
I have been following #verselove on Ethical ELA. On Tuesday, teacher-poet Gayle Sands posted a selection of photographs to use for prompts for ekphrasis, poetry about art. I love how looking at art or photography can lead you to a poem, and many times to something unexpected.
Linda Mitchell and I are writing partners in a Sunday night critique group. After I wrote my poem to an image of Alice Paul, I found her poem, a golden shovel about the same photo. I asked Linda’s permission to post her poem along with mine. I think it shows how poets can take a different perspective.
The photo reminded me of my great grandmother who died just shy of her 100th birthday. While mine was more descriptive of the photo, Linda included historical information about Alice Paul and the Sewall-Belmont House.
I always feel the movement is a sort of mosaic.
~Alice Paul to Woodrow Wilson May 2019
The gentlemen from Illinois and Texas, I
am certain, have lost their minds. Women have always
made way for men. It’s 1968. We feel
strength in Sewall-Belmont House since 1929. The
National Women’s Party movement
headquarters is a landmark, it is
not simply ground to lay gravel for a
new Senate driveway on Capitol Hill. What sort
of message does that send to the daughters of
our work? It would destroy the heart of our mosaic© Linda Mitchell
4/7/20 #verselove

Alice Paul (1885-1977)
Alice Paul at Belmont House, 1972.
Alice Paul
Small but fierce
they’d say
about this woman
who wouldn’t be dared.
Hands on hips, head held
high as a carved marble statue
on a pedestal.Like my great grandmother,
Margaret Simon, draft 2020
Alice Paul stood in white eyelet
eyes set straight, focused
on the photographer’s lens
like a beam of light daring
him to say,
“Smile!”
It is interesting to read the very different approaches. I’ve read a bio of Alice Paul, expect she would be appalled that we are still fighting! I like Linda’s opening lines and your closing ones. They compliment each other! Have a nice day tomorrow, Margaret!
It is amazing how you and Linda both capture the essence of that photo in your individual – and stunning – ways.