Poem of the Week, by Stephen Dunn

IMG_0447I’m teaching a Creative Writing Boot Camp this week. Six days in a row, seven hours a day, nineteen of us gather in a windowed classroom halfway between Minneapolis and St. Paul to write and write and talk and talk about the art and craft and act of writing. Poems and tiny short stories, tiny memoirs. Beautiful, painful, funny, wistful fragments of life, captured on paper and released into the invisible air of the room. I could teach for another fifty years and never lose this astonishment, that nurses and truck drivers and musicians and stay at home parents and hair stylists and sex workers and clerks and commodities traders and group home workers, Muslim and Christian and atheist, come together in a single small room and transform themselves and me and the whole outside world by the power of sharing stories. If a teacher asked me to name a sacred place, the classroom would be mine.


The Sacred

     – Stephen Dunn


After the teacher asked if anyone had

a sacred place

and the students fidgeted and shrank


in their chairs, the most serious of them all

said it was his car,

being in it alone, his tape deck playing


things he’d chosen, and others knew the truth

had been spoken

and began speaking about their rooms,


their hiding places, but the car kept coming up,

the car in motion,

music filling it, and sometimes one other person


who understood the bright altar of the dashboard

and how far away

a car could take him from the need


to speak, or to answer, the key

in having a key

and putting it in, and going.


 


For more information about Stephen Dunn, please click here.


Website
Blog
Facebook page
@alisonmcghee
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 07, 2016 05:59
No comments have been added yet.