Fairbanks eighth-grader wins $10,000 for Noel Wien Library in national contest
I have known your poem “The Three Voices,” since I was just a small child. I don’t even remember the first time I heard it. Back then, it was just the soothing rhythm of your words that mattered to me. Something familiar, something calming to help me fall asleep at night. I always loved it when my father read poetry to me, and “The Three Voices” was my favorite. I memorized it without even noticing.But now that I’m older, now that I can understand the words, it has come to mean so much more to me. One line, “cling with my love to nature, as child to the mother-knee,” has meant more to me than any other. I remember as I read it, being a very little girl, at daycare, clinging to my mother’s knee, begging her not to leave me. But I always let go.Thinking about this has let me let go of other things, and know that letting go is not the end of the world. I can now look at something, and know that I don’t need it, that I can let it go, and everything will be all right.When I’m upset about something, I often find myself reciting this poem to myself. It inspires me in my writing, and my music. When I can’t remember how to play a song on my guitar, I fit the words of “The Three Voices” into my melody, and after awhile, the chords come more naturally.When I read the lines of your poem, I can feel the hard packed dirt and roots under me, feel the warmth of the fire on my face, and feel the very longing you describe. All my memories come rushing back, and I remember something forgotten each time I read it.Once I remembered (as I read the lines about the wind), a year when I went to Chitina to go fishing with my family. I was very little, and I had insisted on sleeping by myself in a one-man tent. The wind was blowing like a hurricane; so hard and fierce that I feared I would blow away and end up in the river, but I was also too stubborn to admit that I was too little to have my own tent, so I sat awake all night. I had forgotten this until your poem brought it back to the front of my mind.“The Three Voices” has helped to shape who I am as a person, and to remind me of my love for nature when I’ve spent too long indoors. I live in Alaska too, and spend a whole lot of time out in nature, at family cabins, or just camping. So I know just how beautiful and enchanting this world can be. And like you, I know that the places where some people say there is nothing, just the middle of nowhere, there is really everything, and the center of what really matters.I have gazed up at the stars so many times in my life, and heard them singing to me too, and I always feel so lucky to live in Alaska. Thank you for being my teacher.Your reader,
Diana Lanni Teacher: Chris Pastro Randy Smith Middle SchoolFairbanks, AlaskaHere is "The Three Voices," by Robert Service
The waves have a story to tell me, As I lie on the lonely beach; Chanting aloft in the pine-tops, The wind has a lesson to teach; But the stars sing an anthem of glory I cannot put into speech. The waves tell of ocean spaces, Of hearts that are wild and brave, Of populous city places, Of desolate shores they lave, Of men who sally in quest of gold, To sink in an ocean grave. The wind is a mighty roamer; He bids me keep me free, Clean from the taint of the gold-lust, Hardy and pure as he; Cling with my love to nature, As a child to the mother-knee. But the stars throng out in their glory, And they sing of the God in man; They sing of the Mighty Master, Of the loom his fingers span, Where a star or a soul is a part of the whole, And weft in the wondrous plan. Here by the camp-fire's flicker, Deep in my blanket curled, I long for the peace of the pine-gloom, When the scroll of the Lord is unfurled, And the wind and the wave are silent, And world is singing to world.
Read full article





