lens
Well-Versed Talent
Poetry thrives across campus
As Ohio's poet laureate, Dave Lucas, PhD, a lecturer in ÐÓ°ÉÊÓÆµ's English department, travels the state to encourage poetry reading and writing and promote the broader importance of the humanities.
With the end of his two-year term nearing, Lucas said he's been most surprised by how pervasive the art form is statewide.
"That no matter where you go in Ohio," he said, "poetry is happening."
The same might be said of ÐÓ°ÉÊÓÆµ, where poetic inspiration and scholarship thrive.
"We have some seriously talented student poets at this school," said Sarah Gridley, MFA, an associate professor of English who teaches poetry workshops, "and often, they are contradicting the perceived ‘divide' between humanities and STEM [science, technology, engineering and math]. You can be a ‘both-and' kind of person here, which I think is great."
In fact, artistic creativity and STEM, Lucas said, are more aligned than one might think.
"Both of those worlds—the sciences and the arts—are seeking to express profound complexity in ways that are approachable and even elegant," he said. "That's really where the two worlds meet."
Read how six student poets— steeped in a range of disciplines—have taken to poetry to express their thoughts, explore new perspectives and preserve memories.
                    Photos by Michael F. McElroy
                
                    
                Darnelle Damu Crenshaw El is a senior majoring in history and sociology. “I write poetry as a form of creative expression. I’ve always been a quiet person and expressing what’s in my heart and my inner thoughts has always been a challenge. Poetry allows me to have that outlet.â€
Mama Said
                    I break my back every day—
                    all to carve a safe path across these scalding seas
                    
                    maneuvering malleable through the ebbs and flows
                    caution is needed in these murky mercantile waters
                    
                    we've been docking from bay to bay
                    for a long time now
                    
                    Lord Knows I have done everything for you—to live
                    Child Now Live and mind you that
                    
                    My Back Births
                    it never breaks
                
                    
                Brian Eckert is a fifth-year student majoring in English with a minor in creative writing. “I write poetry to explore new perspectives and reflect on past experiences. Writing poetry helps me process memories and view experiences through new lenses.â€
To the Dead Horses of the Ohio and Erie Canal
                    Horses are not like mules
                    or oxen, or humans.
                    
                    Horses do not quit working
                    when they get tired.
                    
                    Horses work themselves to death
                    if they can.
                    
                    On this same towpath
                    used to test my own limits
                    horses pulled canal boats all day
                    until their hearts exploded.
                    
                    I always think of you,
                    dear dead horses
                    when I feel
                    my heart thumping
                    and blood rushing
                    through wide open
                    veins and arteries
                    pushing forward
                    to the parking lot
                    where I left my car
                    and water, hoping
                    someday I might perish
                    from the same relentless
                    determination, but for
                    a better purpose.
                
                    
                Paige Lilly is a sophomore majoring in English and biology and minoring in creative writing. "I think of poetry in the same way that a lot of people think about photo albums. In my case, I’m collecting emotions, moments and thoughts in a way that only I can, and I’m putting them in words that are meaningful to me. Writing the poems allows those experiences to live on."
Ramification
                    the bones of this dotted earth
                    that hold the sea to its cliffs
                    and graze the sun with its mountains
                    
                    clack with the hooves of agile precision
                    and crumble before them
                    into empty plains below
                    that taste of goading
                    and the echoes
                    of interlocking horns
                    
                    from the ground I see nothing
                    but a tightening air like a needle
                    run across a balloon
                    that does not pop
                    does not collapse
                    does not submit
                    
                    mindful chaos
                    How do you
                    Survive?
                
                    
                Kevin Pataroque is a third-year student majoring in chemical engineering and minoring in creative writing. “I write poetry because of its potential to open a dialogue between the writer and the reader. Poetic devices such as sensory imagery and comparisons turn the stanzas of words into a snapshot of my own identity, which is something tangible I can give away to begin a conversation with my reader.â€
Contact
                    heat left through
                    the open window
                    Snow: falling
                    lines of grey frost
                    popped blisters across
                    the iridescent face of the earth
                    slowly we shivered in our bed
                    
                    to spend the infinitesimal
                    space between us
                    ice forms in our cracks—
                    are we amphipathic
                    like wind and window
                    joined
                    at the surface of glass
                    or is this love incredible
                    are we to
                    wake in the warmth
                    of the midday sun
                
Jahci Perry-Richardson is working toward a bachelor’s degree in English and a master’s degree in public health. “I write to explore aspects of this world that I find taxing, difficult to understand, or that otherwise elicit notable emotion. Poetry allows me to inhabit a space where I can work to step out of my mindset, examine my own views and embrace alternatives. It is my limitless space.â€
REAPING IN RESISTANCE*
I want to say the tree I planted centuries ago was not cut down by my sister and your brother before it could provide enough fruit and cocoa to feed thousands of generations of color.
But our siblings sit fat and strong lifting fingers to give commands. We may bend in their winds, but birdsong escapes in tunes only we understand.
We may not gain this year's harvest but melody carries the seed through our fields. Our family before us is a shell, a carcass. Wind carries husks, and we will reap our yields.
*As a response to the poem "A Black Man Talks of Reaping" by Arna Bontemps