| 
 
 
  This week: Amy ClampittEdited by: Stormy Lady   More Newsletters By This Editor
  
 
 ![Table of Contents  [#401437]
Table of Contents](https://web1.Writing.Com/main/trans.gif) ![Table of Contents  [#401437]
Table of Contents Table of Contents](/main/images/action/display/ver/1709303267/item_id/401437.png) 
 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
 
 
 ![About This Newsletter  [#401439]
About This Newsletter](https://web1.Writing.Com/main/trans.gif) ![About This Newsletter  [#401439]
About This Newsletter About This Newsletter](https://www.writing.com/main/images/action/display/ver/1709303676/item_id/401439.png) 
 
 | 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  | 
 
 
 ![Letter from the editor  [#401442]
Letter from the editor](https://web1.Writing.Com/main/trans.gif) ![Letter from the editor  [#401442]
Letter from the editor Letter from the editor](https://www.writing.com/main/images/action/display/ver/1709303784/item_id/401442.png) 
 
 | The Kingfisher BY Amy Clampitt
 
 In a year the nightingales were said to be so loud
 they drowned out slumber, and peafowl strolled screaming
 beside the ruined nunnery, through the long evening
 of a dazzled pub crawl, the halcyon color, portholed
 by those eye-spots’ stunning tapestry, unsettled
 the pastoral nightfall with amazements opening.
 
 Months later, intermission in a pub on Fifty-fifth Street
 found one of them still breathless, the other quizzical,
 acting the philistine, puncturing Stravinsky—“Tell
 me, what was that racket in the orchestra about?”—
 hauling down the Firebird, harum-scarum, like a kite,
 a burnished, breathing wreck that didn’t hurt at all.
 
 Among the Bronx Zoo’s exiled jungle fowl, they heard
 through headphones of a separating panic, the bellbird
 reiterate its single chong, a scream nobody answered.
 When he mourned, “The poetry is gone,” she quailed,
 seeing how his hands shook, sobered into feeling old.
 By midnight, yet another fifth would have been killed.
 
 A Sunday morning, the November of their cataclysm
 (Dylan Thomas brought in in extremis to St. Vincent’s,
 that same week, a symptomatic datum) found them
 wandering a downtown churchyard. Among its headstones,
 while from unruined choirs the noise of Christendom
 poured over Wall Street, a benison in vestments,
 
 a late thrush paused, in transit from some grizzled
 spruce bog to the humid equatorial fireside: berry-
 eyed, bark-brown above, with dark hints of trauma
 in the stigmata of its underparts—or so, too bruised
 just then to have invented anything so fancy,
 later, re-embroidering a retrospect, she had supposed.
 
 In gray England, years of muted recrimination (then
 dead silence) later, she could not have said how many
 spoiled takeoffs, how many entanglements gone sodden,
 how many gaudy evenings made frantic by just one
 insomniac nightingale, how many liaisons gone down
 screaming in a stroll beside the ruined nunnery;
 
 a kingfisher’s burnished plunge, the color
 of felicity afire, came glancing like an arrow
 through landscapes of untended memory: ardor
 illuminating with its terrifying currency
 now no mere glimpse, no porthole vista
 but, down on down, the uninhabitable sorrow.
 
 
 Dancers Exercising
 BY Amy Clampitt
 
 Frame within frame, the evolving conversation
 is dancelike, as though two could play
 at improvising snowflakes’
 six-feather-vaned evanescence,
 no two ever alike. All process
 and no arrival: the happier we are,
 the less there is for memory to take hold of,
 or—memory being so largely a predilection
 for the exceptional—come to a halt
 in front of. But finding, one evening
 on a street not quite familiar,
 inside a gated
 November-sodden garden, a building
 of uncertain provenance,
 peering into whose vestibule we were
 arrested—a frame within a frame,
 a lozenge of impeccable clarity—
 by the reflection, no, not
 of our two selves, but of
 dancers exercising in a mirror,
 at the center
 of that clarity, what we saw
 was not stillness
 but movement: the perfection
 of memory consisting, it would seem,
 in the never-to-be-completed.
 We saw them mirroring themselves,
 never guessing the vestibule
 that defined them, frame within frame,
 contained two other mirrors.
 
 On June 15, 1920, Roy Justin Clampitt, a farmer, and Lutie Pauline Felt, welcomed daughter Amy Clampitt into the world. The couple live on a 125 acre farm 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 throughout her high school years. Once she got to college she turned her focus 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. Clampitt traveled overseas and spent five months exploring Europe. Upon her return to the states in 1952, she started working as a reference librarian at the Audubon Society. She worked there for the next eight years. During the 1960's and 70's Clampitt worked as a freelance editor and started working on writing poetry. In 1974 she published a small volume of poetry titled Multitudes, Multitudes; thereafter her work appeared frequently in the New Yorker. In 1977 she began working as an editor at E. P. Dutton. She worked there until 1982, when she quit to focus solely on her writing, with an occasional semester of teaching at a college.
 
 At the age of sixty-three she published her first full-length book of poetry, ”The Kingfisher.”, this collection made her well-known as an American poet. 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. WShe taught at several colleges over the years,The College of William and Mary, Amherst College, and Smith College.
 
 Clampitt spent the last years of her life writing for journals and magazines. She never married. In the spring of 1993 she moved to Lenox Massachusetts. Six months later she was diagnosed with ovarian  cancer. Amy Clampitt died on September 10, 1994, she was seventy-four years old. "The Collected Poems of Amy Clampitt" was published posthumously in 1997.
 
 
 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.
 
 A Catalpa Tree On West Twelfth Street
 by Amy Clampitt
 
 While the sun stops, or
 seems to, to define a term
 for the indeterminable,
 the human aspect, here
 in the West Village, spindles
 to a mutilated dazzle—
 
 niched shards of solitude
 embedded in these brownstone
 walkups such that the Hudson
 at the foot of Twelfth Street
 might be a thing that's
 done with mirrors: definition
 
 by deracination—grunge,
 hip-hop, Chinese takeout,
 co-ops—while the globe's
 elixir caters, year by year,
 to the resurgence of this
 climbing tentpole, frilled and stippled
 
 yet again with bloom
 to greet the solstice:
 What year was it it over-
 took the fire escape? The
 roof's its next objective.
 Will posterity (if there
 
 is any)pause to regret
 such layerings of shade,
 their cadenced crests' trans-
 valuation of decay, the dust
 and perfume of an all
 too terminable process?
 
 
 
 
 Thank you all!
 Stormy Lady
   
 ![Poetry Editor logo  [#804236]
A logo for Poetry Newsletter Editors](https://web1.Writing.Com/main/trans.gif) ![Poetry Editor logo  [#804236]
A logo for Poetry Newsletter Editors A logo for Poetry Newsletter Editors](https://www.writing.com/main/images/action/display/ver/1074576644/item_id/804236.png) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 | 
 
 
 ![Editor's Picks  [#401445]
Editor's Picks](https://web1.Writing.Com/main/trans.gif) ![Editor's Picks  [#401445]
Editor's Picks Editor's Picks](https://www.writing.com/main/images/action/display/ver/1709303830/item_id/401445.png)  
 
 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 The winner of "Stormy's poetry newsletter & contest"
  [ASR] is: 
 
 
 Fall Song
 
 The wind borne leaves rise
 As autumn rushes into winter,
 The pulse of the land slows.
 Some despair as the winter sleep
 Comes upon the woods.
 As if some escape from time
 Were to break the chains of fate.
 But the ash trees know the rhythm
 Of the years, to train the patience
 Of nature’s long slow song.
 
 
 Honorable mention:
 "Colors"
  
 
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
 | 
 
 
 
 ![Word From Writing.Com  [#401447]
Word from Writing.Com](https://web1.Writing.Com/main/trans.gif) ![Word From Writing.Com  [#401447]
Word from Writing.Com Word from Writing.Com](https://www.writing.com/main/images/action/display/ver/1709303874/item_id/401447.png) 
 Have an opinion on what you've read here today? Then send the Editor feedback! Find an item that you think would be perfect for showcasing here? Submit it for consideration in the newsletter!
 https://www.Writing.Com/go/nl_form
 
 
 ![Ask & Answer  [#401448]
Ask & Answer](https://web1.Writing.Com/main/trans.gif) ![Ask & Answer  [#401448]
Ask & Answer Ask & Answer](https://www.writing.com/main/images/action/display/ver/1709303902/item_id/401448.png) 
 
 
 ![Unsubscribe  [#401452]
Removal Instructions](https://web1.Writing.Com/main/trans.gif) ![Unsubscribe  [#401452]
Removal Instructions Removal Instructions](https://www.writing.com/main/images/action/display/ver/1709303960/item_id/401452.png) 
 To stop receiving this newsletter, click here for your newsletter subscription list.  Simply uncheck the box next to any newsletter(s) you wish to cancel and then click to "Submit Changes".  You can edit your subscriptions at any time.
 
 
 
 |