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“I have a capacity for love without / forgiveness,” writes the contemporary African American poet Terrance Hayes, seeking to make sense of his relationship to Wallace Stevens, whose racism was at times explicit. Listen closely to Clifton’s poems and you might begin to hear something similar, a capacity to make rage an embrace. It’s a kind of prophetic intimacy she manages, a fusion of utterance and action. She includes you, no matter who you are.
Zero at the Bone: Fifty Entries Against Despair
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