| Poet's Voice |
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| Written by Ted Kooser / For the Tracy Press | |
| Tuesday, 15 July 2008 | |
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A selection of verse taken from a conversation overheard. So often, reading a poem can in itself feel like a thing overheard. Here, Mary-Sherman Willis of Virginia describes the feeling of being stilled by conversation, in this case barely audible and nearly indecipherable. The Laughter of Women
From over the wall I could hear the laughter of women
in chairs on the grass amid flowers glowing and swaying.
like bubbles spilling over the bricks that enclosed them,
their sound surrounded me, fell on my shoulders and hair,
As I could not move, I had to hear them grow silent, • Poem copyright © 2007 by Mary-Sherman Willis. American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation.
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