Find somebody to watch the kids while you giggle through today’s poem. Happy reading.
Respected editor, publisher, writer and poet, Paul Ruffin often relied upon his experiences growing up in the South as a foundation for his stories.
He was born in Millport, Alabama, and grew up outside Columbus, Mississippi. After serving in the U.S. Army, Ruffin earned both his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in English at Mississippi State University.
He took post-graduate courses at the University of Southampton in England and graduated with his doctoral degree from the Center for Writers and the University of Southern Mississippi in 1974.
He accepted a position at Sam Houston State University where he founded The Texas Review—an international literary journal—and Texas Review Press, a member of the Texas A&M University Press Consortium.
Karla K. Morton, 2010 Texas Poet Laureate, said, “His work at The Texas Review Press elevated the whole of Texas Letters.”
Throughout the years, Ruffin worked tirelessly to promote the press and its authors, once giving his views on university presses moving toward digital books as opposed to traditional ink-on-paper.
“We’re fulfilling the ancient role of the university press and that is to produce books. I don’t want to give up the book because it is an art,” he said.
During his extensive writing career, he published more than 1,500 poems, 100-plus stories, and more than 90 essays in magazines and journals. His work also has appeared in numerous anthologies and textbooks. In addition, he wrote a weekly column that appeared in several newspapers in Texas and Mississippi. In 2009, he was named Texas State Poet Laureate.
In a 2009 article in SHSU’s Heritage Magazine, Ruffin was described as someone who “loves football, shooting, riding his tractor, maintaining his truck, and doing his own carpentry, electric, and plumbing work…not exactly the stereotypical image of a person who loves words and is a master of arranging them into beautifully crafted poems and other literary works.”
-bio via Sam Houston State University
Bonus: "Morituri Salutamus" in full
Selections From Longfellow's "Morituri Salutamus"
Christina Rossetti's "Up-Hill"
C. P. Cavafy's "Che Fece...Il Gran Rifiuto"
Matthew Zapruder's "Graduation Day"
John Ciardi's "An Emeritus Addresses the School"
Matsuo Bashō's Spring Haiku
Thomas Nashe's "Spring, the sweet spring"
Edna St. Vincent Millay's "Spring"
E. E. Cummings' "[O sweet spontaneous]"
Phillis Levin's "End of April
Robert Frost's "Mending Wall"
Robert Southey's "His Books"
William Butler Yeats' "When You Are Old"
John Keats' "How many bards gild the lapses of time"
Dorothy Wordsworth's "Loving and Liking"
Emily Dickinson's "Tell all the truth but tell it slant–"
H. D.'s "Eurydice"
C. S. Lewis' "Stephen to Lazarus"
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