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  This week: Theodore RoethkeEdited by: Stormy Lady   More Newsletters By This Editor
  
 
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 1. About this Newsletter
 2. A Word from our Sponsor
 3. Letter from the Editor
 4. Editor's Picks
 5. A Word from Writing.Com
 6. Ask & Answer
 7. Removal instructions
 
 
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 | This is poetry from the minds and the hearts of poets on Writing.Com. The poems I am going to be exposing throughout this newsletter are ones that I have found to be, very visual, mood setting and uniquely done.  Stormy Lady  | 
 
 
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 | My Papa's Waltz by Theodore Roethke
 
 The whiskey on your breath
 Could make a small boy dizzy;
 But I hung on like death:
 Such waltzing was not easy.
 
 We romped until the pans
 Slid from the kitchen shelf;
 My mother's countenance
 Could not unfrown itself.
 
 The hand that held my wrist
 Was battered on one knuckle;
 At every step you missed
 My right ear scraped a buckle.
 
 You beat time on my head
 With a palm caked hard by dirt,
 Then waltzed me off to bed
 Still clinging to your shirt.
 
 On May 25 1908, in Saginaw, Michigan, Otto Roethke and Helen Huebner welcomed son Theodore Huebner Roethke into their family. The Roethke family owned a greenhouse. Roethke spent his childhood with his parents at the green house observing nature. He attended Authur Hill High School. His father Otto died of cancer in 1923. His father's death changed his point of view on life and his creativity. Roethke attended the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor,  from 1925 to 1929. He graduated magna cum Lauder. Roethke then went on to take graduate courses at University of Michigan and Harvard Graduate School.
 
 When the Great Depression hit he was forced to quit school. He started teaching at Lafayette College. This is where Roethke began his first book, Open House{\i}. He taught at Lafayette College until 1935 then he went on to teach at Michigan State College. Roethke's career at Michigan State was cut short when he was hospitalized for a mental breakdown. He would struggle with depression from that point on, but said his depression helped him with his writing. In 1936 he started teaching at Pennsylvania State University where he taught for seven years. During his seven years at the university he published pieces in Poetry, the New Republic, the Saturday Review, and Sewanee Review. His first volume  Open House {\i} was finally published in 1941.
 
 In 1942 Roethke delivered Morris Gray lectures at Harvard. Then he went on to teach at Bennington College in 1943. His second volume The Lost Son and Other Poems was published in 1948, it included the greenhouse poems. He wrote Open Letter{\i} in 1950, followed by Praise to the End {\i}in 1951. Then wrote an essay, How to Write Like Somebody Else in 1959.
 
 In 1953 Roethke married Beatrice O'Connell. The couple honeymooned at W.A. Auden's villa off the coast of Italy. While there he began editing The Waking: Poems{\i} 1933-1953 which was published later that same year, and won the Pulitzer Prize. The couple went on to travel Europe after their honeymoon. He published Words for the Wind in 1957. The couple travelled back to the United States after two years of travel. In 1963 while visiting friends on Bainbridge Island, Washington Roethke suffered a heart attack. Theodore Roethke died August 1, 1963. His last volume  The Far Field {\i} was published posthumously in 1964.
 
 
 The Storm
 by Theodore Roethke
 
 1
 
 Against the stone breakwater,
 Only an ominous lapping,
 While the wind whines overhead,
 Coming down from the mountain,
 Whistling between the arbors, the winding terraces;
 A thin whine of wires, a rattling and flapping of leaves,
 And the small street-lamp swinging and slamming against
 the lamp pole.
 
 Where have the people gone?
 There is one light on the mountain.
 
 2
 
 Along the sea-wall, a steady sloshing of the swell,
 The waves not yet high, but even,
 Coming closer and closer upon each other;
 A fine fume of rain driving in from the sea,
 Riddling the sand, like a wide spray of buckshot,
 The wind from the sea and the wind from the mountain contending,
 Flicking the foam from the whitecaps straight upward into the darkness.
 
 A time to go home!--
 And a child's dirty shift billows upward out of an alley,
 A cat runs from the wind as we do,
 Between the whitening trees, up Santa Lucia,
 Where the heavy door unlocks,
 And our breath comes more easy--
 Then a crack of thunder, and the black rain runs over us, over
 The flat-roofed houses, coming down in gusts, beating
 The walls, the slatted windows, driving
 The last watcher indoors, moving the cardplayers closer
 To their cards, their anisette.
 
 3
 
 We creep to our bed, and its straw mattress.
 We wait; we listen.
 The storm lulls off, then redoubles,
 Bending the trees half-way down to the ground,
 Shaking loose the last wizened oranges in the orchard,
 Flattening the limber carnations.
 
 A spider eases himself down from a swaying light-bulb,
 Running over the coverlet, down under the iron bedstead.
 Water roars into the cistern.
 
 We lie closer on the gritty pillow,
 Breathing heavily, hoping--
 For the great last leap of the wave over the breakwater,
 The flat boom on the beach of the towering sea-swell,
 The sudden shudder as the jutting sea-cliff collapses,
 And the hurricane drives the dead straw into the living pine-tree.
 
 The Sloth
 by Theodore Roethke
 
 In moving-slow he has no Peer.
 You ask him something in his Ear,
 He thinks about it for a Year;
 
 And, then, before he says a Word
 There, upside down (unlike a Bird),
 He will assume that you have Heard--
 
 A most Ex-as-per-at-ing Lug.
 But should you call his manner Smug,
 He'll sigh and give his Branch a Hug;
 
 Then off again to Sleep he goes,
 Still swaying gently by his Toes,
 And you just know he knows he knows.
 
 
 
 Thank you all!
 Stormy Lady
   
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 The winner of "Stormy's poetry newsletter & contest"
  [ASR] is: 
 
 
 
 Tennessee Summers
 
 
 We were kids catching fireflies
 
 and watching them glow.
 
 Wadin through the creeks
 
 bare foot and slow.
 
 
 Grandma's in the porch swing
 
 Sipping cold lemonade
 
 It was a Tennessee summer
 
 And we had it made.
 
 
 We could play all day
 
 be covered in dust
 
 Grandma gave us a bath
 
 In an old wash tub.
 
 
 The barn where we played
 
 When it got too hot
 
 we swung from the beams
 
 landed in the hay loft.
 
 
 Grandma's house was simple
 
 And clean as could be
 
 With a garden out back
 
 And a weeping willow tree.
 
 
 Those childhood days
 
 I would go back again
 
 To the Tennessee summers
 
 Where my life began.
 
 
 
 
 Honorable mention:
 "Invalid Entry"
  
 
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