Marianne Boruch is the author of eleven poetry collections, including Bestiary Dark (Copper Canyon Press, 2021), The Anti-Grief (2019); Eventually One Dreams the Real Thing; Cadaver, Speak; and The Book of Hours, for which she won the Kingsley-Tufts Poetry Award. She has also published three essay collections about poetry, including The Little Death of Self, as well as a memoir, The Glimpse Traveler. A professor emerita at Purdue University, Boruch continues to teach in the MFA program for writers at Warren Wilson College.

Photograph by Will Dunlap.

Poetry in the Plague Year

An Essay

by Marianne Boruch

Above the desk at home where I write is a large pencil drawing of our son made by our daughter-in-law, given to me for Christmas some years back. And tucked into its frame is a color shot of my grandson at age six, looking straight on and quite jaunty into the world as is and to come. Also edged in there—a popular bumper sticker that never made it to the back end of my car: WHAT WOULD WALT WHITMAN DO?

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