- Playing
- Worth by Marilyn Nelson
- From
- Curtis Fox
Host Intro:
This is Poetry Off the Shelf from The Poetry Foundation. The poet Marilyn Nelson is the daughter of one of the last of the Tuskegee Airmen, and her mother was a teacher. She spent much of her youth living on different military bases and began writing poetry when in elementary school. This next poem, Worth, is about a school for African-American girls that briefly opened in 1833 in Connecticut, before being forced to close.
Host Outro:
That was the poet Marilyn Nelson reading her poem Worth. The piece was produced by PoetryFoundation.org. You can find out more about Marilyn Nelson, and read some of her poems, at the website PoetryFoundation.org.
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Poet Kim Addonizio reads her poem Stolen Moments
Sotto Voce by C. Dale Young
(00:01:26)
From: Curtis Fox
Poet C. Dale Young reads his poem Sotto Voce
Time Done is Dark by Michelle Boisseau
(00:01:36)
From: Curtis Fox
Poet Michelle Boisseau reads her poem Time Done is Dark
Learning the Bicycle by Wyatt Prunty
(00:01:32)
From: Curtis Fox
Poet Wyatt Prunty reads his poem Learning the Bicycle
Minor Miracle by Marilyn Nelson
(00:02:40)
From: Curtis Fox
Poet Marilyn Nelson reads her poem Minor Miracle
Piece Description
Host Intro: This is Poetry Off the Shelf from The Poetry Foundation. The poet Marilyn Nelson is the daughter of one of the last of the Tuskegee Airmen, and her mother was a teacher. She spent much of her youth living on different military bases and began writing poetry when in elementary school. This next poem, Worth, is about a school for African-American girls that briefly opened in 1833 in Connecticut, before being forced to close. Host Outro: That was the poet Marilyn Nelson reading her poem Worth. The piece was produced by PoetryFoundation.org. You can find out more about Marilyn Nelson, and read some of her poems, at the website PoetryFoundation.org.





