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2006 Poetry Out Loud Contest in Ohio

Contestant Poems

 
Emily Astorian – Granville High School
       “Forgetfulness” by Billy Collins
  “Catch a Little Rhyme” by Eve Merriam
  “Advice to a Prophet” by Richard Wilbur
 
Jackson Hille – Columbus Alternative High School
  “A Satirical Elegy on the Death of a Late Famous General” by Jonathan Swift
  “Altruism” by Molly Peacock
  “Forgetfulness” by Billy Collins
 
Lee Horton – Mount Gilead High School
  “Eagle Poem” by Joy Harjo
  “Famous” by Naomi Shihab Nye
  “Ways of Talking” by Ha Jin
 
Robert Jones – Eastmoor Academy High School
  “The Negro Speaks of Rivers” by Langston Hughes
  “Broken Promises” by David Kirby
  “To My Mother” by Wendell Berry
 
Jon Lamotte – Bishop Hartley High School
  “Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening” by Robert Frost
  “‘Hope’ is the thing with feathers—” by Emily Dickinson
  “Trees” by Joyce Kilmer
 
Casey Osman – Westland High School
  “Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night” by Dylan Thomas
  “We Wear the Mask” by Paul Laurence Dunbar
  “Let it Be Forgotten” by Sarah Teasdale
 
Meredith Smith – Thomas Worthington High School
  “Still I Rise” by Maya Angelou
  “Beautiful Black Men” by Nikki Giovonni
  “Bilingual/Bilingue” by Rhina P. Espaillat

 

Bilingual/Bilingue

My father liked them separate, one there,
one here (allá y aquí), as if aware

that words might cut in two his daughter’s heart
(el corazón) and lock the alien part

to what he was—his memory, his name
(su nombre)—with a key he could not claim.

“English outside this door, Spanish inside,”
he said, “y basta.” But who can divide

the world, the word (mundo y palabra) from
any child? I knew how to be dumb

and stubborn (testaruda); late, in bed,
I hoarded secret syllables I read

until my tongue (mi lengua) learned to run
where his stumbled. And still the heart was one.

I like to think he knew that, even when,
proud (orgulloso) of his daughter’s pen,

he stood outside mis versos, half in fear
of words he loved but wanted not to hear.

Rhina P. Espaillat



Rhina P. Espaillat, “Bilingual/Bilingüe” from Where Horizons Go (Kirksville, MO: New Odyssey Books, 1998). Used with the permission of the author.

 

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