What Sparks Poetry is a serialized feature that explores experiences and ideas that spark the writing of new poems. In the first series, The Poems of Others, our editors pay homage to the poems that led them to write. Each Monday's delivery brings you the poem and an excerpt from the essay. 
Lillian's

Let it be alleys. Let it be a hall
Whose janitor javelins epithet and thought
To cheapen hyacinth darkness that we sought
And played we found, rot, make the petals fall.
Let it be stairways, and a splintery box
Where you have thrown me, scraped me with your kiss,
Have honed me, have released me after this
Cavern kindness, smiled away our shocks.
That is the birthright of our lovely love
In swaddling clothes. Not like that Other one.
Not lit by any fondling star above.
Not found by any wise men, either. Run.
People are coming. They must not catch us here
Definitionless in this strict atmosphere.
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"I was twenty and an undergraduate at Howard University, taking Dr. Jon Woodson’s Survey of African American Poetry. He was suspicious of labels and spent the first weeks of class arguing against his own course title. His first lecture began with a summary dismissal of Maya Angelou, who a year earlier was Bill Clinton’s Inaugural Poet. He would hand out poems with the authors’ names blacked out, and ask: “What makes this a Black poem, or is this good or bad?” We had to defend our answers. Our shortcomings were immediately evident. This is how I was introduced to Gwendolyn Brooks’s 'A Lovely Love.'"

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ELEMENTAL VERSE: HOW POETRY INFLUENCED SCIENTISTS

The work of scientist poets demonstrates "that science and poetry offer a complementary, rather than antagonistic, approach to making sense of the world around us."

via THE INDEPENDENT 
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LAST CALL: NORTH STREET BOOK PRIZE FOR SELF‑PUBLISHED BOOKS

Now in its fifth year, sponsored by Winning Writers and co-sponsored by BookBaby and Carolyn Howard-Johnson. $10,500 in cash prizes. Categories include Poetry, Mainstream/Literary Fiction, Genre Fiction, Creative Nonfiction & Memoir, Children's Picture Book, and Graphic Narrative. One grand prize winner will receive $3,000, and the top winner in each category will receive $1,000, plus additional benefits. Gift for everyone who enters. Deadline: June 30. Final judges: Jendi Reiter and Ellen LaFleche. Entry fee: $60. Winning Writers is one of "101 Best Websites for Writers" (Writer's Digest). Entries accepted by mail and via Submittable. See guidelines and past winners at Winning Writers.  
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