11-28-2005, 11:29 PM | #1 (permalink) |
Crazy
Location: buckle of the snow belt
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please survey this survey
Please answer either pair, or both:
Who is your favorite poet? Why? What is your favorite poem? Why? Please: no listing your self as poet nor your own pieces as poem. Even if it's true. And please no listing the whole poem. But do feel free to provide a link to it somewhere in cyberspace where we might go visit it, take it out for a latte, or lay down on a sunny, blue skied afternoon and see what shapes the clouds are making while they play. Thanks. "It is the great triumph of genius to make the common appear novel (or vice-versa)." ~ Anon E. Mouse
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10th sig ~> "How many a dispute could have been deflated into a single paragraph if the disputants had dared to define their terms?" -- Aristotle |
11-29-2005, 03:49 AM | #2 (permalink) |
Drifting
Administrator
Location: Windy City
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Often times, the best way to get responses going on a question like this is to initiate the discussion by providing your own answers
That said, for me : Favorite poet in their work's entirety would be Walt Whitman, for his view of the world and the thinks he has taken time to give importance. Favorite Poem - this changes from time to time as my focus of energy changes, but I always end up coming back to E.E. Cummings "Somewhere I have never travelled"
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Calling from deep in the heart, from where the eyes can't see and the ears can't hear, from where the mountain trails end and only love can go... ~~~ Three Rivers Hare Krishna |
11-29-2005, 07:21 AM | #3 (permalink) | ||
Crazy
Location: buckle of the snow belt
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What?
Quote:
Quote:
Whitman's cool. Good mind for the time period he was alive. EE Cuummings... Umm, don't you think you should have call NO CAPS on that one, dearie? Poet: Phillip Booth. He taught me a lot. Poet: Jack Preletsky [sp?]. Funny. Appeals to youth, but doesn't go under your head to do it. Poet: Poe. Well, okay, I like his STORIES more. He must have had a pretty freaky mind. Imagine what he would have produced today. Poet: John Donne. Because I do. You know, it would be nice for someone to say Shakespeare... Poem: "We'll go no more a-roving" [sp?] -- Byron is randy and sad all at once. Beautiful. Poem: "The Waste Land" -- Elliott [sp? -- man, I suck at spelling...] is just magnificent in this. Poem: "Do not go gentle in that good night" -- an all too personal moment with such an overwhelmingly universal appeal. Wonderful. NOW do you see why I didn't wanna start?????
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10th sig ~> "How many a dispute could have been deflated into a single paragraph if the disputants had dared to define their terms?" -- Aristotle |
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