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One of
America’s Preeminent Poets Remembered
Won
Emmy, National Book Award, and Two Pulitzer
Nominations

After a
poetry reading on the campus of St. Mary’s
College of Maryland in 2003,
Lucille Clifton posed for a photo.
Press Release #10-033
(St. Mary’s
City, MD) February 16, 2010– Poet Lucille
Clifton, former St. Mary’s College of Maryland
professor of humanities and Maryland poet
laureate, died unexpectedly, Saturday, February
13, from a bacterial infection. Among many
awards over her life, the poet, who was 73,
received the National Book Award in poetry in
2000 for her collection of poems, Blessing the
Boats: New and Selected Poems, 1988-2000 (BOA
Editions). She received an Emmy and was the only
poet to have won two Pulitzer nominations.
“Lucille
Clifton taught and inspired generations of
poets, including many students at St. Mary’s
College,” said Larry Vote, acting president of
St. Mary’s College of Maryland (SMCM). “She was
beloved by the faculty, staff, and community.
She brought to campus many poets of
international renown, creating a legacy and
special love of poetry that exists to this day,
and was a great teacher and friend to the
college. Lucille Clifton’s presence continues to
be tangible on campus with her poetry adorning
both the Campus Center and in a special
installation encircling St. John’s Pond. She
will forever be a significant part of the
college’s history.”
“Lucille
Clifton was among the very best of American
poets,” said Michael S. Glaser, former professor
of English at St. Mary’s, and a former Maryland
poet laureate himself. “Her poems had a profound
impact on many readers in many lands because she
was a courageous truth teller. Her work is
graced with compassion, generosity, and light.”
Clifton also
had a great impact on generations of students at
St. Mary’s College, including Colombian-born
Henry Arango ’10, who came to the U.S. at age
eight and has written poetry ever since. “As
someone who has experienced marginalization, I
was drawn to Lucille's work, which embraced and
encouraged me to continue to give voice to my
experience,” he said. Arango met Clifton three
years ago during a poetry workshop that she led.
He attended the Duke Ellington School of the
Arts in Washington, D.C., and now serves as the
president of Raices Hispanas and is an English
and African and African Diaspora studies major
at SMCM.
“Outside of her
work,” Arango added, “Lucille was able to invoke
the nurturing feelings so familiar of a
daughter, mother or grandmother, the people who
we look to comfort us and cast their blanket of
warmth and love over us. Lucille Clifton was not
just a poem written on the wall at St. Mary's
College, she was a celebration of life and all
the wonderful things that make us human.”
Roy Raley,
former owner of Raley’s Grocery Store in Ridge,
Maryland, and now an SMCM employee, met Clifton
nearly 15 years ago, when Glaser’s wife,
Kathleen, brought her in for fried chicken. “We
met over fried chicken,” laughed Raley. A
friendship bloomed, and she would eventually
visit Raley for dinner at his home. “We talked
about everything—from race to ghosts to space.
She taught me an awful lot about life. You don’t
often meet people in your life who can have that
kind of an impact.
“We talked
about race all the time, for lots of reasons…She
said once that racism is a factor in everyone’s
life, we just don’t admit it. She was so genuine
and honest. She didn’t intimidate you with her
education or her stature, because she never
brought it up. She wanted you to accept her as
the person standing before you.”
Clifton served
the college as St. Mary's Distinguished
Professor of the Humanities from1989-2000 and as
the Hilda C. Landers Endowed Chair in the
Liberal Arts, from 2000 until her retirement in
2007. She was most famously known as a poet who
wrote with a distinct voice, indentifying
herself as a mother and a black woman. She was
born in Depew, New York, June 27, 1936. Her
first book of poems, Good Times, was rated one
of the best books of the year by the New York
Times in 1969.
Clifton went on
to write many other collections of poetry,
including The Terrible Stories (1995), which was
nominated for the National Book Award; The Book
of Light (1993); Quilting: Poems 1987-1990
(1991); and Next: New Poems (1987). Her
collection Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir
1969-1980 (1987) was nominated for the Pulitzer
Prize; Two-Headed Woman (1980), also a Pulitzer
Prize nominee, was the recipient of the
University of Massachusetts Press Juniper Prize.
She also wrote Generations: A Memoir (1976) and
20 children’s books.
Her honors
included an Emmy award from the American Academy
of Television Arts and Sciences, a Lannan
Achievement Award in Poetry, two fellowships
from the National Endowment for the Arts, the
Shelley Memorial Award, and in 2007, she was the
first African American woman to be awarded the
Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize from the Poetry
Foundation for “lifetime accomplishments that
warrant extraordinary recognition.” In 1999,
Clifton was elected a Chancellor of the Academy
of American Poets.
On Thursday,
February 18 at noon, a small memorial gathering
will be held in Columbia, Maryland, at the Wild
Lake Interfaith Center in Howard County,
Maryland at 10431 Twin Rivers Road, Columbia,
Maryland 21044, 410-730-7920. A second memorial
will be held Saturday, April 10, at 7:30 p.m. at
SMCM, in St. Mary’s City, Maryland to honor and
celebrate the life and work of Clifton. This
memorial will take place in Montgomery Hall,
Room 25. A third memorial is still being planned
for New York City.
St. Mary’s
College of Maryland, designated the Maryland
state honors college in 1992, is ranked one of
the best liberal arts schools in the nation by
U.S. News & World Report, Kiplinger’s, and
The
Princeton Review. Founded in 1840 as Maryland’s
“monument school” commemorating the state’s
first capital, SMCM is the state’s only public
honors college.
More than 2,000 students attend the college,
which has the highest graduation rate for all
Maryland public colleges and universities, and
an SAT average for student admissions of 1848.
The school’s waterfront campus along the St.
Mary’s River in Southern Maryland is home to the
2009 National Intercollegiate Sailing
Association Co-ed champions.
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