What have you had to explore on your own? What, or who, helped?
This poem explores the archetype of the cave — a cave that calls, a cave that contains secrets and perhaps even information. “Someone standing at the mouth had / the idea to enter. To go further / than light or language could / go.” The poem manages — at once — to convey the bravery of exploration and the solitude and possibility that can accompany such journeys.
Paul Tran – is the recipient of a Ruth Lilly and Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Fellowship from the Poetry Foundation and a Discovery/Boston Review Poetry Prize. Their work has appeared in The New Yorker, Poetry Magazine, Good Morning America, NYLON, and elsewhere, including the RZA-directed movie Love Beats Rhymes alongside Azealia Banks, Common, and Jill Scott.
Find the transcript for this show at onbeing.org.
Christian Wiman — All My Friends Are Finding New Beliefs
Carlos Andrés Gómez — Father
Ellen Bass — Bone of My Bone and Flesh of My Flesh
R.A. Villanueva — Life Drawing
Zaffar Kunial — The Word
Dilruba Ahmed — Phase One
Layli Long Soldier — WHEREAS my eyes land on the shoreline
Chen Chen — I Invite My Parents to a Dinner Party
Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill — Ceist na Teangan (The Language Issue)
Aracelis Girmay — Consider the Hands that Write this Letter
Tayi Tibble — Our Nan Lets Us Smoke Inside
Philip Metres — One Tree
Roger Robinson — A Portable Paradise
Seán Hewitt — Suibhne is wounded, and confesses
Meleika Gesa-Fatafehi — Say My Name
Lucille Clifton — song at midnight
Chris Abani — The New Religion
Molly McCully Brown — Transubstantiation
Natalie Diaz — Of Course She Looked Back
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