Nelson, Marilyn

United States, (b. 1946)

Pig on the Ice
ca. 1853

  1. After the service, we dutiful few
  2. followed the shouts and laughter to the pond.
  3. All Seneca was out, even the new
  4. German grocer and his four children, blond,
  5. blue-eyed replicas of his ninth-month Frau,
  6. with red cheeks. Brown ladies skated like swans,
  7. crinolines billowing. Brave curliques
  8. cut the smooth ice. Couples held mittened hands.
  9. Runny-nosed brown and pink boys cracked the whip.
  10. Above bare trees, clouds swept across the sky.
  11. Then one of the Murphy’s pigs decided to tip
  12. after the children, slid, and flew sky-high!
  13. Squealing its head off, it skidded and slipped,
  14. toppling brown and white indiscriminately.
  15.  
  16. Nations of expletives sprang from our lips!

 Marilyn Nelson. My Seneca village. South Hampton, NH: Namelos (2015).

About the Poet:

Marilyn Nelson (aka: Marilyn Nelson Waniek), United States, (b. 1946), is a poet, educator, translator, and children’s book author. She earned her BA from the University of California, Davis, an MA from the University of Pennsylvania (1970) and a PhD from the University of Minnesota (1979).

Nelson is author of The Homeplace (1990), a Finalist for the 1991 National Book Award; The Fields of Praise (1997) a finalist for the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize, the National Book Award, and the PEN Winship Award; and several other collections of poems, including For the Body and The Cat Walked Through the Casserole and Other Poems for Children.

In 2013, Nelson was elected a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. Nelson is a professor emerita of English at the University of Connecticut; founder and director of Soul Mountain Retreat, a small writers’ colony; and the former (2001—2006) Poet Laureate of the State of Connecticut. [DES-03/22]

 • Biographies here are short. Yet all the poets presented have fascinating lives. And they have created a bountiful trough of treasures beyond these works. Please root on about those you enjoy! I hope you find something informative, meaningful or that provokes your further contemplation.

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