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  1. 3 de ene. de 2015 · LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas (AP) — Poet Miller Williams, a prolific writer and teacher who read a poem at President Bill Clinton’s 1997 inauguration, has died. He was 84. Williams, the father of singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams, died Thursday night at a hospital in Fayetteville of complications from Alzheimer’s disease, family friend Linda ...

  2. Miller Williams’ ‘Let Me Tell You’ describes the art of observing each and every minute detail from daily life. The stain in some old house’s wallpaper can be useful to express poetic thoughts. For Williams, even one’s father’s last words are important. None can tell how powerful the dying words can be.

  3. El poeta de Arkansas Miller Williams, un autor prolífico y profesor encargado de leer un poema en la ceremonia de juramentación del presidente Bill Clinton en 1997, ha muerto. Tenía 84 años.

  4. The person may turn away as an act of mercy, leaving her there in a room full of understanding. with nothing to cover her, neither sound nor silence . Poem copyright ©1995 by Miller Williams, whose most recent book of poems is “Time and the Tilting Earth,” Louisiana State University Press, 2008.

  5. Poet, editor, critic, and translator Miller Williams was born in Hoxie, Arkansas in 1930, the son of a Methodist clergyman and civil rights activist. Miller’s work is known for its gritty realism as much as for its musicality. Equally comfortable in formal and free verse, Williams...

  6. 1 de ene. de 2015 · Miller Williams is an American contemporary poet, as well as a translator and editor. He has authored over 25 books and won several awards for his poetry. His accomplishments have been chronicled in Arkansas Biography. He is perhaps best known for reading his poem "Of History and Hope" at the second inauguration of President Bill Clinton in 1997.

  7. 22 de jul. de 2020 · The Shrinking Lonesome Sestina – Miller Williams. Somewhere in everyone's head something points toward home, a dashboard's floating compass, turning all the time. to keep from turning. It doesn't matter how we come. to be wherever we are, someplace where nothing goes. the way it went once, where nothing holds fast.