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  This week: Amy ClampittEdited 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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 | Beach Glass by Amy Clampitt
 
 While you walk the water's edge,
 turning over concepts
 I can't envision, the honking buoy
 serves notice that at any time
 the wind may change,
 the reef-bell clatters
 its treble monotone, deaf as Cassandra
 to any note but warning. The ocean,
 cumbered by no business more urgent
 than keeping open old accounts
 that never balanced,
 goes on shuffling its millenniums
 of quartz, granite, and basalt.
 It behaves
 toward the permutations of novelty—
 driftwood and shipwreck, last night's
 beer cans, spilt oil, the coughed-up
 residue of plastic—with random
 impartiality, playing catch or tag
 ot touch-last like a terrier,
 turning the same thing over and over,
 over and over. For the ocean, nothing
 is beneath consideration.
 The houses
 of so many mussels and periwinkles
 have been abandoned here, it's hopeless
 to know which to salvage. Instead
 I keep a lookout for beach glass—
 amber of Budweiser, chrysoprase
 of Almadén and Gallo, lapis
 by way of (no getting around it,
 I'm afraid) Phillips'
 Milk of Magnesia, with now and then a rare
 translucent turquoise or blurred amethyst
 of no known origin.
 The process
 goes on forever: they came from sand,
 they go back to gravel,
 along with treasuries
 of Murano, the buttressed
 astonishments of Chartres,
 which even now are readying
 for being turned over and over as gravely
 and gradually as an intellect
 engaged in the hazardous
 redefinition of structures
 no one has yet looked at.
 
 On June 15, !920, Amy Clampitt was born, in New Providence, Iowa. Her parents were Quakers. Her childhood was spent in a small farming community. She started writing at a very early age. She wrote poetry first and then moved to fiction, Clampitt attended Grinnell College. She graduated with a bachelor’s degree with honors in English. Clampitt went on to study for her graduate’s degree at Columbia University. She left before finishing, Upon leaving the college Clampitt started working as a secretary at the Oxford University Press.
 
 In 1951 she left the Oxford University Press and spent five months exploring Europe. When she returned to the states she worked as a reference librarian at the Audubon Society and then as a freelance editor. In 1977 she began working as an editor at E. P. Dutton. She worked there until 1982 when she quit to focus on her writing. Clampitt became a full time poet with an occasional semester of teaching at a college. Her first poem was published by The New Yorker in 1978. At the age of sixty-three she published her first collection of poetry, ”The Kingfisher.”
 
 Over the next ten years Clampitt published five books of poetry. “What the Light Was Like” was published in 1985. Followed by ”Archaic Figure” in 1987 and ”Westward” in 1990. Her last book ”A Silence Opens,” was published in 1994. Clampitt was a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1982, and in 1984 of an Academy Fellowship. Clampitt was made a MacArthur Foundation Fellow in 1992. She was also a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She taught at the College of William and Mary, Amherst College, and Smith College. She spent the last years of her life writing for journals and magazines.
 
 Amy Clampitt died in Lenox Massachusetts on September 10, 1994  of cancer.
 
 
 Fog
 by Amy Clampitt
 
 A vagueness comes over everything,
 as though proving color and contour
 alike dispensable: the lighthouse
 extinct, the islands' spruce-tips
 drunk up like milk in the
 universal emulsion; houses
 reverting into the lost
 and forgotten; granite
 subsumed, a rumor
 in a mumble of ocean.
 Tactile
 definition, however, has not been
 totally banished: hanging
 tassel by tassel, panicled
 foxtail and needlegrass,
 dropseed, furred hawkweed,
 and last season's rose-hips
 are vested in silenced
 chimes of the finest,
 clearest sea-crystal.
 Opacity
 opens up rooms, a showcase
 for the hueless moonflower
 corolla, as Georgia
 O'Keefe might have seen it,
 of foghorns; the nodding
 campanula of bell buoys;
 the ticking, linear
 filigree of bird voices.
 
 Vacant Lot With Pokeweed
 by Amy Clampitt
 
 Tufts, follicles, grubstake
 biennial rosettes, a low-
 life beach-blond scruff of
 couch grass: notwithstanding
 the interglinting dregs
 
 of wholesale upheaval and
 dismemberment, weeds do not
 hesitate, the wheeling
 rise of the ailanthus halts
 at nothing—and look! here's
 
 a pokeweed, sprung up from seed
 dropped by some vagrant, that's
 seized a foothold: a magenta-
 girdered bower, gazebo twirls
 of blossom rounding into
 
 raw-buttoned, garnet-rodded
 fruit one more wayfarer
 perhaps may salvage from
 the season's frittering,
 the annual wreckage.
 
 
 
 Thank you all!
 Stormy Lady
   
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 The winner of "Stormy's poetry newsletter & contest"
  [ASR] is: 
 
 
 Cleaning out old houses can be eyeopening as
 Many of the surprises take your breath away.
 Miss Agnes Tinker passed away quite unexpectedly
 and her niece asked us to get things out of the way.
 
 In the bedroom, were many photographs of the family
 with older people who had hairstyles and clothes
 that were beautiful to see. They looked
 dainty and old fashioned from head to their toes.
 
 Her little office held objects of art
 that were bought decades ago.
 And in a scented box was a bundle of letters
 from a soldier, who was a very special beaux.
 
 The parlor was a fascinating room
 with record players, records and a tube radio.
 There were songs that were patriotic or romantic,
 while the radio played music, songs and soap operas shows.
 
 In the kitchen we cleared out hand held gadgets.
 They were hand held and still in good shape.
 My mother explained the memories she had
 with a sifter, an egg beater and grate.
 
 Miss Tinker was a lonely person, who had kept her home
 to be a place where time seemed to stand still.
 The time was in a capsule of her fondest memories
 which she lived on her own free will.
 
 
 
 Honorable mention:
 
 
 
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