THE LANCE, OCTOBER 23,1975 Marion Cannon: Poet In Residence f With Her Poetry An ON RHYMING All my life I tiiought poetry had to rhyme. Then I tonk a creative writing course at Queens College in Charlotte taught by Charleen Whisnant. I strug gled along for a while, and then I got back a paper on ^ich Charleen had written, “Marion, you don’t have to rhyme.” I thought to myself ‘‘Per haps not,” and I’ve enjoyed writing much more since. When I was younger I loved all growing things. Trees, flowers in the cycle of each year. But now I look upon them with dislike... they’ll last. The little maple will grow on and on and give its shade To people I will never see. The roots I’ve nourished in my flower bed Will go on living when I lie dead And I begrudge them life. Next year I think I’ll only plant The fragile annuals. ON HER POETRY One needs so little to create If bridges, planes and towers Are not the goal: A scrap of linen, strands of wool, a needle; A pot of dirt, a seed, a bulb Or just a pencil and a piece of paper. ON GRANDCHILDREN Ireally like grandchildren. You can enjoy them without being responsible for them. You don’t have to worry about whether or not they say “please” or “may I” or if they washed their hands before dinner or if they go to bed at the right hour. And when you’re tired of them you can call their parents and say, “Take them away now.” When they started the Church in Chartres Everyone worked. If you could carve, you;arved. Or you carried Stones. The Church should grow out of that plain Visible across fields of grain, Lifting its towers to the sky. It still stands high. And round about the town now grow The worker’s houses, row on row, Pre-fabs of concrete, all alike. And in the live the ones who work On swift, assembly lines. Hands turning out a product uniform and cheap. I lit a candle for them. When my book came out (Another Light) I was immediately labelled ‘The Poet of Old Age and Death.’ One reviewer in Chapel HiU even used that as his headline: all the way across the top - THE POET OF OLD AGE AND DEATH. I think I have grown up. And others think so, too. see me walk along the street A little stooped, my grey hair blowing in the wind. And steps uncertain. ’ yet I know that if a yellow leaf CmeMdttering in my path and acorns fall **»em crack ^d chaw that leaf to catch and hold A little of the year’s end gold... I am not old!