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Question of the Day | 07/24/2008 12:00 am

In celebration of Kay Ryan's appointment as the 16th Poet Laureate, tell us: What is your favorite poem of all time?

© iStock
Joan Ganz Cooney

Joan Ganz Cooney | 07/24/2008 12:00 am

Joan Ganz Cooney: A Plethora of Poetry

The poems in Robert Lowell’s Life Studies, several of Robert Frost’s, a few of Eliot’s, Mathew Arnold’s Dover Beach, Wordsworth’s The Gypsy Scholar and many others. I couldn’t possibly choose one.

Joan Juliet Buck

Joan Juliet Buck | 07/24/2008 12:00 am

Joan Juliet Buck: From Auden to Yeats

One poem — impossible! All of Eliot’s Four Quartets and Prufrock, of course. Yeats: The Song of Wandering Aengus, Leda and the Swan, Lapis Lazuli, The Wild Swans at Coole. Rilke: The Duino Elegies. Philip Schultz’s new book Failure. Frank Bidart’ s old collection In the Western Night. James Merrill’s Changing Light at Sandover. Francis Ponge’s wartime poems. W.H. Auden’s Lay Your Sleeping Head, My Love.

Liz Smith

Liz Smith | 07/24/2008 12:00 am

Liz Smith: Meryl Streep, Wallace Stevens and Me

This is a toughie as there are many I’d like to list. But I particularly adore Edward Arlington Robinson (1869-1935), the American poet who won three Pulitzer Prizes. This poem is Miniver Cheevy and it was also a favorite of the late actor Richard Burton. When he passed it on to me, he apologized, saying, "It is well known almost to the point of being hackneyed."

At the annual Academy of American Poets who read each year in Lincoln Center under the influence of the poet Rose Styron, I went to the podium and read "Miniver Cheevy" because it’s a good poem to "perform."  There was much applause.

But then I was followed by none other than the great actress Meryl Streep who read Wallace Stevens’s Sunday Morning. Naturally, she got a standing ovation.

It was thrilling to find an entire audience in Avery Fisher Hall … all people who adore poetry.

Click here on this text to read my nationally syndicated daily column.

Judith Martin

Judith Martin | 07/24/2008 8:40 am

Judith Martin's Rhyme and Reason

Shelley’s Ozymandias. I used to recite it when asked for a voice level for television or radio, and when I got to "My name is Ozymandias," more than one television sound technician said, "It says ‘Martin’ here," whereas more than one radio technician recited it along with me.

Yeats’s The Second Coming until it began to sound like a string of book titles.

And just because they are yummy:

Hopkins’s Pied Beauty

Stevens’s Sea Surface Full of Clouds

Julia Reed

Julia Reed | 07/24/2008 1:10 pm

Julia Reed's Love Letters

Oh my God, one poem is indeed impossible, and it’s a good thing I’m far away from my bookshelves or I would be paralyzed, but off the top of my head: Rilke’s Duino Elegies, Jim Harrison’s The Theory and Practice of Rivers, Leonard Cohen’s Travel, most of Pablo Neruda. I spent a long love affair once communicating via a secret postcard code that employed Neruda’s 100 Love Sonnets. They will bring you to your knees: "I loved you without knowing I did … I broke into houses to steal your likeness …"
Jane Wagner

Jane Wagner | 07/24/2008 4:51 pm

Jane Wagner's Many Loves

I agree with Liz and Joan. I have so many “favorite” poems, the task to choose one would be overwhelming. So I’ll just open the flood gates and let my mind overflow with thoughts of …

Marianne Moore: I love her observations and the piercing accuracy of the words she uses to describe them. "The mind is an enchanting thing …" Click here to read the rest of the poem.

We All Know It: "That silence is best: that action and …"

Edwin Arlington Robinson
"Time was when his half million drew …"
Click here to read the rest of Robinson’s poem.

Walt Whitman: Oh, everything he wrote, really.
Song of Myself
Click here to read Song of Myself.

W.H. Auden: Same as above, everything! But these are two of my favorites:

If I Could Tell You
"Time will say nothing but I told you so"
Click here to read the rest of the poem.

In Memory of W.B. Yeats (d. January 1939)
"He disappeared in the dead of winter …"
Click here to read the rest of the poem.

Emily Dickinson
"After great pain, a formal feeling comes …"
Click here to read the rest of the poem.

"My life closed twice before its close …"
Click here to read the rest of the poem. 

Rudyard Kipling: I always thought this poem by Rudyard Kipling seemed so modern.
The Gods of the Copybook Headings
"As I pass through my incarnations in every age and race …"
Click here to read the rest of the poem.

William Butler Yeats
The Pity of Love, Friends, The Folly of Being Comforted, Before the World Was Made.

Allen Ginsberg
Howl and Kaddish, although here I guess we have to give some credit to peyote buttons and amphetamines.

I’ll add to Joan’s list of T.S. Eliot’s poems The Hollow Men. Langston Hughes, of course. Stephen Spender, Robert Lowell, Robert Creeley. I used to read the Symbolists Rimbaud, Mallarmé and Verlaine, but they didn’t rush through the floodgates, this time.

The first poem I memorized when I was a child was given to me by my grandmother – we would call her “Mama Dear.” I don’t know who wrote it, I just know Mama Dear loved to hear me recite it:

She was ironing her doll’s new gown
Little Marion, four years old
brows tuckered down
in a painstakin’ frown
under her curly locks of gold

It was Sunday
and Mom coming in
said in a tone of surprise,
“Don’t you know it’s a sin
Any work to begin
on the day that the Lord sanctifies?”

Then, lifting her face like a rose
thus answered this wise little tot,
“Now don’t you suppose
the good Lord knows
that this little iron’s not hot?”

Sheila Nevins

Sheila Nevins | 07/24/2008 2:30 pm

Sheila Nevins: Two Poets Walk Into a Bar ...

I am impressed by the intelligence of my wOw-Sisters. Frankly, although an English major at Barnard, I’ve never really understood some poetry. It always seems esoteric or made for the very few. Sometimes it is hard for me to understand what it is the poet is trying to get at. That said, when poetry is read aloud, I kinda’ get the feel — if read by the poet him/herself.

 

Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star
by Jane Taylor, 1804

Twinkle, twinkle, little star,
How I wonder what you are!
Up above the world so high,
Like a diamond in the sky!

Click here to read the rest of Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star.

Why is this my favorite? Because I like to question as well — "How I wonder what you are!" I think that Taylor summed it all up; especially the part about the diamond in the sky. That’s the only bling I get — or want. 

However, in a more scholarly way:

Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night
by Dylan Thomas, 1951

Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Click here to read the rest of Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night by Dylan Thomas.

I like anybody who fights against the darkness and searches for the light and the twinkle of a star. I think Jane Taylor and Dylan Thomas would have gone to the Whitehorse Tavern in New York and boozed up a bit while looking at the dark sky.

Read more about: Books, Kay Ryan, Poetry

117 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

joan larsen
It is the season of divorce. February ends abruptly. Oak trees which have fiercely held their leaves all winter suddenly let go. Our friends tear apart. We married so young I think of pictures of Asian princes bethrothed at five, their enormous eyes accepting anything. In the woods dog nose among emptied burrows, bark at the silence. Don’t leave now. We have almost survived our lives.
By joan larsen on 07/24/2008 12:11 am
Frank Peterson
Joan, who wrote that please..
By Frank Peterson on 07/24/2008 1:06 am
joan larsen
Twenty or so years ago when the world was so full of emotions unspilled, I am guessing the typed pages that flowed on and on were what was in my heart. Funny … they all hold true and bring tears today.
By joan larsen on 07/24/2008 6:03 am
Frank Peterson
Tht is quite lovely Joan—thank you.
By Frank Peterson on 07/24/2008 10:14 am
joan larsen
I hope you don’t mind if I add a poem - one rarely written about - but one that all women with children will relate to in a way that may not have been written before. Full of imagery, I hope, and truth — and love. Strapped down, victim in an old comic book, I have been here before, this place where pain winces off the walls like too bright light Bear down a doctor says, foreman to a sweating laborer, but this work, this forcing of one life from another is something I signed for at a moment when I would have signed anything. Babies should grow in fields; common as beets and turnips they should be picked and held root end up, soil spilling from between their toes - and how much easier it would be later, returning to earth. Bear up … bear down … the audience grows restive, and I’m a magician who can’t produce a rabbit from my swollen hat. She’s crowning, someone says, but there is no one royal here, just me, quite barefoot, greeting my barefoot child. *
By joan larsen on 07/24/2008 5:16 pm
kermie b
Joan, I love the phrase “and how much easier it would be later, returning to earth.” You write beautifully.
By kermie b on 07/26/2008 8:24 am
Marjorie C.
joan, thanks for sharing that most beautiful poem. I love poetry’s economy of words… the vivid imagery that reaches deep into the soul.
By Marjorie C. on 07/24/2008 9:02 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
Majorie, you coined it perfectly––poetry’s economy of words…the vivid imagery that reaches deep into the soul––– and Joan, your poem written at a time when your emotions were raw and bleeding, is good because you could express these feelings into words. And that is a gift.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 07/24/2008 10:07 am
C A Rose
I agree. It is too hard to name just one. I’m fortunate to have been exposed to poetry at a very early age. So many poems, so little time…
By C A Rose on 07/24/2008 12:22 am
Frank Peterson
On such a night as this When no moon lights your way to me, I wake, my passion blazing, My breast a fire raging, exploding flame While within me my heart chars. Ono no Komachi 834 - ?? And these by Izumi Shikibu 974 - 1034: Why haven’t I thought of it before? This body, remembering yours is the keepsake you left. And this one: Lying alone my black hair tangled, uncombed, I long for the one who touched it first. We don’t know her first name, only her last and her father’s court title, shikibu—she lived like Ono No Komachi in Heian Japan and is Japan’s greatest woman poet. How can one have only one favourite poem?
By Frank Peterson on 07/24/2008 12:25 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
HAN WUTI–––ON THE DEATH OF HIS MISTRESS The sound of her silk skirt has stopped. On the marble pavement dust grows. Her empty room is cold and still. Fallen leaves are piled against the doors. Longing for a lovely lady How can I bring my aching heart to rest?
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 07/24/2008 1:27 pm
Frank Peterson
Oh Phyllis that one does it for me and brings hr back again—thank you.
By Frank Peterson on 07/24/2008 1:46 pm
Frank Peterson
And just one more: It’s by Nizar Qabbani a Lebanese poet much revered in the Arabic world; this is to his wife Balqis who died too young: In the blue harbour of your eyes Snow falls in July. Ships laden with turquoise Spill over the sea and are not drowned. In the blue harbor of your eyes I run on the scattered rocks like a child Breathing the fragrance of the sea And return an exhausted bird. In the blue harbor of your eyes Stones sing in the night. Who has hidden a thousand poems In the closed book of your eyes? If only, if only I were a sailor, If only somebody’d give me a boat, I would furl my sails each evening In the blue harbour of your eyes.
By Frank Peterson on 07/24/2008 12:38 am
kermie b
Definitely Rilke. From the “Archaic Torso of Apollo.” The last two lines left me in awe when I was an impressionable student, and I love them still. We cannot know his legendary head with eyes like ripening fruit. And yet his torso is still suffused with brilliance from inside, like a lamp, in which his gaze, now turned to low, gleams in all its power. Otherwise the curved breast could not dazzle you so, nor could a smile run through the placid hips and thighs to that dark center where procreation flared. Otherwise this stone would seem defaced beneath the translucent cascade of the shoulders and would not glisten like a wild beast’s fur: would not, from all the borders of itself, burst like a star: for here there is no place that does not see you. You must change your life. ****************** “Here there is no place that does not see you. You must change your life.” I love those lines. That and “This is the land they call life. You will recognize it by its seriousness.”
By kermie b on 07/24/2008 12:42 am
Frank Peterson
Ki: I love that: Thank you so much :-) He wrote this too that resonates for me always: For one human being to love another is perhaps the most difficult task of all, the epitome, the ultimate test. It is that striving for which all other striving is merely preparation. Rainier Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet
By Frank Peterson on 07/24/2008 12:52 am