Poetry is pronounced dead, and reborn, so often that a phoenix metaphor springs too easily to mind. Poetry’s fiery demise and ashy reincarnation might be the oldest news in literature; Sumerian scribes must have jived about it in cuneiform.
A more complex metaphor, and the one I prefer, is to see poetry not as a rising firebird, but as a wading waterbird.
Take the egret, for example. Its French name, aigrette, means both “silver heron” and “brush.” During breeding season, long filamentous feathers waterfall down the egret’s buff back, and these decorative plumes, prized by hunters and hatmakers a century ago, nearly brought about the egret’s extinction.
But the egret kept on, standing long-legged in liminal space—that transition point between land and water, past and present, life and death—stirring wavelets with its wings and harpooning breakfast with its bill.
Poets, too, live on this threshold: colonial or solitary, motionless or migratory as it suits us. This has always been our way.
In creating a grassroots, nonprofit, global organization devoted to advancing poetry for children and teens, I am not concerned with staving off poetry’s passing or reinventing poetry’s purpose for a new generation. Rather, I am celebrating poetry as a living thing—as many living things at once—and I’m sharing it with everyone I know or hope to meet.
To advocate for poetry, in my view, is to live with an intense love of written and spoken language and a willingness to tell and show others (especially the youngest) how you feel and why.
Each day new poets are born.
There’s no phoenix flash or gunpowder delivery.
Just the raised voices of hatchlings, their musical, crook-necked cries.
Steven Withrow—a poet, storyteller, and teacher from Rhode Island—is the author of six books about visual design. He is co-producer of the documentary film Library of the Early Mind. His poem “Cornered” appears in the p*tag ebook anthology for teens, and his poem “Night Sledding” appears in the Gift Tag anthology. He is the founder of PACYA.
To join PACYA, which is free and open to anyone over 18 years old (or younger with a parent’s or guardian’s permission), or to inquire about anything related to our mission, please email stevenwithrow@gmail.com.
I would like to join–Francisco X. Alarcón
What a wonderful idea! I would love to join. Please let me know if I can help in any way. Thank you, Sylvia Vardell, for letting me know about Poetry at Play. Margarita Engle
Thanks for getting this going Steve. What a great idea. Yes, I’d love to join. Sheryl McFarlane
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Dear Margarita, your The Firefly Letters is in my hand at this very moment.
Dear Steve, please count me as a member.
Thank you!
Thanks, Hannah!