Miller and Lucinda Williams

Miller Williams is perhaps most famous, beyond poetry circles, for delivering the poem at President Clinton’s second inauguration. Recently retired from teaching at the University of Arkansas, Williams has published, edited, and translated over thirty books. His early stints at universities across the South compose part of the growing legend of his daughter’s career, as do his friendships with the likes of Flannery O’Connor, James Dickey, Charles Bukowski, and country singer George Jones. The itinerant but always lively childhood of Lucinda Williams meant exposure to writers, musicians, and a different town every couple of years, until the Williamses finally settled in Fayetteville, Arkansas. Though poetry was always somewhere in the background, music was her first love.

Lucinda Williams traces her defining musical moment back to a night when she was twelve, when one of her father’s students dropped by and put on Bob Dylan’s newest album, Highway 61 Revisited. For Williams, the album proved enormously influential, wedding the literary and musical impulses so abundant in her home. “He was the first artist who actually managed to incorporate both of the worlds I came out of, which was the more traditional folk music of America and the poetic, literary world. That’s when I decided what I wanted to achieve.”

CPC Readings

Friday, February 20, 2004
The Art Institute of Chicago

Poetry by Miller and Lucinda Williams

Blue

Go find a jukebox
And see what a quarter will do
I don’t wanna talk
I just wanna go back to the blue

Love Poem with Toast

Some of what we do, we do
to make things happen,
the alarm to wake us up, the coffee to perc,
the car to start.

June Twenty, Three Days After

When I was a boy and a man would die
we’d say a verse when the hearse went by
one car two car three car four
someone knocking on the devil’s door.[/quote]

– Miller Williams

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