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Lucille Clifton



Lucille Clifton (1936–2010) was an American poet, writer, and teacher. She was Poet Laureate of Maryland from 1979 to 1985, and her awards included the Juniper Prize for Poetry, the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, the National Book Award, two nominations for the Pulitzer Prize in poetry, an Emmy Award from the American Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, and two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts. Lucille Clifton is known for her themes of family, community, politics, womanhood, the spirit, and the African American experience.

Lucille Clifton
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Lucille Clifton Reads “Won’t You Celebrate with Me”

A glorious ode to claiming one’s belonging in that space between starshine and clay.

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The Clifton House: A Labor of Love and Legacy

“Always leave a place better than how you found it,” the award-winning poet Lucille Clifton used to tell her daughter, Sidney.

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Lucille Clifton 1936–2010

The Poetry Foundation remembers Lucille Clifton (1936-2010). Awarding the prestigious Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize to Clifton in 2007, the judges remarked that “One always feels the looming humaneness around Lucille Clifton’s poems—it is a moral quality that some poets have and some don’t.”

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29:17

Lucille Clifton Talks of Her Books of Poems, Including “Good Times”

Former Maryland poet laureate Roland Flint hosts Lucille Clifton, who won the National Book Award for Blessing of the Boats. Flint and Clifton discuss her work.

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Refuge Temple: Thinking About Lucille Clifton

I encountered Lucille Clifton’s poetry for the first time not even as a poem, but as a lyric in Ani Difranco’s “Lost Woman Song,” which was about her experience going to have an abortion and having to walk past the picket line of Moral Majority protesters...

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Lucille Clifton: All About Love

Asked about the most important aspect of her craft, Clifton answered, “For me, sound … sound, the music of a poem, the feeling are most important. I can feel what I can hear.”

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04:23

5 Poems by Lucille Clifton

In the poem "fury", Lucille Clifton recalls her father burning her mother's poetry in a furnace while saying no wife of his would be a poet.

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Generations: A Memoir

A moving family biography in which the poet traces her family history back through Jim Crow, the slave trade, and all the way to the women of the Dahomey people in West Africa. Buffalo. A father's funeral. Memory.

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(Feeling) at Home in America with Lucille Clifton

I love how Clifton casts nets of inclusion and exclusion simply by naming and then renaming her place in the world. And, also, her line breaks! I love her line breaks. - Camille T. Dungy

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blessing the boats

We can stop the struggle and just sail.

In respect of copyright, we cannot display the poem here. Click the link to read it.

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