Although I read and write poetry every day, every month in
the year, I'm always excited to see that the Academy of American Poets
commemorates April as National Poetry Month. The Academy has been sponsoring
this observance since 1996 and encourages schools, libraries, publishers, and
poets to celebrate poetry during April through readings, workshops, and
festivals. This year, members of this supportive organization have suggested
that poetry lovers carry poems in their pockets and read them during casual
encounters with friends, co-workers, and other people they meet on the street on
April 24.
I own approximately 400 books of poetry and house most of them
in my bedroom here at Sewanee, Tennessee, and when I'm in Louisiana, I suffer
pangs of withdrawal from the lack of availability of my books. However, right
now, just as the "blooming yellows" appear—daffodils and
forsythia, our first signs of spring—I'm in my Tennessee poetry library
again and am happy to be in the company of bards ranging from Shakespeare to
Charles Simic.
I teethed on Robert Louis Stevenson's A Child's Garden of Verse, thanks to my mother,
memorized Henry W. Longfellow's poems in the third grade, and had an epiphany
about becoming a poet when I was eleven. The epiphany occurred as I was sitting
at one of those old fold-up seat desks reading "Hiawatha," and as I
read the poem, I experienced the same sensation that Emily Dickinson said she felt
when she read a good poem—as if the top of her head had blown off. I also
received the revelation that I could write a poem. We had just moved into a new
stucco bungalow in Franklinton, Louisiana, and I wrote the poem about this new
home, the sight of which gave me an overwhelming feeling of security after
traveling in the West the preceding summer, "gypsying," as my
wanderlust father described my childhood odyssey to California.
I only remember that two of the lines of the poem I wrote described
the home as being "away from the town's noisy din/safe from the roar of
the cotton gin," unimpressive lines to mark the advent of the life of a
poet, but enough expression to make me think that I could write poetry. And, by
the way, this early effort is one of the few rhyming poems I've penned during
my lifetime.
I didn't become serious about writing poetry until I was 29,
and my first published poem appeared in The
American Weave in 1967 when I was 32. I was paid from the Hart Crane Memorial Fund and felt as though I had arrived in the world of poetry. Five
years later, I received an award for inspirational poetry during the Deep South Writer's Conference but, again, time passed and I read more poetry than I
wrote. During the early 1970's, I became serious about writing poetry while I
sojourned in the desert of southern Iran and have remained dedicated to the
craft and to publishing my work for almost forty years.
A friend once told me that no one is successful at any
endeavor until they put in their 10,000 hours of practice, and I think that
measure is probably a good marker for success in writing poetry that engages
people. A better measure is that of writing a poem a day, and I feel that the
ritual of writing is a spiritual act, as well as an act requiring discipline
and study.
My poems will probably never be recited by third graders or
sit on the shelves of academicians in the university realms, but the writing of
them is still as exciting as the day I wrote that first poem when I was eleven
and said to myself: "I can do that! For me, poetry provides what Jacque
Maritain declared: "You
cannot attain eternal life through poetry but it is as essential as bread to
the human race as it fits us for the life of the spirit."
PUBLISHED POETRY BOOKS OF DIANE MARQUART MOORE: In A Convent Garden and Other Poems; Mystical Forest; Everything Is Blue; Post Cards From Diddy Wah Diddy; Alchemy; Old Ridges; Rising Water; The Holy Present and Farda; Grandma's Good War; Afternoons in Oaxaca; The Book of Uncommon Poetry; Counterpoint;
Your Chin Doesn't Want to Marry; Soaring; More Crows; Just Passing Through;
The Beast Beelzebufo (children's poetry); and A Moment Seized.
Poems have appeared in The
Daily Iberian, Yaddasht Haftegy, American
Weave, Trace, Pinyon Review,
Interdisciplinary Humanities, Southwestern
Review, and other journals.
2 comments:
Happy National Poetry Month! Let us all be inspired!
Diane,
I am writing a poem a day and posting on my blog for National Poetry Month as well as teaching and encouraging my students to write. In the midst of April, we will have state testing and Easter break, so I'll probably finish out the year with poetry through May. The kidlit poetry sphere is a rich place to hang out.
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