The Poetry Splash DIRECTIONS: 1. Read through each of these poems. 2. Pick your favorite poem and respond to it in a well-written paragraph. Address the following questions: What did you like about the poem? How did the poem make you feel? Which words or phrases did you like? What surprised you? What might this poem be saying? 3. What is the definition of poetry? Exit Rita Dove Just when hope withers, the visa is granted. The door opens to a street like in the movies, clean of people, of cats; except it is your street you are leaving. A visa has been granted, "provisionally"-a fretful word. The windows you have closed behind you are turning pink, doing what they do every dawn. Here it's gray. The door to the taxicab waits. This suitcase, the saddest object in the world. Well, the world's open. And now through the windshield the sky begins to blush as you did when your mother told you what it took to be a woman in this life I'm Alive, I Believe In Everything Lesley Choyce Self. Brotherhood. God. Zeus. Communism. Capitalism. Buddha. Vinyl records. Baseball. Ink. Trees. Cures for disease. Saltwater. Literature. Walking. Waking. Arguments. Decisions. Ambiguity. Absolutes. Presence. Absence. Positive and Negative. Empathy. Apathy. Sympathy and entropy. Verbs are necessary. So are nouns. Empty skies. Dark vacuums of night. Visions. Revisions. Innocence. I've seen All the empty spaces yet to be filled. I've heard All of the sounds that will collect at the end of the world. And the silence that follows. I'm alive, I believe in everything I'm alive, I believe in it all. Waves lapping on the shore. Skies on fire at sunset. Old men dancing on the streets. Paradox and possibility. Sense and sensibility. Cold logic and half truth. Final steps and first impressions. Fools and fine intelligence. Chaos and clean horizons. Vague notions and concrete certainty. Optimism in the face of adversity. I'm alive, I believe in everything I'm alive, I believe in it all. Eating Poetry by Mark Strand Introduction to Poetry by Billy Collins Ink runs from the corners of my mouth. There is no happiness like mine. I have been eating poetry. I ask them to take a poem and hold it up to the light like a color slide The librarian does not believe what she sees. Her eyes are sad and she walks with her hands in her dress. or press an ear against its hive. The poems are gone. The light is dim. The dogs are on the basement stairs and coming up. Their eyeballs roll, their blond legs burn like brush. The poor librarian begins to stamp her feet and weep. She does not understand. When I get on my knees and lick her hand, she screams. I am a new man. I snarl at her and bark. I romp with joy in the bookish dark. Alone by Maya Angelou Lying, thinking Last night How to find my soul a home Where water is not thirsty And bread loaf is not stone I came up with one thing And I don't believe I'm wrong That nobody, But nobody Can make it out here alone. Alone, all alone Nobody, but nobody Can make it out here alone. There are some millionaires With money they can't use Their wives run round like banshees Their children sing the blues I say drop a mouse into a poem and watch him probe his way out, or walk inside the poem's room and feel the walls for a light switch. I want them to waterski across the surface of a poem waving at the author's name on the shore. But all they want to do is tie the poem to a chair with rope and torture a confession out of it. They begin beating it with a hose to find out what it really means. They've got expensive doctors To cure their hearts of stone. But nobody No, nobody Can make it out here alone. Alone, all alone Nobody, but nobody Can make it out here alone. Now if you listen closely I'll tell you what I know Storm clouds are gathering The wind is gonna blow The race of man is suffering And I can hear the moan, 'Cause nobody, But nobody Can make it out here alone. Alone, all alone Nobody, but nobody Can make it out here alone.