Poetry Friday: Thinking of Winter at the Height of Summer
Welcome to this week's Poetry Friday round-up! It's great fun to be part of this community, and I'm thrilled to take my turn hosting. For those of you visiting my blog for the first time, welcome, and for those of you returning, welcome back.
In northern Illinois, we're finally shaking off the (admittedly gorgeous) spring weather and moving into true summer: hot, muggy, and buggy. At the same time, the days are growing shorter, this constant reminder of winter's approach. Here's a little Keats that seems fitting.
On the Grasshopper and Cricket
The poetry of earth is never dead:
When all the birds are faint with the hot sun,
And hide in cooling trees, a voice will run
From hedge to hedge about the new-mown mead;
That is the Grasshopper's—he takes the lead
In summer luxury,—he has never done
With his delights; for when tired out with fun
He rests at ease beneath some pleasant weed.
The poetry of earth is ceasing never:
On a lone winter evening, when the frost
Has wrought a silence, from the stove there shrills
The Cricket's song, in warmth increasing ever,
And seems to one in drowsiness half lost,
The Grasshopper's among some grassy hills.
There's an interesting story to go with this poem. Keats and fellow poet and friend (James Henry) Leigh Hunt had a tradition of friendly competition, and "On the Grasshopper and Cricket" supposedly came out of a 15-minute sonnet-writing contest on December 30, 1816.
Hunt's poem, "To the Grasshopper and the Cricket" is also a treat, though I favor the Keats a little more. I think it's that lovely line, "The poetry of earth is ceasing never," that does it for me.
Round-Up
If you like, please leave your link to your Poetry Friday post in the comments below. I'll add it to the round-up as promptly as I can!
- Cloudscome, of A Wrung Sponge, shares an original poem "Baby Gate," from the perspective of a retired baby gate.
- David E., of Fomagrams, shares an original poem from a recent workshop, "Clothesline."
- Stacey, of Two Writing Teachers, shares The Eagle and the Bear," a poem about strength by David J. Pipkin.
- Sherry, of Semicolon, shares a beautiful (and timely) poem written by her daughter, "Beach."
- John Mutford, of The Book Mine Set, reviews Hand to Hand, a collection of poems by Nadine McInnis.
- Writer2B shares some of her favorite Suzanne Vega lyrics.
- Elaine Magliaro, of Wild Rose Reader and Blue Rose Girls, shares two poems: "Taos," by Cynthia Gray (not to mention lovely photographs from Elaine's trip to the Rio Grande), and "A Green Crab's Shell, by Mark Doty.
- Mary Lee, of A Year of Reading, shares "Catalogue," by Rosalie Moore. (Incidentally, it's about cats, not books, and Mary Lee has posted some cute kitty photos to go with it.)
- Jama Rattigan shares a poem about one of my favorite musical groups of yore, Simon & Garfunkel: "A Duet," by Kevin McFadden.
- Eisha, of 7 Impossible Things Before Breakfast, shares "Leda," from Lyrae Van Clief-Stefanon's book Black Swan.
- Laura Salas discusses her favorite poetry how-to books (be sure to follow the link near the bottom to read the rest of her article). Each week, she also invites all poets to share their poems of 15 words or less.
- Kelly Fineman, of Writing and Ruminating, shares and discusses "Porphyria's Lover," by Robert Browning.
- Michele, of Scholar's Blog, shares "Listen..." by Ogden Nash.
- Christy, of Positively Everything, shares "Sleep in the Mojave Desert," by Sylvia Plath, in celebration of her own recent journey through the Mojave.
- Ruth, of There Is No Such Thing as a God-Forsaken Town, shares "Adelstrop," by Edward Thomas.
- Marcie, of World of Words, shares an original (and mouth-watering) haiku about strawberries.
- Karen Edmisten highlights two of her favorite Poetry Friday bloggers.
- Tiel Aisha Ansari, of Knocking from Inside, shares an original poem, "First Light," inspired by a painting.
- Becky, of Becky's Book Reviews, shares "Shower," from Linda Sue Park's collection Tap Dancing on the Roof.
- Little Willow shares the lyrics to "Climbing Uphill," by Jason Robert Brown, from the musical The Last Five Years.
- Susan, of Chicken Spaghetti, shares "Alone," by Edgar Allen Poe.
- MotherReader shares her poetic interpretation of Barack Obama's "Yes We Can" speech.
- Monica Edinger, of Educating Alice, shares three poems by J. Patrick Lewis. (Would that I received personal poems in my email!)
- Jennie, of Biblio File, shares "Lessons of War: Judging Distances," by Henry Reed.
- Gina Ruiz shares "Sunset, Eight in the Evening," by Cuitlamiztli Carter.
- Anastasia Suen shares poetry lesson plans to go with Where in the Wild?: Camouflaged Creatures Concealed... and Revealed.
- Suzanne, of Adventures in Daily Living, shares "Little Summer Poem Touching the Subject of Faith," by Mary Oliver, and recommends the poetry collection For a Child: Great Poems Old and New, edited by Wilma McFarland.
- Carol, of Carol's Corner, shares "The First Time," a beach-minded poem by Ralph Fletcher.
- Tricia, of The Miss Rumphius Effect, shares "Why Latin Should Still Be Taught in High School," by Christopher Bursk.
- HipWriterMama shares "Dear Doctor, I Have Read Your Play," by Lord Byron.
- Cuileann, of The Holly and the Ivy, shares "The Truth the Dead Know," by Anne Sexton.
- Charlotte, of Charlotte's Library, reviews Crocs, written by David T. Greenberg and illustrated by Lynn Munsinger.
- And Jim Danielson brings the day to a lovely close with his original poem "Blue Lake—July 5."
Thanks, everyone, for swinging by!


I am posting mine a bit early so I guess I'm first this week. I've got an original here. Thanks for hosting!
I'm at my school residency this week, in with a poem that came out of a workshop exercise. Over here this week.
I'm in with a poem about strength.
http://twowritingteachers.wordpress.com/2008/07/11/poetry-friday-a-poem-...
Best,
Stacey
My daughter wrote a poem about her trip to the beach. Not Keats, but not bad.
http://www.semicolonblog.com/?p=2591
I'm in with a review of Nadine McInnis's "Hand to Hand":
http://bookmineset.blogspot.com/2008/07/readers-diary-376-nadine-mcinnis...
Thanks for hosting, and for sharing the Keats poem. Classic, isn't it?
That's a pretty amazing poem for a 15-minute attempt! Thanks for sharing it.
My post is a Suzanne Vega song, here: http://writer2b.wordpress.com/2008/07/11/poetry-friday-small-blue-thing/
Thanks for hosting!
Definitely amazing for a 15-minute attempt. In some ways, it must have been great to be Keats. In other ways... not so great.
Thanks for doing the roundup this week!
At Wild Rose Reader, I have a poem by New Mexican poet Cynthia Gray entitled "Taos." I've also posted more photos from my trip to New Mexico--as well as some other pictures.
http://wildrosereader.blogspot.com/2008/07/new-mexico-independence-day-a...
At Blue Rose Girls, I have a poem by Mark Doty entitled "A Green Crab's Shell" and next week's schedule of poetry readings at Boston University. The readings are part of the Summer Poetry Institute for Teachers. Doty will be one of the participating poets.
http://bluerosegirls.blogspot.com/2008/07/poetry-friday-mark-dotyand-mor...
This week, I've got a poem in honor of our new cat:
http://readingyear.blogspot.com/2008/07/poetry-friday-catalogue.html
Happy Friday, everyone! Thanks for hosting, Lisa!
Love that Keats poem (new to me).
Today I'm in with a fun poem about Simon and Garfunkel by Kevin McFadden:
http://jamarattigan.livejournal.com/147148.html.
Thanks for hosting, Lisa!
Hey, Lisa. I like your poetry choice today, even if it does imply that I'm not supposed to be annoyed when crickets get inside the house and start chirping.
7-Imp is in today with "Leda" by Lyrae Van Clief-Stefanon. Thanks for rounding up!
http://blaine.org/sevenimpossiblethings/?p=1345
I'm not sure which I'd rather have in my house, crickets or the so-called "water bugs" (i.e., gigantic cockroaches) we get under our dishwasher. At least the roaches are quiet?
Thanks for hosting, Lisa. Nice to meet you and your blog! 15-minute sonnet contest? Yipes. Lovely poem, though. I agree with you about that ceasing never line. Gorgeous.
I'm in with a roundup of some of my favorite How To Write Poetry books at http://laurasalas.livejournal.com/81650.html.
And I'm also in with 15 Words or Less poems, a weekly participatory event, at http://laurasalas.livejournal.com/81231.html. Anybody's welcome to come read the poems and/or add one of your own in the comments.
I've never written a sonnet in less than an hour, and I guarantee I'll never write a sonnet anyone will be reading 200 years from now. Go Keats!
I'm in with Browning and "Porphyria's Lover". Here's the link: http://kellyrfineman.livejournal.com/317895.html
In my haste to leave on vacation yesterday, I kinda sorta mucked up my weeks (I'm hosting next week.) Michele at Scholar's Blog is in with some Ogden Nash: http://scholar-blog.blogspot.com/2008/07/poetry-friday-18.html
And Christy Lenzi is in with Sylvia Plath's "Sleep in the Mojave Desert": http://christylenzi.blogspot.com/2008/07/poetry-friday-sleep-in-mojave-d...
Sorry for my foul-up, and thanks for rounding us all up!!
No worries, Kelly! Thanks for passing on Michele's and Christy's links.
I'm in with a poem called Adelstrop.
http://thereisnosuchthingasagodforsakentown.blogspot.com/2008/07/poetry-...
I'm in with a original haiku and photo about the strawberries in my garden.
Thanks for hosting! My link is
here. Today, I'm focusing on two other bloggers and *their* Poetry Friday posts. :-)
An original poem inspired by a painting: http://knockingfrominside.blogspot.com/2008/07/first-light.html
Thanks for hosting! I'm in with Shower by Linda Sue Park
I've quoted a song from a musical - Climbing Uphill from The Last Five Years by Jason Robert Brown.
http://slayground.livejournal.com/396828.html
Thanks for rounding up! I'm in with Edgar Allan Poe's "Alone."
http://tinyurl.com/675dxj
I've got an "interpretation" of poetry with "Yes We Can" here:
http://www.motherreader.com/2008/07/poetry-friday-yes-we-can.html
Hi Lisa,
I haven't contributed in ages so am glad to have something today: http://medinger.wordpress.com/2008/07/11/three-poems-from-j-patrick-lewi...
I'm in with a new-to-me poem by Henry Reed
http://tushuguan.blogspot.com/2008/07/poetry-friday_11.html
I'm in finally after a long hiatus! In with Cuitlamiztli Carter's poem. http://amoxcalli.ginaruiz.com/?p=402
I'm in with Where in the Wild by David Schwartz and Yael Schy (authors) and Dwight Kuhn (photographer)http://6traits.wordpress.com/2008/07/11/where-in-the-wild-2/
Thanks!
:-) Anastasia
I'm sharing a beautiful Mary Oliver poem.
and I am sharing a poetry book recommendation for children.
My poem is from Ralph Fletcher's waterific book, HAVE YOU BEEN TO THE BEACH LATELY? Ralph beautifully captures experiences of a day at the beach- getting buried in the sand, finding a hermit crab, playing in the waves, a summer storm, a beach barbecue. Perfect for reading at the beach, or for those of us land-locked beach wannabes in hot, dry Colorado!
It sounds like a fun read! I'm familiar with Fletcher's writing guides for kids, but I've never actually read his own poetry before. I'll have to check it out!
Hi Lisa,
I'm in with a poem entitled Why Latin Should Still Be Taught in High School.
Thanks for rounding us up!
Thanks for hosting! I'm in with Lord Byron and a critique of sorts.
http://hipwritermama.blogspot.com/2008/07/poetry-fridaydear-doctor-i-hav...
I really like that picture of voice running from hedge to hedge. Sort of makes me think of the Phantom's voice circling around the theater in The Phantom of the Opera. :) I'm also very grateful that I only live in the Chicago area during the school year! August is miserable enough for me.
I've got an Anne Sexton poem today, "The Truth the Dead Know": http://thehollyandtheivy.blogspot.com/2008/07/truth-dead-know_11.html
Chicago was totally beautiful this June, but we're definitely getting toward miserable time. On the bright side, I live three blocks from a 22,000 square mile air conditioner! Come home from work, jump in the lake...
However, I lived in the Bay Area for a couple years, and I do miss the moderate maritime climate--in August and February particularly.
I'm in with a look at a new picture book poem: Crocs! by David T. Greenberg, illustrated by Lynn Munsinger.
http://charlotteslibrary.blogspot.com/2008/07/crocs-for-poetry-friday.ht...
Thanks for hosting!
I'm in very late with an original poem titled BLUE LAKE - JULY 5,2008.
http://jdwrites4kids.blogspot.com/2008/07/poetry-friday-blue-lake-july-5...
Jim Danielson
And I almost forgot to say thanks for hosting!
Also, it took far more than 15 minutes to write mine.
Jim Danielson
Hey, you weren't late! Past my bedtime, maybe, but not late. Thanks for stopping by!