My favorite place on the Web is Poetry Daily. Every day it gives me a new poem, from one of hundreds of literary journals and books. When I find a poem I like, I put it in a fat, three-ring binder, my own anthology. click
Louis Untermeyer’s A Treasury of Great Poems, English and American, introduced me to poetry in ninth grade. All the scattered bits that remain in my memory come from that year and that book. “Whoso list to hunt, I know where is an hind…” “I like it because it is bitter, and because it is my heart…” “Love at the lips was touch as sweet as I could bear…” I loved that book, but I left all my books (and my first husband) behind when I was twenty-three.
I found the Treasury again at our library’s semi-annual used book sale. I paid two dollars and was reunited with hundreds of old friends. click
At 94 my father astonished a dinner party by reciting Keats’ Ode on a Grecian Urn, all fifty lines. He glowed with pride, and deserved to. Doris, my sister-in-law, once recited the preamble to Intimations of Immortality. She seemed to do it for the sheer pleasure of hearing the words. My sister followed with Jabberwocky.
I have always wished I had a big collection of poetry in my head. It would entertain me when I have to wait in line, or when I am imprisoned in a small cell for my courageous political actions, or, perhaps more likely, in a hospital bed for one or another ailment of age.
When I retired I decided to memorize poetry. I started with Elinor Wylie, “Down to the Puritan marrow of my bones, there’s something in this richness that I hate.” I struggled to remember the poet’s exact words, as she no doubt struggled to choose them, though some, I hope, came as a gift. Over and over I repeated the whole sonnet, until it seemed to be firmly planted. An hour later it was gone.
In my computer I have a file of the ten poems I managed to memorize. I wish I had such a file in my brain. Each poem I added drove out the previous one.
Years ago, I paid my two foster children to memorize short poems. I believe I paid them a quarter. The first poem was
I never saw a purple cow
I never hope to see one
But I can tell you anyhow
I’d rather see than be one.
Like many other plans from our early days together, when I thought I could achieve perfection, this one soon fell by the wayside and our path descended into the mucky quotidian.
I would like to try the same thing with Amanda. She already knows the pleasure of rhyme and rhythm. But Joe believes it is wrong to pay for learning, which should be its own reward. He is adamant, so I concede, though I still believe it’s a good idea.
I read poetry for months at a time, and then I let it go. Every time I come back to it I am renewed. Thank you, Poetry Daily, for the daily gift.
As I was saying, poetry aloud rocks. When I heard the famous e e cummings poem “anyone who lived in a pretty how town” out loud spoken with expression, it turned into the most accurate and moving account of what it means to be human I have ever heard.
What I don’t like about a lot of modern poetry, though, is the pretension and deliberate obscurity of language that some authors believe makes poetry profound and ‘poetic.’ ugh. if it don’t communicate, it don’t work.
Hey Julie, there’s a reading at 1:30 – 3:30 at the Natural History Museum, with the Scribe Tribe (group of poets recommended to me by two whom I admire) plus drumming and music. Here’s the link http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/wildmusic/events.htm
If you want to go together we can.
yay fg, this one is v.fine. just memorized this:
“Who loves the rain
And looks on life with quiet eyes,
Him will I follow through the storm
And at his hearthfire keep me warm,
Who loves the rain
And loves his home
And looks on life with quiet eyes.”
by Francis Thompson
thank you grandma.
Quiet eyes – I love it! And so unlike the Chamblis I know and love! I wonder how long your brain will retain?
This one I shall re-read, often.
BTW Chamblis omitted a line:
(following “keep me warm”)
“Nor Hell nor Heaven shall that soul surprise”
W. Wembley
OOPS! apparently not long…i omitted a line. oh well…
chamblis
I guess Chamblis has the same memory issues I do! Thanks for that.
I agree with your husband. But I also agree that Amanda should have some acknowledgement of her achievement. Perhaps a copy of the poem on pretty paper that could be gathered into her own anthology when there are enough pages?
p.s. I know that “Who loves the rain” poem! I learned it as a song.
Linda, what a nice idea!