
John Keats
#aprilpoetrychallenge for #nationalpoetrymonth
16 April - romance
John Keats
#aprilpoetrychallenge for #nationalpoetrymonth
16 April - romance
Yesterday my son & I enjoyed another #makingmemories day in NYC.The cold,damp,& rain did not deter us! We took a 6:10 a.m. Amtrak train to the Metro North line which let us out at Grand Central Station.Breakfast for me was 2 mini bacon quiches & Starbucks coffee. Perfect start to my day! The MET exhibit was truly breathtaking. I love how the drawings, etchings, & oil paintings took us through Friedrich‘s artistic & spiritual life chronologically.
I wanted whimsical poetry about fey and got a discussion about the evils of monarchies, wars, and institutions at the time. The fairy Mab takes the soul of a child and shows it humanity and its follies and mistakes.
This isn't surprising because Percy Bysshe Shelley was quite the activist in his time and many of the themes reflect his passions and views.
It‘s a Wordsworth Wednesday. Next three poems:“Anecdote for Fathers,” “We Are Seven,” and “Lines Written in Early Spring.” The first two are well-delivered anecdotes with gentle morals. The last, a short and not too deep reflection on human destructiveness. What I am enjoying most about Wordsworth is the simplicity factor which can catch you off guard with emotion. Idk- they sort of capture a coy childlike naivety perhaps, an innocence.
I‘m on a new medication and feeling a bit loopy this morning, so I‘m jumping ahead to some Coleridge, “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” I‘m reading in fits and starts, shutting my eyes when I get too zonked out. Martin Scofield, in his introduction to this volume, notes that the poem looks forward to the work of Poe and others, and I agree. The use of archaic language, the way the meter shifts, and the imagery are all clear marks of lineage.
I‘ve been enjoying Wordsworth‘s poems (a lot more than his poetics thankfully). I got to three this morning: “Goody Blake and Harry Gill,” “Lines Written at a Small Distance from My House,” and “Simon Lee.” Of these, Goody Blake was my favorite, more a traditional ballad than any of the poems so far, a story with a moral, and a more overt or obvious rhyme scheme with repetition.
#catsoflitsy
Notes on “Lines Left upon a Seat in a Yew-Tree,” and “The Female Vagrant” :
I found “Yew-Tree” to be quite affecting. It spoke to the conflict between the solitary self and community and how we treat ourselves when we are at our lowest. Quite philosophical.
“Female Vagrant” was superb- lots of pathos. I love the lines about war- “Oh! dreadful price of being to resign/ All that is dear in being!”
Slow reading is helping me enjoy this volume so far!
Aside from scattered poems in various anthologies, I have never read Wordsworth or Coleridge with any focus, so I decided to slowly work my way through this volume, like I‘m doing with the 50 other books I‘m currently reading. 📚🙃I‘m grateful for the introductory chapter and the notes because if it wasn‘t for them I would be overwhelmed by the density of Wordsworth‘s Preface. ⬇️