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Stanley Kunitz Reads "Touch Me"

In partnership with:
With support from: Lowell Institute
Date and time
Wednesday, April 1, 2009

American poet Stanley Kunitz reads "Touch Me".

Stanley_Kunitz.jpg
One of Stanley Kunitz's greatest loves was gardening. "It's the way things are," he once said, "death and life inextricably bound to each other. One of my feelings about working the land is that I am celebrating a ritual of death and resurrection. Every spring I feel that. I am never closer to the miraculous than when I am grubbing in the soil." Kunitz was 99 years old when he published his last book in 2005. He died the following year. He received many awards for his poetry, including the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and the Robert Frost Medal. He also served two terms as US poet laureate (1974-76 and 2000-01), as well as New York state poet laureate (1987-89). Kunitz lived, worked, and gardened for many summers in Provincetown, Massachusetts.