View this email on a browserForward to a friend
September 6, 2016
 

White Lobelia

 
Stephen Burt
illustration

About This Poem

 

“‘White Lobelia’ comes from an hour of very bourgeois shopping at our local garden center, Bonny’s Garden Center on Bay State Road (recommended). I am certainly not the gardener in our household—both my spouse and our kids have greener thumbs—but I do seem to find useful symbols in what they select and in what we try to plant, as well as in what’s just lying around plant shops. The lobelia in buckets are the good girls, the good students, the ones who follow adult rules and don’t try to stand out; they may feel rootless, or unnatural, or disconnected from instincts, or voiceless, and they may be right, but they’ve also chosen according to their own natures, and they might end up with a good life. They may underestimate their own ability to say something original; they may not credit their own strong feelings; they may view authentic feeling, real feeling, rootedness, originality, embodied power, as belonging to others, elsewhere—especially if they (the lobelia) are white.

 

That is: it’s also a poem about whiteness. The actual lobelia in the garden center were white, and the poem had several totally ineffective, misguided stanzas about the color white, which I cut, but it wasn’t called ‘White Lobelia’ until it was almost finished. It’s one of a few poems I’m working on this year in which I try to make whiteness, white privilege, white people’s insulation or distance from several forms of oppression, and from several forms of expression, into explicit topics—though that’s not the first thing I set out to describe; I hope it comes across as #3 or #4, with the quiet good girls (some girls are boys, of course), imagining someone will hear them as they wish to be heard, at #1.”
—Stephen Burt

 

Stephen Burt is the author of Belmont (Graywolf Press, 2013) as well as of The Poem Is You: Sixty Contemporary American Poems and How to Read Them (Harvard University Press, 2016). Burt teaches at Harvard University and lives in Belmont, Massachusetts.

more-at-poets

Poetry by Burt

 

Belmont

(Graywolf Press, 2013)

"Personal Poem" by Frank O’Hara

read-more

"Cut Lilies" by Noah Warren

read-more

"What [The flower sermon]" by Ron Silliman

read-more

Poem-a-Day

 

Launched during National Poetry Month in 2006, Poem-a-Day features new and previously unpublished poems by contemporary poets on weekdays and classic poems on weekends.