What would you be willing to sacrifice for art you believe in?
Art Quote of the Day
Monday, January 28, 2013
Friday, January 04, 2013
New Year's Resolution Poems
New Year's Resolution Poems">
From the editors of Poetry magazine, a great list of poems to get your 2013 started on the right foot.
Kick the Habit
“On Quitting” by Edgar Guest
This poem is a direct challenge. Guest asks whether the “pluck” you’ve shown in the world matches your private muster. The only way to tell—give up something that you love.
Quit Smoking
“A Farewell to Tobacco” by Charles Lamb
Lamb’s hyperbolic allusions to Bacchus, ancient Egypt, Katherine of Spain, and the like romanticize tobacco. Instead of renouncing smoking altogether, he resolves to replace time spent on the bad habit with time spent praising it—in other words, he writes a poem instead of lighting up.
Just Do It
“Burning the Old Year” by Naomi Shihab Nye
Nye burns through a year of memories—literally. Her biggest regret at the start of a new year? Not doing what she set out to do the year before.
Travel
Sections 1 and 15 of “Song of the Open Road” by Walt Whitman
Perhaps Whitman understood better than anyone else the importance of balancing one’s desire for inwardness with living a public, dynamic life. In “Song of the Open Road,” he invites us to put aside our books and papers and venture out.
Get Organized
“Living” by C.D. Wright
Wright’s poem is a giant to-do list: take out the trash, go to the post office, make car payments, all of it interrupted by reveries on the self—”My mind like a mirror that’s been in a fire,” “Our love a difficult instrument we are learning to play.”
Find More Time
“Time Problem” by Brenda Hillman
The fact that Hillman is carrying on a conversation with both her young daughter and Stephen Hawking as she writes “Time Problem” sheds light on the double-edged nature of time. How can we understand its absurdity and feel inextricably bound to it?
Get Out of Debt
“XII Mon. February [1746] hath xxviii days” by Benjamin Franklin
At age 20, Benjamin Franklin developed a plan to observe 13 virtues. Like most of us, he sometimes failed, but his wisdom lives on. Here Franklin reminds us that our actual needs are few, and that “fancy” and “pride” are among the forces that trick us into thinking we need to possess more than we actually have.
Spend More Time with Family
“Eating Together” by Li-Young Lee
In 12 short lines, Lee captures all of the tenderness and tension that can exist in a family meal. Though we may feel exhausted by our families by the time the new year rolls in, Lee reminds us that we’ll miss the most ordinary occasions when a family member isn’t with us any longer.
Don't Explain
“New Year's Day” by Kim Addonizio
After another year of far away loves and high hopes, the poet thinks perhaps acceptance is the best way to maintain equilibrium in the new year. “Today,” she says, walking in the mud on the first day of the new year, “I want to resolve nothing.”
From the editors of Poetry magazine, a great list of poems to get your 2013 started on the right foot.
Kick the Habit
“On Quitting” by Edgar Guest
This poem is a direct challenge. Guest asks whether the “pluck” you’ve shown in the world matches your private muster. The only way to tell—give up something that you love.
Quit Smoking
“A Farewell to Tobacco” by Charles Lamb
Lamb’s hyperbolic allusions to Bacchus, ancient Egypt, Katherine of Spain, and the like romanticize tobacco. Instead of renouncing smoking altogether, he resolves to replace time spent on the bad habit with time spent praising it—in other words, he writes a poem instead of lighting up.
Just Do It
“Burning the Old Year” by Naomi Shihab Nye
Nye burns through a year of memories—literally. Her biggest regret at the start of a new year? Not doing what she set out to do the year before.
Travel
Sections 1 and 15 of “Song of the Open Road” by Walt Whitman
Perhaps Whitman understood better than anyone else the importance of balancing one’s desire for inwardness with living a public, dynamic life. In “Song of the Open Road,” he invites us to put aside our books and papers and venture out.
Get Organized
“Living” by C.D. Wright
Wright’s poem is a giant to-do list: take out the trash, go to the post office, make car payments, all of it interrupted by reveries on the self—”My mind like a mirror that’s been in a fire,” “Our love a difficult instrument we are learning to play.”
Find More Time
“Time Problem” by Brenda Hillman
The fact that Hillman is carrying on a conversation with both her young daughter and Stephen Hawking as she writes “Time Problem” sheds light on the double-edged nature of time. How can we understand its absurdity and feel inextricably bound to it?
Get Out of Debt
“XII Mon. February [1746] hath xxviii days” by Benjamin Franklin
At age 20, Benjamin Franklin developed a plan to observe 13 virtues. Like most of us, he sometimes failed, but his wisdom lives on. Here Franklin reminds us that our actual needs are few, and that “fancy” and “pride” are among the forces that trick us into thinking we need to possess more than we actually have.
Spend More Time with Family
“Eating Together” by Li-Young Lee
In 12 short lines, Lee captures all of the tenderness and tension that can exist in a family meal. Though we may feel exhausted by our families by the time the new year rolls in, Lee reminds us that we’ll miss the most ordinary occasions when a family member isn’t with us any longer.
Don't Explain
“New Year's Day” by Kim Addonizio
After another year of far away loves and high hopes, the poet thinks perhaps acceptance is the best way to maintain equilibrium in the new year. “Today,” she says, walking in the mud on the first day of the new year, “I want to resolve nothing.”
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)