My Papas Waltz - Livingston Public Schools

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My Papa's Waltz by Theodore Roethke

My Papa's Waltz

The whiskey on your breath

Could make a small boy dizzy;

But I hung on like death:

Such waltzing was not easy.

We romped until the pans

Slid from the kitchen shelf;

My mother's countenance

Could not unfrown itself.

The hand that held my wrist

Was battered on one knuckle;

At every step you missed

My right ear scraped a buckle.

You beat time on my head

With a palm caked hard by dirt,

Then waltzed me off to bed

Still clinging to your shirt.

Theodore Roethke

In 1908, Theodore Roethke was born in Saginaw, Michigan. As a child, he spent much time in the greenhouse owned by his father and uncle. His impressions of the natural world contained there would later profoundly influence the subjects and imagery of his verse. Roethke graduated magna cum laude from the University of Michigan in 1929. He later took a few graduate classes at Michigan and Harvard, but was unhappy in school. His first book, Open House (1941), took ten years to write and was critically acclaimed upon its publication. He went on to publish sparingly but his reputation grew with each new collection, including The Waking which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1954.

He admired the writing of such poets as Emerson , Thoreau , Whitman , Blake , and Wordsworth , as well as Yeats and Dylan

Thomas . Stylistically his work ranged from witty poems in strict meter and regular stanzas to free verse poems full of mystical and surrealistic imagery. At all times, however, the natural world in all its mystery, beauty, fierceness, and sensuality, is close by, and the poems are possessed of an intense lyricism. Roethke had close literary friendships with fellow poets W. H. Auden , Louise Bogan , Stanley Kunitz , and William Carlos Williams . He taught at various colleges and universities, including Lafayette, Pennsylvania State, and Bennington, and worked last at the University of Washington, where he was mentor to a generation of Northwest poets that included David Wagoner , Carolyn Kizer , and Richard Hugo .

Theodore Roethke died in 1963.

A Selected Bibliography

Poetry

Collected Poems (1966)

I Am! Says the Lamb (1961)

Open House (1941)

Party at the Zoo (1963)

Praise to the End! (1951)

Sequence, Sometimes Metaphysical (1964)

The Far Field (1964)

The Lost Son (1948)

The Waking: Poems 1933-1953 (1953)

Words for the Wind: The Collected Verse (1958)

Prose

On the Poet and His Craft: Selected Prose (1966)

Selected Letters (1968)

Straw for the Fire: From the Notebooks of TR, 1943-1963 (1972)

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