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I looked back and did not see anything about poetry, so if this is redundant--I apologize in advance. I started thinking about poems that have lingered with me over the years or that really wacked me up side the head when I first read them. I will be fifty soon and poetry--as far as I can tell--is not as well known or taught (from what I can see from my kids' experience) as part of a core curriculum these days. The recently passed Maya Angelou received a lot of press a few years back and certainly is an exception to what I indicate. At any rate, I will start by saying that as a lifetime South Floridian, poems by Robert Frost really attracted me--Fire and Ice, Nothing Gold Can Stay, Birches, Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening and a host of others just drew me into a world I did not know. I still go back and read them every now and then.
Ezra Pound's Cantos were startling in their ferocity and his poetry was so erudite and vigorous, but the guy he highly recommended, T. S. Elliot, really got my mind going. The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock was like nothing I had ever read or heard of. From there I headed into The Waste Land, a poem that is still one of the most amazing pieces of literature that likely has ever been written. Like Frost, I can go back and read some of their works since I still have by anthology from college, which, like many, is where I was introduced to many of these works.
Romancero Sonambulo by Garcia Lorca is a wonderful piece of Spanish poetry and I have enjoyed the works of Antonio Machado, but it has been years since I have read either of them.
Shakespeare and Cervantes kind of stand like towers over all writers and poets of western civilization and trying to cite to one or another of their writings would be futile. The same could be said of the man who invented the modern Italian language, Fr. Dante Alighieri, although La Comedia Divina is all you need to consider.
All of this being said, poetry ceased being something I sought out or read much of likely over twenty five years ago. Work and raising kids takes up so much time. When I do read, I am perusing four books at a time, when not reading the Bible--which contains more beautiful poetry than just about anything else; i.e., Canticle of Canticles, the Psalter, Lamentations, etc.
How about y'all? Any poems or other pieces of literature along the same lines that have moved you?
Ezra Pound's Cantos were startling in their ferocity and his poetry was so erudite and vigorous, but the guy he highly recommended, T. S. Elliot, really got my mind going. The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock was like nothing I had ever read or heard of. From there I headed into The Waste Land, a poem that is still one of the most amazing pieces of literature that likely has ever been written. Like Frost, I can go back and read some of their works since I still have by anthology from college, which, like many, is where I was introduced to many of these works.
Romancero Sonambulo by Garcia Lorca is a wonderful piece of Spanish poetry and I have enjoyed the works of Antonio Machado, but it has been years since I have read either of them.
Shakespeare and Cervantes kind of stand like towers over all writers and poets of western civilization and trying to cite to one or another of their writings would be futile. The same could be said of the man who invented the modern Italian language, Fr. Dante Alighieri, although La Comedia Divina is all you need to consider.
All of this being said, poetry ceased being something I sought out or read much of likely over twenty five years ago. Work and raising kids takes up so much time. When I do read, I am perusing four books at a time, when not reading the Bible--which contains more beautiful poetry than just about anything else; i.e., Canticle of Canticles, the Psalter, Lamentations, etc.
How about y'all? Any poems or other pieces of literature along the same lines that have moved you?