Poetry: May 24, 2017 Issue [#8301]
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Poetry


 This week: Mark Van Doren
  Edited by: Stormy Lady Author IconMail Icon
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Table of Contents

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

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 Author Icon


Word from our sponsor



Letter from the editor

Spring Thunder
by Mark Van Doren

Listen, The wind is still,
And far away in the night --
See! The uplands fill
With a running light.

Open the doors. It is warm;
And where the sky was clear--
Look! The head of a storm
That marches here!

Come under the trembling hedge--
Fast, although you fumble...
There! Did you hear the edge
of winter crumble

Nothing Stays
by Mark Van Doren

Nothing stays
not even change,
That can grow tired
of it's own name;
The very thought
too much for it.

Somewhere in air
a stillness is,
So far, so thin-
But let it alone.
Whoever we are
it is not for us

On June 13, 1894, Doctor Charles Lucius Van Doren and his wife Eudora Ann Butz welcomed their fourth son Mark Van Doren into their family. The family lived on a farm in Illinois. His older brother was the literary critic and teacher Carl Van Doren. The boys both went to elementary school and high school in Urbana. Upon finishing high school, Van Doren attended Columbia University, where he first earned his Bachelor's degree, then continued on to earn his PhD. When he graduated from Columbia, he became a teacher there. Van Doren spent the next forty years being a professor at Columbia.

During his forty year teaching career he found the time to write over fifty works of fiction, non-fiction and poetry. Van Doren’s poetry collections include Spring Thunder published in 1924 followed by Jonathan Gentry in 1931. A Winter Diary was published in 1935. In 1940 he won a Pulitzer Prize for his Collected Poems published in 1039. His last book of poetry The Mayfield Deer was published in 1941.

Van Doren first taught Erskine's General Honors course in the early 1920s. He then headed a crucial planning committee for Humanities A. Van Doren enjoyed this program so much he not only chaired the program, he taught the course for seventeen years, stating it was the best time he had teaching undergraduates. In 1922 he married Dorothy Graffe, novelist and writer of the memoir The Professor and I published in 1959. The couple had two sons Charles and John Van Doren.

In the 1930s, Van Doren and former colleague Mortimer Adler established the great books program at St. John's College in Annapolis. He then frequently visited as lecturer. Van Doren served as president of the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1957. After his retirement from Columbia in 1959, Van Doren went on to lectured at Harvard University.

Throughout his teaching career Van Doren also published scholarly books on other writers such as John Dryden, published in 1920, Shakespeare and Nathaniel Hawthorne, published in 1949. He also published An Anthology of World Poetry in 1928, and the essay collections The Noble Voice published in 1946. Introduction to Poetry (1951), and The Happy Critic, and Other Essays (1961).

Mark Van Doren went into surgery on December 8, 1972, for circulatory problems at the Charlotte Hungerford Hospital. He died on December 10, 1972, in Torrington, Connecticut. He was 78.

The Deepest Dream
by Mark Van Doren

The deepest dream is of mad governors,
Down, down we feel it, till the very crust
Of the world cracks, and where there was no dust,
Atoms of ruin rise. Confusion stirs,
And fear; and all our thoughts--dark scavengers--
Feed on the center's refuse. Hope is thrust
Like wind away, and love sinks into lust
For merest safety, meanest of levelers.

And then we wake. Or do we? Sleep endures
More than the morning can, when shadows lie
Sharper than mountains, and the cleft is real
Between us and our kings. What sun assures
Our courage, and what evening by and by
Descends to rest us, and perhaps to heal?






Thank you all!
Stormy Lady Author Icon

A logo for Poetry Newsletter Editors
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Editor's Picks


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The winner of "Stormy's poetry newsletter & contestOpen in new Window. [ASR] is:

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#2119954 by Not Available.


The funky caterpillar played the electric organ
His music swayed throughout the garden.

Perched high upon a glossy stone
Beneath him was the dance zone.

The flowers danced like wacky Jackson
Often slipping from the lack of traction.

The rain poured in heavenly showers
Draining away their gyrating powers.

The garden now was wet and muddy
Making everyone feel a little grubby.

Funky caterpillar started to play once again
Forgetting the strain from the troublesome rain.

Now he had help from the birds
Strange how they knew all of the words.

To songs like the Earth Song and Aint No Sunshine...
But they gave him the Butterflies singing Rockin' Robin.



Honorable mention:
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#2122130 by Not Available.

Image Protector
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Requiem for the Tulip Open in new Window. (E)
in a Bop poem
#2122141 by Dave has company Author IconMail Icon



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These are the rules:

1) You must use the words I give in a poem or prose with no limits on length.

2) The words can be in any order and anywhere throughout the poem and can be any form of the word.

3) All entries must be posted in your portfolio and you must post the link in this forum, "Stormy's poetry newsletter & contestOpen in new Window. [ASR] by June 16, 2017.

4) The winner will get 3000 gift points and the poem will be displayed in this section of the newsletter the next time it is my turn to post (June 21, 2017)

The words are:


fireflies campfires creeks trees fishing pole marshmallows summer


*Delight* Good luck to all *Delight*

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 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#2121859 by Not Available.

 Neighborhood Nature Open in new Window. (E)
A free-verse poem about scenes of nature around my suburban neighborhood in Louisiana.
#2121941 by Harry Author IconMail Icon

Image Protector
STATIC
Under a Texas Sky Open in new Window. (E)
Gone Fishin'
#2121814 by ♥Ho Ho HOOves♥ Author IconMail Icon

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Fireflies and Friendship Open in new Window. (E)
a free verse poem to my mother concerning the death of her best friend
#2121629 by Beyond the Cloud9 Author IconMail Icon

 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#2121667 by Not Available.

 
Image Protector
STATIC
The Grateful Magnolia Tree Open in new Window. (E)
orphaned and abandoned in a wasteland
#2122242 by Alexi Author IconMail Icon

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Image Protector
STATIC
Visions of Faint Apparitions Open in new Window. (E)
A ghost story.
#2121993 by Danial Lucas Author IconMail Icon

 Time To Speak Open in new Window. (E)
a poem of love lost
#2122037 by Maci Author IconMail Icon

 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#2122158 by Not Available.

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Ask & Answer


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