Poetry Giveaway!

Act now, and receive as our gift to you....one of these lovely poetry broadsides.

All month long we’ve been polling staff here to find out everyone’s favorite poems, and now we want to hear from YOU – what’s your all-time favorite poem?  Which piece of verse do you find yourself returning to again and again?  If you were trapped on a desert island with only one poem in your pocket…..you get it.

Let us know in the comments below.  We’ll pick three and post them on the blog at the end of the week.  As a thank you for sharing, we’re giving away three different poetry broadsides (pictured above), including one signed by Billy Collins and one of a poem called X-ray that actually looks like an X-ray (and is really cool.) All three are perfect for framing and demonstrating to the world at large that you are indeed a lover of poetry.

So tell us – what poem can you not live without?

17 thoughts on “Poetry Giveaway!

  1. The current poem I simply cannot live without would have to be ‘Reasons to Survive November” by Tony Hoagland, from his book What Narcissism Means To Me.

  2. Years ago I memorized this Naomi Shihab Nye poem to tell myself in moments of sadness, ennui, road rage, etc. It never fails to be the perfect straight-backed chair, the raft to sweep me up.

    You Know Who You Are
    By Naomi Shihab Nye

    Why do your poems comfort me, I ask myself.
    Because they are upright, like straight-backed chairs.
    I can sit in them and study the world as if it too
    were simple and upright.

    Because sometimes I live in a hurricane of words
    and not one of them can save me.
    Your poems come in like a raft, logs tied together,
    they float.
    I want to tell you about the afternoon
    I floated on your poems
    all the way from Durango Street to Broadway.

    Fathers were paddling on the river with their small sons.
    Three Mexican boys chased each other outside the library.
    Everyone seemed to have some task, some occupation,
    while I wandered uselessly in the streets I claim to love.

    Suddenly I felt the precise body of your poems beneath me,
    like a raft, I felt words as something portable again,
    a cup, a newspaper, a pin.
    everything happening had a light around it,
    not the light of Catholic miracles,
    the blunt light of a Saturday afternoon.
    light in a world that rushes forward with us or without us.
    I wanted to stop and gather up the blocks behind me
    in this light, but it doesn’t work.
    You keep walking, lifting one foot, then the other,
    saying “This is what I need to remember”
    and then hoping you can.

  3. When Death Comes by Mary Oliver

    When death comes
    like the hungry bear in autumn
    when death comes and takes all the bright coins from his purse

    to buy me, and snaps his purse shut;
    when death comes
    like the measle-pox;

    when death comes
    like an iceberg between the shoulder blades,

    I want to step through the door full of curiosity, wondering;
    what is it going to be like, that cottage of darkness?

    And therefore I look upon everything
    as a brotherhood and a sisterhood,
    and I look upon time as no more than an idea,
    and I consider eternity as another possibility,

    and I think of each life as a flower, as common
    as a field daisy, and as singular,

    and each name a comfortable music in the mouth
    tending as all music does, toward silence,

    and each body a lion of courage, and something
    precious to the earth.

    When it’s over, I want to say: all my life
    I was a bride married to amazement.
    I was a bridegroom, taking the world into my arms.

    When it’s over, I don’t want to wonder
    if I have made of my life something particular, and real.
    I don’t want to find myself sighing and frightened
    or full of argument.

    I don’t want to end up simply having visited this world.

  4. “Youth” — WS Merwin

    Through all of youth I was looking for you
    without knowing what I was looking for

    or what to call you I think I did not
    even know I was looking how would I

    have known you when I saw you as I did
    time after time when you appeared to me

    as you did naked offering yourself
    entirely at that moment and you let

    me breathe you touch you taste you knowing
    no more than I did and only when I

    began to think of losing you did I
    recognize you when you were already

    part memory part distance remaining
    mine in the ways that I learn to miss you

    from what we cannot hold the stars are made

  5. The Layers

    Stanley Kunitz

    I have walked through many lives,
    some of them my own,
    and I am not who I was,
    though some principle of being
    abides, from which I struggle
    not to stray.
    When I look behind,
    as I am compelled to look
    before I can gather strength
    to proceed on my journey,
    I see the milestones dwindling
    toward the horizon
    and the slow fires trailing
    from the abandoned camp-sites,
    over which scavenger angels
    wheel on heavy wings.
    Oh, I have made myself a tribe
    out of my true affections,
    and my tribe is scattered!
    How shall the heart be reconciled
    to its feast of losses?
    In a rising wind
    the manic dust of my friends,
    those who fell along the way,
    bitterly stings my face.
    Yet I turn, I turn,
    exulting somewhat,
    with my will intact to go
    wherever I need to go,
    and every stone on the road
    precious to me.
    In my darkest night,
    when the moon was covered
    and I roamed through wreckage,
    a nimbus-clouded voice
    directed me:
    “Live in the layers,
    not on the litter.”
    Though I lack the art
    to decipher it,
    no doubt the next chapter
    in my book of transformations
    is already written.
    I am not done with my changes.

  6. “The Quiet World”
    By Jeffrey McDaniel
    (from his book The Forgiveness Parade)

    In an effort to get people to look
    into each other’s eyes more,
    and also to appease the mutes,
    the government has decided
    to allot each person exactly one hundred
    and sixty-seven words, per day.

    When the phone rings, I put it to my ear
    without saying hello. In the restaurant
    I point at chicken noodle soup.
    I am adjusting well to the new way.

    Late at night, I call my long distance lover,
    proudly say I only used fifty-nine today.
    I saved the rest for you.

    When she doesn’t respond,
    I know she’s used up all her words,
    so I slowly whisper I love you
    thirty-two and a third times.
    After that, we just sit on the line
    and listen to each other breathe.

  7. The bee is such a busy soul,
    he has no time for birth control.
    That is why, in times like these,
    there are so many sons of bees.

  8. Absolute favorite is “Mindful” by Mary Oliver. I always find new bits of inspiration when I read it.

  9. Lying in a Hammock at William Duffy’s Farm in Pine Island, Minnesota

    Over my head, I see the bronze butterfly
    Asleep on the black trunk,
    Blowing like a leaf in green shadow.
    Down the ravine behind the empty house,
    The cowbells follow one another
    Into the distances of the afternoon.
    To my right,
    In a field of sunlight between two pines,
    The droppings of last year’s horses
    Blaze up into golden stones.
    I lean back, as the evening darkens and comes on.
    A chicken hawk floats over, looking for home.
    I have wasted my life.

    — James Wright

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