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What Poems Made You Get Into Writing?

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~asianblade:iconasianblade: Apr 5, 2008, 7:14:44 AM
here one of the poems that made me want to write poems.



The Dog: Gerald Stern





What I was doing there with my white teeth exposed
like that on the side of the road I don't know,
and I don't know why I lay beside the sewer
so that lover of dead things could come back
with his pencil sharpened and his piece of white paper.
I was there for a good two hours whistling
dirges, shrieking a little, terrifying
hearts with my whimpering cries before I died
by pulling the one leg up and stiffening.
There is a look we have with the hair of the chin
curled in mid-air, there is a look with the belly
stopped in the midst of its greed. The lover of dead things
stoops to feel me, his hand is shaking. I know
his mouth is open and his glasses are slipping.
I think his pencil must be jerking and the terror
of smell - and sight - is overtaking him;
I know he has that terrified faraway look
that death brings - he is contemplating. I want him
to touch my forehead once and rub my muzzle
before he lifts me up and throws me into
that little valley. I hope he doesn't use
his shoe for fear of touching me; I know,
or used to know, the grasses down there; I think
I knew a hundred smells. I hope the dog's way
doesn't overtake him, one quick push,
barely that, and the mind freed, something else,
some other thing, to take its place. Great heart,
great human heart, keep loving me as you lift me,
give me your tears, great loving stranger, remember
the death of dogs, forgive the yapping, forgive
the shitting, let there be pity, give me your pity.
How could there be enough? I have given
my life for this, emotion has ruined me, oh lover,
I have exchanged my wildness - little tricks
with the mouth and feet, with the tail, my tongue is a parrot's,
I am a rampant horse, I am a lion,
I wait for the cookie, I snap my teeth -
as you have taught me, oh distant and brilliant and lonely.

--
some live and some die in the name of the samurai

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*monkgryphon:iconmonkgryphon: Apr 5, 2008, 7:57:07 AM
I don't think I read a poem that gave me the idea of "I want to write something like that, too."

I started writing after I learned how to write.

--
Of all the things I've lost, I miss my mind the most.

==Mark Twain
~JesterSeven:iconJesterSeven: Apr 6, 2008, 3:05:04 AM
Hard to say. My mother has saved bits of poetry that I wrote when I was young enough not to remember having done it. I do remember just liking the sound of poetry though, whether it was a nursery rhyme or something a little more complicated. If I had to pick I'd say "The Lady of Shallot" by Tennyson as my Dad used to read it to me, and "Land of Counterpane" by Stevenson as that was one of my favourites from an old book my Mother gave me, A Child's Garden of Verses.

--
The little devil on everyone's shoulder.
*GaioumonBatou:iconGaioumonBatou: Apr 6, 2008, 8:39:51 PM
I don't think there was ever anything specific that made me say "I want to write", I think I just started writing, and as I wrote more letters and words and less awkward squiggles and the other things I wrote when I was younger, I became more able to share my ideas.

--
< PinkyMcCoversong > lololololololol :lmoffle:
< LadyLincoln > Hey now, I got...corn...er the Indy 500. Okay, we suck :P
<raspil> i'm sure it's in the bible somewhere. "and on the second day, there was Jose Cuervo and lime."
=parentheses:iconparentheses: Apr 7, 2008, 12:54:24 AM
There was nothing specific that made me want to write, but there were certain poems that made me sit up and say, I want to make people feel like I feel after reading this.

One I can show (because I have the book of poems it appears in right here) is Words for the Poetry Teacher by Sam Hunt:

Why ever teach a line
the child has to learn
by heart, before his time?

Better to let it burn.

Better to sit dead still
on sofa, bench or stool,
arms folded, back in school.

Know not a syllable.

Just like that sky-high pine
that sighs; that knows of pain;
that knows no need of rhyme.

So the child. So the rain.
~evildex:iconevildex: Apr 8, 2008, 2:43:19 AM
There were attempts at poetry in my elementary days and most of it was forgettable drek. I remember that it was a novelization of that old Disney movie The Black Hole (starring Ernest Borgnine) that got my eleven-or-so-year-old self making odes to a gravity well. I remember I was taking a summer journalism and poetry workshop at one of the local universities... there were sample poems put up by this really hairy guy... and one of them was... I got into poetry because I was exposed to ... Joyce Kilmer's Trees?
*batousaijin:iconbatousaijin: Apr 8, 2008, 10:33:43 AM
"October Dawn" by Ted Hughes, and "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night" by Dylan Thomas.

--
Tots and Teens: The Children's Literature Contest --Amazing literature and amazing prizes!! :typerhappy:
~Ocalikecoca:iconOcalikecoca: Apr 8, 2008, 10:51:49 AM
No poem got me into writing, but there were some that inspired me in the sense that they pushed the creativity button
~critmass:iconcritmass: Apr 8, 2008, 11:26:36 AM
my own

--
there is a wisdom in the wave
~ThorStrongStone:iconThorStrongStone: Apr 8, 2008, 1:12:04 PM
"I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by
madness, starving hysterical naked,
dragging themselves through the negro streets at
dawn looking for an angry fix,
angelheaded hipsters burning for the ancient
heavenly connection to the starry dynamo in the
machinery of night..................."



Howl.

--
"An artist is always alone - if he is an artist. No, what the artist needs is loneliness." -Henry Miller