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  This week: Howard NemerovEdited 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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 | The Makers by Howard Nemerov
 
 Who can remember back to the first poets,
 The greatest ones, greater even than Orpheus?
 No one has remembered that far back
 Or now considers, among the artifacts,
 And bones and cantilevered inference
 The past is made of, those first and greatest poets,
 So lofty and disdainful of renown
 They left us not a name to know them by.
 
 They were the ones that in whatever tongue
 Worded the world, that were the first to say
 Star, water, stone, that said the visible
 And made it bring invisibles to view
 In wind and time and change, and in the mind
 Itself that minded the hitherto idiot world
 And spoke the speechless world and sang the towers
 Of the city into the astonished sky.
 
 They were the first great listeners, attuned
 To interval, relationship, and scale,
 The first to say above, beneath, beyond,
 Conjurors with love, death, sleep, with bread and wine,
 Who having uttered vanished from the world
 Leaving no memory but the marvelous
 Magical elements, the breathing shapes
 And stops of breath we build our Babels of.
 
 Insomnia I
 by Howard Nemerov
 
 Some nights it's bound to be your best way out,
 When nightmare is the short end of the stick,
 When sleep is a part of town where it's not safe
 To walk at night, when waking is the only way
 You have of distancing your wretched dead,
 A growing crowd, and escaping out of their
 Time into yours for another little while;
 
 Then pass ghostly, a planet in the house
 Never observed, among the sleeping rooms
 Where children dream themselves, and thence go down
 Into the empty domain where daylight reigned;
 Reward yourself with drink and a book to read,
 A mystery, for its elusive gift
 Of reassurance against the hour of death.
 Order your heart about: Stop doing that!
 And get the world to be secular again.
 
 Then, when you know who done it, turn out the light,
 And quietly in darkness, in moonlight, or snowlight
 Reflective, listen to the whistling earth
 In its backspin trajectory around the sun
 That makes the planets sometimes retrograde
 And brings the cold forgiveness of the dawn
 Whose light extinguishes all stars but one.
 
 On February 29th 1920, David and Gertrude Nemerov, welcomed their son Howard Nemerov into the world. The couple lived in New York and owned a department store. Nemerov grew up in a well to do family. He and his sister both displayed a passion for art at an early age. His sister leaned towards visual art while Neverov towards literature. Nemerov attended the Society for Ethical Culture’s Fieldstone School in which he graduated in 1937. Upon graduation Nemerov enrolled at Harvard University. He graduated from Harvard in 1941 with a bachelor's degree.
 
 After college Nemerov enlisted in the U.S Army Air Force where he served as a pilot during World War II. While serving his country he met and married his wife in 1944. After the war ended Nemerov and his wife returned to New York City. It was upon his return to New York that Nemerov started writing his first book, “The Image and the Law” published in 1947. Nemerov was hired after the war to teach literature to veterans at the Hamilton College in New York. He published Guide to the Ruins in 1950 followed by The Salt Garden published in 1955. Nemerov's teaching career took off and he went on to teach at several different colleges all while continuing his writing. Nemerov published prose “The Homecoming Game" in 1957 and "Federigo: Or the Power of Love” in 1954 along with his books and poetry. He published " Mirrors and Windows”  in 1958 followed by “The Blue Swallows” in 1967 and a book of poetry, “The Winter Lightning: Selected Poems” in 1968.
 
 In 1969 Nemerov moved to St. Louis and he started teaching at Washington University. While here he carried the title of Distinguished Poet in Residence from 1969 until his death in 1991. He published "The Collected Poems of Howard Nemerov,” in 1977, which won Nemerov the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and the Bollingen Prize. He was chosen Poet Laureate of the United States in 1988. Nemerov continued writing and publishing with his last book of poetry being published in 1991, “Trying Conclusions: New and Selected Poems,” 1961-1991
 
 Howard Nemerov died of cancer on July 5, 1991.
 
 
 (Language warning for next poem)
 Walking the Dog
 by Howard Nemerov
 
 Two universes mosey down the street
 Connected by love and a leash and nothing else.
 Mostly I look at lamplight through the leaves
 While he mooches along with tail up and snout down,
 Getting a secret knowledge through the nose
 Almost entirely hidden from my sight.
 
 We stand while he's enraptured by a bush
 Till I can't stand our standing any more
 And haul him off; for our relationship
 Is patience balancing to this side tug
 And that side drag; a pair of symbionts
 Contented not to think each other's thoughts.
 
 What else we have in common's what he taught,
 Our interest in shit. We know its every state
 From steaming fresh through stink to nature's way
 Of sluicing it downstreet dissolved in rain
 Or drying it to dust that blows away.
 We move along the street inspecting shit.
 
 His sense of it is keener far than mine,
 And only when he finds the place precise
 He signifies by sniffing urgently
 And circles thrice about, and squats, and shits,
 Whereon we both with dignity walk home
 And just to show who's master I write the poem.
 
 
 Thank you all!
 Stormy Lady
   
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 The winner of "Stormy's poetry newsletter & contest"
  [ASR] is: 
 "Forgotten Dreams"
  
 Forgotten Dreams
 
 Oh, how I longed for sweet, tender moments,
 of quiet afternoons with a devoted mother.
 One who'd offer guiding, encouraging words
 followed by a warm embrace; tender in spirit.
 
 What I got instead were countless tears
 washing away dreams of what will never be.
 No humble pleas asking forgiveness
 only promises of hauntings from beyond.
 
 All that remains, decades later, are forgotten dreams.
 No peaceful, luminous spirits; only dark, cold shadows.
 There are no memories to comfort my wounded soul
 or fill the gaps within my shredded heart.
 
 Honorable mention:
 
 
 
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