
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    Lucille Clifton First Black Woman To Win Lilly Poetry Prize
    Poet says she is "always surprised" at her growing international audience
    Black poet Lucille Clifton has won the 2007 Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, one of the most prestigious honors awarded American poets. In making the $100,000 award, the judges cited Clifton's "looming humaneness" and "moral quality." "Clifton has added enormously to the representation of the African-American experience in poetry and has been a kind of historical consciousness for her people and a public consciousness for us all," the judges said. Clifton, 71, is the first black woman to win the Lilly Prize, which was established in 1986 and is presented annually by the Poetry Foundation. Previous winners include such well-known poets as Adrienne Rich, John Ashbery, Donald Hall, Yusef Komunyakaa, and last year's winner, Richard Wilbur. "I'm a contemporary American poet who is African American and female," Clifton told USINFO when asked how she sees her work within the context of American poetry.

    77. Conjuring Hope In A Body: Lucille Clifton's Eschatology
    In a 2000 interview with Michael Glaser, AfricanAmerican poet and memoirist lucille clifton identified hope as a central function of her work. She said,
    http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&se=gglsc&d=5009768012

    78. OkCupid.com: Singles Interested In Lucille Clifton
    These 10 users are interested in lucille clifton . Edit your profile to add your interests. You wanted lucille clifton You wanted lucille clifton
    http://www.okcupid.com/interests?i=lucille clifton

    79. Lucid And Musical: The Poetry Of Lucille Clifton — Joyce Nower
    n the summer of 1999, I went to China with lucille clifton; well, not with the poet herself, but with three of her poems. Recently, I came across the one I
    http://www.alsopreview.com/aside/jnclifton.html
    Lucid and Musical: The Poetry of Lucille Clifton
    by Joyce Nower
    n the summer of 1999, I went to China with Lucille Clifton; well, not with the poet herself, but with three of her poems. Recently, I came across the one I went on to discuss with students at Sichuan Normal University: " why some people be mad at me ," from Blessing the Boats: New and Selected Poems 1988-2000 (BOA Editions Ltd., 2000), poems selected from five of the ten volumes of poetry published by Clifton so far. A widely read and as widely enjoyed poet, as well as a prolific author of children's books, Clifton, born in 1936, has received innumerable awards, and has the unique honor of having two books of poems nominated in the same year as finalists for the Pulitzer Prize. She is currently a Distinguished Professor of Humanities at St. Mary's College in Maryland, and on the Board of Chancellors of the Academy of American Poets. In view of her widespread popularity, it is not surprising that when I was invited to give lectures on contemporary American poetry to classes in American Literature at Sichuan Normal University in Chengdu Province, I brought some Clifton poems along. That summer afternoon the auditorium and the broad sills of the low windows separating the hallway from the auditorium were overflowing with at least 300 students. Since it is best to pack a light suitcase , I packed three of Clifton's short poems, selecting for discussion Clifton's "

    80. [minstrels] The Lost Baby Poem -- Lucille Clifton
    notes lucille clifton read at my high school in 1993, and ten years later I still remember her inflection when reading her work.
    http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/1246.html
    [1246] the lost baby poem
    Title : the lost baby poem Poet : Lucille Clifton Date : 5 May 2003 the time i dropped y... Length : Text-only version Prev Index Next Your comments on this poem to attach to the end [ microfaq the lost baby poem the time i dropped your almost body down down to meet the waters under the city and run one with the sewage into the sea what did i know about waters rushing back what did i know about drowning or being drowned you would have been born into winter in the year of the disconnected gas and no car we would have made the thin walk over genesee hill into the canada wind to watch you slip like ice into strangers' hands you would have fallen naked as snow into winter if you were here i could tell you these and some other things if i am ever less than a mountain for your definite brothers and sisters let the rivers pour over my head let the sea take me for a spiller of seas let black men call me stranger always for your never named sake Lucille Clifton http://www.poets.org/poets/poets.cfm?45442B7C000C0E05 ); the site also includes a few of her other poems ("Homage to My Hips" is one of my favorites). Ani DiFranco fansites are legion, but this one ( http://www.ani-difranco.net/

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