Poets Walk In
The name originated with disarming informality one day when our hostess in the last minute rush to get out the tea things put a sign on the door

Poets Walk In

Since then our meetings as well as we ourselves have been gaily dubbed "The Poets."

After several months of reading poetry together we found ourselves writing poetry and bringing it, albeit timidly, to the group. I do not remember how this came about; it seemed inevitable. One day early in this new phase a member brought a scrapbook in which she had mounted, over the years, poems she had written in times of deep feeling. Of them she said, quoting from Emily Dickinson, "I felt a palsy, here, the verses just relieve," and she read us even some of the most intimate of them. Such openings into the hearts of one after another of our members have been an important element in a creative association which has been both a delight and a therapeutic. Sometimes it comes as a shock to discover that other people who look so serene have eruptive joys and sorrows similar to one's own. Especially are those who have little opportunity to associate closely with others prone to think they are the only ones who have difficulties to surmount.
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Poets Walk In
The name originated with disarming informality one day when our hostess in the last minute rush to get out the tea things put a sign on the door

Poets Walk In

Since then our meetings as well as we ourselves have been gaily dubbed "The Poets."

After several months of reading poetry together we found ourselves writing poetry and bringing it, albeit timidly, to the group. I do not remember how this came about; it seemed inevitable. One day early in this new phase a member brought a scrapbook in which she had mounted, over the years, poems she had written in times of deep feeling. Of them she said, quoting from Emily Dickinson, "I felt a palsy, here, the verses just relieve," and she read us even some of the most intimate of them. Such openings into the hearts of one after another of our members have been an important element in a creative association which has been both a delight and a therapeutic. Sometimes it comes as a shock to discover that other people who look so serene have eruptive joys and sorrows similar to one's own. Especially are those who have little opportunity to associate closely with others prone to think they are the only ones who have difficulties to surmount.
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Poets Walk In

Poets Walk In

by Anna Pettit Broomell
Poets Walk In

Poets Walk In

by Anna Pettit Broomell

eBook

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Overview

The name originated with disarming informality one day when our hostess in the last minute rush to get out the tea things put a sign on the door

Poets Walk In

Since then our meetings as well as we ourselves have been gaily dubbed "The Poets."

After several months of reading poetry together we found ourselves writing poetry and bringing it, albeit timidly, to the group. I do not remember how this came about; it seemed inevitable. One day early in this new phase a member brought a scrapbook in which she had mounted, over the years, poems she had written in times of deep feeling. Of them she said, quoting from Emily Dickinson, "I felt a palsy, here, the verses just relieve," and she read us even some of the most intimate of them. Such openings into the hearts of one after another of our members have been an important element in a creative association which has been both a delight and a therapeutic. Sometimes it comes as a shock to discover that other people who look so serene have eruptive joys and sorrows similar to one's own. Especially are those who have little opportunity to associate closely with others prone to think they are the only ones who have difficulties to surmount.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940162023401
Publisher: Pendle Hill Publications
Publication date: 06/22/2018
Series: Pendle Hill Pamphlets , #77
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 148 KB

About the Author

Anna Pettit Broomell was a member of Green Street Monthly Meeting and active in the Society of Friends. She was chairman of the Publications Committee at Pendle Hill, the Quaker study center, and Philadelphia Yearly Meeting First Day School Committee (Race Street). She died October 4, 1972.

Anna was the daughter of Franklin (1841-1912) and Hannah Thompson Pettit. The family transferred from Salem Monthly Meeting to Green Street Monthly Meeting. The Pettit family had been members of the Society of Friends beginning with Jonathan Pettit who became a Quaker in 1750 and married Mary Shrouds. Their son, Joseph Pettit (1752-801), married Sarah Bassett. Their grandson, David Pettit (1808-1876), married Martha Engle. He was a progressive farmer and corresponded with Charles Downing. He was also an Elder at Salem Monthly Meeting and visited the Great Nemaha Indian Agency in 1873. David and Martha Pettit had six children: Mary, Woodnutt, William H., Franklin (1841-1912), Hannah (b. 1843 and married Harrison Streeter), and David (born 1849). David Pettit married out of unity to Clara Kern. They lived in Philadelphia and, later, Beverly, N.J. He was in the iron business and a writer and poet.

Anna Pettit Broomell was chairman of the Pendle Hill Publications Committee. She is the author of "The Friendly Story Caravan" published by J.B. Lippencott Company and of "What Do You Think?" published by Harper & Brothers.

[source: Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College]
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