The Art of Poetry No. 115
“Anyone who writes is a seeker. You look at a blank page and you’re seeking. That role is assigned to us and never removed.”
Winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature, the National Book Award, the Pulitzer Prize, and many other honors, Louise Glück is the author of thirteen collections of poetry. She served as the U.S. Poet Laureate from 2003 to 2004 and as the judge of the Yale Series of Younger Poets from 2003 to 2010. Her poems are known for their confessional subject matter, use of mythology, and stark, uncompromising portrayal of inner life. Her work is collected in the volume Poems 1962-2012, followed by Faithful and Virtuous Night in 2014 and the essay collections Proofs and Theories (1994) and American Originality (2017).
“Anyone who writes is a seeker. You look at a blank page and you’re seeking. That role is assigned to us and never removed.”
I had left my passport at an inn we stayed at for a night or so whose name I couldn’t remember. This is how it began. The next hotel would not receive me. A beautiful hotel, in an orange grove, with a view of the sea.
Today the sun was shining
so my neighbor washed her nightdresses in the river—
she comes home with everything folded in a basket,
They told her she came out of a hole in her mother
but really it’s impossible to believe
something so delicate could come out of something
Spring comes quickly: overnight
the plum tree blossoms,
the warm air fills with birdcalls.
My mother made figs in wine—
poached with cloves, sometimes a few peppercorns.
Black figs, from our tree.
A cool wind blows on summer evenings, stirring the wheat.
The wheat bends, the leaves of the peach trees
rustle in the night ahead.