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	<title>Comments on: More &#8220;Political Poetry&#8221;</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/05/more-political-poetry/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/05/more-political-poetry/</link>
	<description>A blog from the Poetry Foundation where contemporary poets debate classic and contemporary poetry from America and around the world.</description>
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		<item>
		<title>By: okello peter cromwell</title>
		<link>http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/05/more-political-poetry/#comment-332</link>
		<dc:creator>okello peter cromwell</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Sep 2008 06:14:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pf/harriet/?p=183#comment-332</guid>
		<description>i need some political poems to make a great politician with good self esteem
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>i need some political poems to make a great politician with good self esteem</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Tom Zart</title>
		<link>http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/05/more-political-poetry/#comment-331</link>
		<dc:creator>Tom Zart</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jun 2008 13:32:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pf/harriet/?p=183#comment-331</guid>
		<description>POETS ARE THE BELL RINGERS OF THE SOUL
Poets as a rule are high on adventure
Like wondering bards or prophets today.
Embracing hearts and minds with wisdom
Casting through verse their visions at play.
Poets have their dreams and their nightmares
Of love, life, death, faith, and war.
They feel the pain and tragedy of others
Even those they’ve never met before.
They fan the flames of human compassion
With their stories of the failings of man.
Professing to follow a higher power
As they recruit whomever they can.
Poets are the bell ringers of the soul
As they depict the past, the present and beyond.
They sound their alarm of what lies ahead
As the missteps of man live on.
FREEDOM
In their new uniforms
The young march off
Not knowing who shall return.
With a proud devotion
They brandish their flag
Leaving loved ones to wonder and yearn.
May we all be buried
By all of our children
Is an ancient tribal prayer.
They&#039;re so easy to lose
But so hard to forget
Such a burden for a parent to bear.
The taste of victory
Shall soon be forgotten
But, never that which was lost.
For those rows of white headstones
In peaceful green fields
Make it easy to tally the cost.
America has survived
All attempts to destroy
Knowing the cruelty of war
And we who remain
Must help keep her free
For those who can march no more!
© Tom Zart
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>POETS ARE THE BELL RINGERS OF THE SOUL<br />
Poets as a rule are high on adventure<br />
Like wondering bards or prophets today.<br />
Embracing hearts and minds with wisdom<br />
Casting through verse their visions at play.<br />
Poets have their dreams and their nightmares<br />
Of love, life, death, faith, and war.<br />
They feel the pain and tragedy of others<br />
Even those they’ve never met before.<br />
They fan the flames of human compassion<br />
With their stories of the failings of man.<br />
Professing to follow a higher power<br />
As they recruit whomever they can.<br />
Poets are the bell ringers of the soul<br />
As they depict the past, the present and beyond.<br />
They sound their alarm of what lies ahead<br />
As the missteps of man live on.<br />
FREEDOM<br />
In their new uniforms<br />
The young march off<br />
Not knowing who shall return.<br />
With a proud devotion<br />
They brandish their flag<br />
Leaving loved ones to wonder and yearn.<br />
May we all be buried<br />
By all of our children<br />
Is an ancient tribal prayer.<br />
They&#8217;re so easy to lose<br />
But so hard to forget<br />
Such a burden for a parent to bear.<br />
The taste of victory<br />
Shall soon be forgotten<br />
But, never that which was lost.<br />
For those rows of white headstones<br />
In peaceful green fields<br />
Make it easy to tally the cost.<br />
America has survived<br />
All attempts to destroy<br />
Knowing the cruelty of war<br />
And we who remain<br />
Must help keep her free<br />
For those who can march no more!<br />
© Tom Zart</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Don Share</title>
		<link>http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/05/more-political-poetry/#comment-330</link>
		<dc:creator>Don Share</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Mar 2008 16:29:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pf/harriet/?p=183#comment-330</guid>
		<description>The French Prisoner
by János Pilinszky
If only I could forget him, the Frenchman
I saw outside our quarters, creeping round
near daybreak in that density of garden
as if he&#039;d almost grown into the ground.
He was just looking back, peering about him
to check that he was safe here and alone:
once he was sure, his plunder was all his!
Whatever chanced, he&#039;d not be moving on.
He was already eating. He was wolfing
a pilfered turnip hidden in his rags.
Eating raw cattle feed. But he&#039;d no sooner
swallowed a mouthful than it made him gag;
and the sweet food encountered on his tongue
delight and then disgust, as it might be
the unhappy and the happy, meeting in
their bodies&#039; all-consuming ecstasy.
Only forget that body. . . Shoulder blades
trembling, and a hand all skin and bone,
the palm cramming his mouth in such a way
that it too seemed to feed in clinging on.
And then the furious and desperate shame
of organs galled with one another, forced
to tear from one another what should bind them
together in community at last.
The way his clumsy feet had been left out
of all that gibbering bestial joy; and how
they stood splayed out and paralyzed beneath
the body&#039;s torture and fierce rapture now.
And his look too—if I could forget that!
Retching, he went on gobbling as if driven
on and on, just to eat, no matter what,
anything, this or that, himself even.
Why go on? It turned out that he&#039;d escaped
from the prison camp nearby—guards came for him.
I wander, as I did then in that garden,
among my garden shadows here at home.
&quot;If only I could forget him, the Frenchman&quot;—
I&#039;m looking through my notes, I read one out,
and from my ears, my eyes, my mouth, the seething
memory boils over in his shout:
&quot;I&#039;m hungry!&quot; And immediately I feel
the undying hunger which this wretched creature
has long since ceased to feel, for which there is
no mitigating nourishment in nature.
He feeds on me. More and more hungrily!
And I&#039;m less and less sufficient, for my part.
Now he, who would have been contented once
with any kind of food, demands my heart.
Translated from the Hungarian by Clive Wilmer &amp; George Gömöri
From the March 2008 issue of &lt;i&gt;Poetry&lt;/i&gt;
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The French Prisoner<br />
by János Pilinszky<br />
If only I could forget him, the Frenchman<br />
I saw outside our quarters, creeping round<br />
near daybreak in that density of garden<br />
as if he&#8217;d almost grown into the ground.<br />
He was just looking back, peering about him<br />
to check that he was safe here and alone:<br />
once he was sure, his plunder was all his!<br />
Whatever chanced, he&#8217;d not be moving on.<br />
He was already eating. He was wolfing<br />
a pilfered turnip hidden in his rags.<br />
Eating raw cattle feed. But he&#8217;d no sooner<br />
swallowed a mouthful than it made him gag;<br />
and the sweet food encountered on his tongue<br />
delight and then disgust, as it might be<br />
the unhappy and the happy, meeting in<br />
their bodies&#8217; all-consuming ecstasy.<br />
Only forget that body. . . Shoulder blades<br />
trembling, and a hand all skin and bone,<br />
the palm cramming his mouth in such a way<br />
that it too seemed to feed in clinging on.<br />
And then the furious and desperate shame<br />
of organs galled with one another, forced<br />
to tear from one another what should bind them<br />
together in community at last.<br />
The way his clumsy feet had been left out<br />
of all that gibbering bestial joy; and how<br />
they stood splayed out and paralyzed beneath<br />
the body&#8217;s torture and fierce rapture now.<br />
And his look too—if I could forget that!<br />
Retching, he went on gobbling as if driven<br />
on and on, just to eat, no matter what,<br />
anything, this or that, himself even.<br />
Why go on? It turned out that he&#8217;d escaped<br />
from the prison camp nearby—guards came for him.<br />
I wander, as I did then in that garden,<br />
among my garden shadows here at home.<br />
&#8220;If only I could forget him, the Frenchman&#8221;—<br />
I&#8217;m looking through my notes, I read one out,<br />
and from my ears, my eyes, my mouth, the seething<br />
memory boils over in his shout:<br />
&#8220;I&#8217;m hungry!&#8221; And immediately I feel<br />
the undying hunger which this wretched creature<br />
has long since ceased to feel, for which there is<br />
no mitigating nourishment in nature.<br />
He feeds on me. More and more hungrily!<br />
And I&#8217;m less and less sufficient, for my part.<br />
Now he, who would have been contented once<br />
with any kind of food, demands my heart.<br />
Translated from the Hungarian by Clive Wilmer &#038; George Gömöri<br />
From the March 2008 issue of <i>Poetry</i></p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: bill knott</title>
		<link>http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/05/more-political-poetry/#comment-329</link>
		<dc:creator>bill knott</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Mar 2008 21:52:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pf/harriet/?p=183#comment-329</guid>
		<description>...
I hate to mention my &quot;Selected Political Poems 1965-2005&quot;,
which is posted in its entirety on my blog
for open access and free download . . .
...
but here&#039;s a question: who has the &quot;right&quot; to write
a political poem?
as a male WASP, did I have the right
over those forty years
to try to write
all the poems in that book?
(I say &quot;try&quot;
because I assume I failed in
my attempts,
but did I have the moral right
to even try, is my question . . .)
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8230;<br />
I hate to mention my &#8220;Selected Political Poems 1965-2005&#8243;,<br />
which is posted in its entirety on my blog<br />
for open access and free download . . .<br />
&#8230;<br />
but here&#8217;s a question: who has the &#8220;right&#8221; to write<br />
a political poem?<br />
as a male WASP, did I have the right<br />
over those forty years<br />
to try to write<br />
all the poems in that book?<br />
(I say &#8220;try&#8221;<br />
because I assume I failed in<br />
my attempts,<br />
but did I have the moral right<br />
to even try, is my question . . .)</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Tom Zart</title>
		<link>http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/05/more-political-poetry/#comment-328</link>
		<dc:creator>Tom Zart</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Mar 2008 17:33:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pf/harriet/?p=183#comment-328</guid>
		<description>NEVER BE AFRAID TO BE PROUD of AMERICA
America, the abundant, the place I was born
I&#039;ll cherish till the day I die.
Where the bones of past heroes lie buried in the ground
Who loved her the same as I.
Her mountains are so tall they reach for the sky
With prairies where the green grasses grow.
There&#039;s billions of trees where wild birds nest
With creatures that flourish below.
That blue gold called water with which we are blessed
As raindrops or crystallized snow;
Changes to rivers and fresh water lakes
While the winds of our seasons blow.
There&#039;s the haunt of a whistle from a lonely freight train
Racing on ribbons of steel
With the harvest of farms and from the factories
Balanced in a box on a wheel.
Some cities have buildings a hundred stories tall
Structures of concrete, glass and steel.
A statue in a harbor, a present from France
Describes how, inside, we feel.
That flag on the moon with red and white stripes
Proves America’s dreams come true.
A country of heroes who line up to protect
The past, the present and the few.
We’ll defeat terrorism as it should be fought
Never letting Satan’s horde chase us to our door.
Safeguarding our borders and system of life
As our forefathers sacrificed before.
Never be afraid to be proud of America
And march with the brave, faithful and just.
Refusing to submit to the will of our enemies
Standing firm to preserve what we trust.
POLITICIANS
Most of the time as a politician stands up
Along with the truth, their brain sits down.
Promising anything and everything to anyone
While posing to the public, to be on common ground.
The higher the office the greater the corruption
As candidates compete for those dead presidents of green.
While we&#039;re taxed to death to fund their pork
Our cost for everything has become obscene.
Thank God there are some better than most
Not squeaky clean, but more honest than others.
Regardless of party, they deserve our vote
For they share our thoughts like sisters and brothers.
Politicians who wish to be revered by history
Must earn their fame by living the truth.
Any who continue to mislead and deceive
Must be shunned by the voter at the booth.
Obama 08’
A soldier for the people
Who’s been up and who&#039;s been down
Though while on his journey
He has never turned around.
Facing more than flesh and blood
With Worthington’s two-faced hoard.
Opposing all who test his soul
With integrity as his sword.
The wicked casts their dark net
Over any they may charm.
Plotting to mislead the flock,
While pretending to do no harm.
He’ll expose the devious daily
As he works for you and me.
We&#039;re not alone in our struggle
To preserve America the free.
His personal goals of well being
Will never stand in the way
Of doing his public duty
No matter what others may say.
His devotion shall prove contagious
It&#039;s the brilliance of his kind
What you find within him
Is great character of mind.
With faith and courage, he must live
For his life to be complete
With good morals and family life
He’ll triumph, even in defeat.
He was raised to participate
Within his community
With his fellow men and women
He’ll enrich life, hope and liberty.
McCain 08’
We&#039;ll defeat terrorism as it should be fought
Never letting Satan&#039;s horde chase us to our door.
Safeguarding our borders and system of life
As our forefathers sacrificed before.
Never be afraid to be proud of America
And march with the brave, faithful and just.
Refusing to submit to the will of our enemies
Standing firm to preserve what we trust.
America has survived all attempts to destroy
Knowing the cruelty and sorrow of war
And we who remain must help keep her free
For those who can march no more!
Those who wish to be President
Must practice what they teach.
For their people need inspiring
To believe what they preach.
Take heed therefore, unto yourselves
You overseers of the flock
Or the voters shall cast you out
For your futures are not of rock.
Life may place us in deep waters
Though it doesn&#039;t wish us to drown.
It&#039;s our past record that lets others know
Who we are as we smile or frown.
If you wish to be remembered
From the truth you must never part.
Power corrupts the best of us
When we stop listening to our heart.
Hillary 08’
An angry woman opens her mouth
And shuts her mind to reason.
She who stays slow to anger
Is loved by more each season.
Anger snuffs the lamp of thought
And it&#039;s hard to stay serene.
Where anger rules hatred thrives
Then the world we love turns mean.
She who fans the coals of hate
Has no reason to complain.
If some hot sparks scorch her face
Her anguish is thus her pain.
Anger is a human madness
Which consumes the heart and mind.
She who rules her spirit with love
Shall be praised by all mankind.
By
Tom Zart
Most Published Poet
On The Web
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>NEVER BE AFRAID TO BE PROUD of AMERICA<br />
America, the abundant, the place I was born<br />
I&#8217;ll cherish till the day I die.<br />
Where the bones of past heroes lie buried in the ground<br />
Who loved her the same as I.<br />
Her mountains are so tall they reach for the sky<br />
With prairies where the green grasses grow.<br />
There&#8217;s billions of trees where wild birds nest<br />
With creatures that flourish below.<br />
That blue gold called water with which we are blessed<br />
As raindrops or crystallized snow;<br />
Changes to rivers and fresh water lakes<br />
While the winds of our seasons blow.<br />
There&#8217;s the haunt of a whistle from a lonely freight train<br />
Racing on ribbons of steel<br />
With the harvest of farms and from the factories<br />
Balanced in a box on a wheel.<br />
Some cities have buildings a hundred stories tall<br />
Structures of concrete, glass and steel.<br />
A statue in a harbor, a present from France<br />
Describes how, inside, we feel.<br />
That flag on the moon with red and white stripes<br />
Proves America’s dreams come true.<br />
A country of heroes who line up to protect<br />
The past, the present and the few.<br />
We’ll defeat terrorism as it should be fought<br />
Never letting Satan’s horde chase us to our door.<br />
Safeguarding our borders and system of life<br />
As our forefathers sacrificed before.<br />
Never be afraid to be proud of America<br />
And march with the brave, faithful and just.<br />
Refusing to submit to the will of our enemies<br />
Standing firm to preserve what we trust.<br />
POLITICIANS<br />
Most of the time as a politician stands up<br />
Along with the truth, their brain sits down.<br />
Promising anything and everything to anyone<br />
While posing to the public, to be on common ground.<br />
The higher the office the greater the corruption<br />
As candidates compete for those dead presidents of green.<br />
While we&#8217;re taxed to death to fund their pork<br />
Our cost for everything has become obscene.<br />
Thank God there are some better than most<br />
Not squeaky clean, but more honest than others.<br />
Regardless of party, they deserve our vote<br />
For they share our thoughts like sisters and brothers.<br />
Politicians who wish to be revered by history<br />
Must earn their fame by living the truth.<br />
Any who continue to mislead and deceive<br />
Must be shunned by the voter at the booth.<br />
Obama 08’<br />
A soldier for the people<br />
Who’s been up and who&#8217;s been down<br />
Though while on his journey<br />
He has never turned around.<br />
Facing more than flesh and blood<br />
With Worthington’s two-faced hoard.<br />
Opposing all who test his soul<br />
With integrity as his sword.<br />
The wicked casts their dark net<br />
Over any they may charm.<br />
Plotting to mislead the flock,<br />
While pretending to do no harm.<br />
He’ll expose the devious daily<br />
As he works for you and me.<br />
We&#8217;re not alone in our struggle<br />
To preserve America the free.<br />
His personal goals of well being<br />
Will never stand in the way<br />
Of doing his public duty<br />
No matter what others may say.<br />
His devotion shall prove contagious<br />
It&#8217;s the brilliance of his kind<br />
What you find within him<br />
Is great character of mind.<br />
With faith and courage, he must live<br />
For his life to be complete<br />
With good morals and family life<br />
He’ll triumph, even in defeat.<br />
He was raised to participate<br />
Within his community<br />
With his fellow men and women<br />
He’ll enrich life, hope and liberty.<br />
McCain 08’<br />
We&#8217;ll defeat terrorism as it should be fought<br />
Never letting Satan&#8217;s horde chase us to our door.<br />
Safeguarding our borders and system of life<br />
As our forefathers sacrificed before.<br />
Never be afraid to be proud of America<br />
And march with the brave, faithful and just.<br />
Refusing to submit to the will of our enemies<br />
Standing firm to preserve what we trust.<br />
America has survived all attempts to destroy<br />
Knowing the cruelty and sorrow of war<br />
And we who remain must help keep her free<br />
For those who can march no more!<br />
Those who wish to be President<br />
Must practice what they teach.<br />
For their people need inspiring<br />
To believe what they preach.<br />
Take heed therefore, unto yourselves<br />
You overseers of the flock<br />
Or the voters shall cast you out<br />
For your futures are not of rock.<br />
Life may place us in deep waters<br />
Though it doesn&#8217;t wish us to drown.<br />
It&#8217;s our past record that lets others know<br />
Who we are as we smile or frown.<br />
If you wish to be remembered<br />
From the truth you must never part.<br />
Power corrupts the best of us<br />
When we stop listening to our heart.<br />
Hillary 08’<br />
An angry woman opens her mouth<br />
And shuts her mind to reason.<br />
She who stays slow to anger<br />
Is loved by more each season.<br />
Anger snuffs the lamp of thought<br />
And it&#8217;s hard to stay serene.<br />
Where anger rules hatred thrives<br />
Then the world we love turns mean.<br />
She who fans the coals of hate<br />
Has no reason to complain.<br />
If some hot sparks scorch her face<br />
Her anguish is thus her pain.<br />
Anger is a human madness<br />
Which consumes the heart and mind.<br />
She who rules her spirit with love<br />
Shall be praised by all mankind.<br />
By<br />
Tom Zart<br />
Most Published Poet<br />
On The Web</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: kokumo</title>
		<link>http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/05/more-political-poetry/#comment-327</link>
		<dc:creator>kokumo</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Jul 2007 11:09:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pf/harriet/?p=183#comment-327</guid>
		<description>I wanted to comment before now but just couldn&#039;t get around to it. I will just keep it brief, I recently did a BBC interview where I was classed as a &quot;protest poet&quot; and I&#039;m still toying with  whether or not I should accept this tag? does that make me political?
blood fi oil (part 2)
from sun up to sun dung
people nuh nyam
gun shot blazing in Sudan
Janjaweed bad breed hab dem plan
initiated by Bush an him gangs
chasing black Africans affa dem lan
fi exploit de oil wut billions a gallong
wanted dead or alive by de oil barrons
time fi talk de truth United Nation
time fi talk de truth Kofi Annan
de scramble fi Africa on de rise again
United Snake and A-robs a fren
now humanitatian crisis
lata a rise in oil prices
lives nuh wut nutten to Hallibutten
a time fi black people show dem suppen
an start cut troat deepa dan dem well
an bury de corps a de oil cartels
wen a nuh one ting a de ada
masacre afta masacre
wen a nuh precious metal a stone an rubba
from Angola to Liberia
from Congo to Rwanda
hundreds a panya maschette escape from Beljum
an a rip thru skull lakka bullits from a gun
rite thru Africa mi seet
blood a spill fi de mark a de beast
Darfur region tun ghost town
Janjaweed malitia a hunt dem dung
raping an a killing
village bun dung to de grun
man ina numba ten an oval office
a tun an a twist
a sey dis yah a nuh genocide
is jus anada humanitarian crisis
but millions a die
caan even bite de fly
wha pitch pon dem mouth caana
not even a drink a waata
de international community sey dem a help
but de media jus a help dem self
United States put sanctions pon medical supplies
fi mek black people die like flies
why! why!
world leaders why
how many will ave to die
fi de price a de oil
blood! blood! blood fi oil
©2004 Kokumo’s poetry published by copy right control (kokumo@msn.com)
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I wanted to comment before now but just couldn&#8217;t get around to it. I will just keep it brief, I recently did a BBC interview where I was classed as a &#8220;protest poet&#8221; and I&#8217;m still toying with  whether or not I should accept this tag? does that make me political?<br />
blood fi oil (part 2)<br />
from sun up to sun dung<br />
people nuh nyam<br />
gun shot blazing in Sudan<br />
Janjaweed bad breed hab dem plan<br />
initiated by Bush an him gangs<br />
chasing black Africans affa dem lan<br />
fi exploit de oil wut billions a gallong<br />
wanted dead or alive by de oil barrons<br />
time fi talk de truth United Nation<br />
time fi talk de truth Kofi Annan<br />
de scramble fi Africa on de rise again<br />
United Snake and A-robs a fren<br />
now humanitatian crisis<br />
lata a rise in oil prices<br />
lives nuh wut nutten to Hallibutten<br />
a time fi black people show dem suppen<br />
an start cut troat deepa dan dem well<br />
an bury de corps a de oil cartels<br />
wen a nuh one ting a de ada<br />
masacre afta masacre<br />
wen a nuh precious metal a stone an rubba<br />
from Angola to Liberia<br />
from Congo to Rwanda<br />
hundreds a panya maschette escape from Beljum<br />
an a rip thru skull lakka bullits from a gun<br />
rite thru Africa mi seet<br />
blood a spill fi de mark a de beast<br />
Darfur region tun ghost town<br />
Janjaweed malitia a hunt dem dung<br />
raping an a killing<br />
village bun dung to de grun<br />
man ina numba ten an oval office<br />
a tun an a twist<br />
a sey dis yah a nuh genocide<br />
is jus anada humanitarian crisis<br />
but millions a die<br />
caan even bite de fly<br />
wha pitch pon dem mouth caana<br />
not even a drink a waata<br />
de international community sey dem a help<br />
but de media jus a help dem self<br />
United States put sanctions pon medical supplies<br />
fi mek black people die like flies<br />
why! why!<br />
world leaders why<br />
how many will ave to die<br />
fi de price a de oil<br />
blood! blood! blood fi oil<br />
©2004 Kokumo’s poetry published by copy right control (kokumo@msn.com)</p>
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		<title>By: Kwame Dawes</title>
		<link>http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/05/more-political-poetry/#comment-326</link>
		<dc:creator>Kwame Dawes</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2007 02:23:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pf/harriet/?p=183#comment-326</guid>
		<description>Emily,
I realize that I would not feel comfortable relying on the poem to effect change. In a sense, the poem is a witness for me. But in my day to day, I have to think about my political engagement as an acitivity--something done. I think of the late Nigerian poet, Christopher Okigbo, who was killed as he fought in the Biafran War. The loss to poetry of that great poet has been immense, and yet it was clear that Okigbo simply did not see making poems as an answer. But this phrasing is unfair. &quot;Simply making poems&quot; is an unfair way of pitting two political acts against each other. They are their own things--their own legitimate expressions of the political. The Iraqui-vets writing poems understand that to be honest poets, they must engage the politics that haunts their lives. The list of political poems is actually impressive. Very impressive.
One love
KD
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Emily,<br />
I realize that I would not feel comfortable relying on the poem to effect change. In a sense, the poem is a witness for me. But in my day to day, I have to think about my political engagement as an acitivity&#8211;something done. I think of the late Nigerian poet, Christopher Okigbo, who was killed as he fought in the Biafran War. The loss to poetry of that great poet has been immense, and yet it was clear that Okigbo simply did not see making poems as an answer. But this phrasing is unfair. &#8220;Simply making poems&#8221; is an unfair way of pitting two political acts against each other. They are their own things&#8211;their own legitimate expressions of the political. The Iraqui-vets writing poems understand that to be honest poets, they must engage the politics that haunts their lives. The list of political poems is actually impressive. Very impressive.<br />
One love<br />
KD</p>
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		<title>By: Emily Warn</title>
		<link>http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/05/more-political-poetry/#comment-325</link>
		<dc:creator>Emily Warn</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 May 2007 14:16:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pf/harriet/?p=183#comment-325</guid>
		<description>Kwame,
A couple weeks ago I heard two American Iraqi-vet soldiers Brian Turner and John Roth read their poems.  One of Roth&#039;s poems was about an experience that he said will haunt him the rest of his life, and it&#039;s certainly haunted me me ever since I heard it. The poem is about a man dressed in all black who suddenly appeared before Roth&#039;s patrol and pointed a gun at them. Roth tried to shoot back but his rifle jammed, and then through a series of mishaps, which the poem describes, he mistakenly fired on innocent people.  After he read his poem, other vets in the audience stood up and started telling their stories about war.
I thought about this poem and evening in relation to your asking for a list of poems that use &quot;language to effect some kind of political change or transformation.&quot;  In this case, the poem and other vets&#039; stories helped us understand the suffering of these particular vets and perhaps helped them live with it, and it brought home the suffering our country is inflicting on the whole population of another country.  But I felt uneasy; while we were listening, more soldiers and civilians were being killed in Iraq by our government, so I didn&#039;t want to feel good in any way for having listened.
The experience led to other questions that I think are also raised in Jeffrey&#039;s post: If we often write poems out of lived experience, can we write poems that effect political change without actively working in other ways to effect it?  I think of your work at the community center in South Carolina.  I know that many poets do and can because our imaginations inform our poems along with experience. A friend suggested Randall Jarrell&#039;s poem &quot;Protocols&quot; in this regard.  And, I think of Juliana Sparhr&#039;s book &lt;i&gt;thisconnectionofeveryonewithlungs&lt;/i&gt;, which documents the weeks and months leading up to the Iraqi war. Half-diary, half-lyric, it addresses a beloved in an idyllic Hawaiian location while factually reporting the troop movements, the rhetoric of news and politicans, the melting glaciers, the sensuality and comforts of daily life,  and South Korean&#039;s restarting the nuclear reactors.  So that&#039;s one book for the list.
Emily
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Kwame,<br />
A couple weeks ago I heard two American Iraqi-vet soldiers Brian Turner and John Roth read their poems.  One of Roth&#8217;s poems was about an experience that he said will haunt him the rest of his life, and it&#8217;s certainly haunted me me ever since I heard it. The poem is about a man dressed in all black who suddenly appeared before Roth&#8217;s patrol and pointed a gun at them. Roth tried to shoot back but his rifle jammed, and then through a series of mishaps, which the poem describes, he mistakenly fired on innocent people.  After he read his poem, other vets in the audience stood up and started telling their stories about war.<br />
I thought about this poem and evening in relation to your asking for a list of poems that use &#8220;language to effect some kind of political change or transformation.&#8221;  In this case, the poem and other vets&#8217; stories helped us understand the suffering of these particular vets and perhaps helped them live with it, and it brought home the suffering our country is inflicting on the whole population of another country.  But I felt uneasy; while we were listening, more soldiers and civilians were being killed in Iraq by our government, so I didn&#8217;t want to feel good in any way for having listened.<br />
The experience led to other questions that I think are also raised in Jeffrey&#8217;s post: If we often write poems out of lived experience, can we write poems that effect political change without actively working in other ways to effect it?  I think of your work at the community center in South Carolina.  I know that many poets do and can because our imaginations inform our poems along with experience. A friend suggested Randall Jarrell&#8217;s poem &#8220;Protocols&#8221; in this regard.  And, I think of Juliana Sparhr&#8217;s book <i>thisconnectionofeveryonewithlungs</i>, which documents the weeks and months leading up to the Iraqi war. Half-diary, half-lyric, it addresses a beloved in an idyllic Hawaiian location while factually reporting the troop movements, the rhetoric of news and politicans, the melting glaciers, the sensuality and comforts of daily life,  and South Korean&#8217;s restarting the nuclear reactors.  So that&#8217;s one book for the list.<br />
Emily</p>
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		<title>By: Brian Hadd</title>
		<link>http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/05/more-political-poetry/#comment-324</link>
		<dc:creator>Brian Hadd</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 14 May 2007 16:56:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pf/harriet/?p=183#comment-324</guid>
		<description>Aesthetical achievement politically interpreted! Mr Dawes--amazing!
&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.hoodpublishing.com&quot; rel=&quot;nofollow&quot;&gt;The Hood Company&lt;/a&gt;
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Aesthetical achievement politically interpreted! Mr Dawes&#8211;amazing!<br />
<a href="http://www.hoodpublishing.com" rel="nofollow">The Hood Company</a></p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: niki</title>
		<link>http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2007/05/more-political-poetry/#comment-323</link>
		<dc:creator>niki</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 13 May 2007 04:19:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://pf/harriet/?p=183#comment-323</guid>
		<description>&quot;Crimes against human rights, never confessed and never publicly denounced, are a poison which destroys the possibility of a friendship between nations. Anthologies of Polish poetry publish poems of my late friends...and give the date of their deaths...It is absurd not to be able to write how they perished, though everybody in Poland knows the truth....&quot;
Czeslaw Milosz
from the Nobel Prize Lecture, 1980
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;Crimes against human rights, never confessed and never publicly denounced, are a poison which destroys the possibility of a friendship between nations. Anthologies of Polish poetry publish poems of my late friends&#8230;and give the date of their deaths&#8230;It is absurd not to be able to write how they perished, though everybody in Poland knows the truth&#8230;.&#8221;<br />
Czeslaw Milosz<br />
from the Nobel Prize Lecture, 1980</p>
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