Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American poet Alice Dunbar Nelson.
Last updated on April 17, 2025.
Alice Dunbar Nelson was an American poet, journalist, and political activist. Among the first generation born free in the South after the Civil War, she was one of the prominent African Americans involved in the artistic flourishing of the Harlem Renaissance. Her first husband was the poet Paul Laurence Dunbar. After his death, she married physician Henry A. Callis; and, lastly, was married to Robert J. Nelson, a poet and civil rights activist. She achieved prominence as a poet, author of short stories and dramas, newspaper columnist, activist for women's rights, and editor of two anthologies.
Nothing will do me any good unless I learn to control this body of mine.
The rainbow is elusive, and its colors but the illumination of tears.
Every new fad or fashion at once has its denouncers from the pulpit, platform, professor's chair.
Blue. My God! I'm so blue that if I were a dog, I'd sit on my haunches and howl and howl and howl...
Didacticism is the death of art.
Willow trees are kind, Dear God. They will not bear a body on their limbs.
In every race, in every nation, and in every clime in every period of history there is always an eager-eyed group of youthful patriots who seriously set themselves to right the wrongs done to their race or nation or . . . art or self-expression.
I am profoundly in the D's - discouraged, depressed, disheartened, disgusted.
It's punishment to be compelled to do what one doesn't wish.
Picturesqueness is a lost art. We may expect at anytime to hear that a collar ad is blazing its electric lights atop of the largest pyramid.
I had not thought of violets of late,
The wild, shy kind that springs beneath you feet
In wistful April days.