Weekend Assignment #316: National Poetry Month
As April wraps up, let's not let it get away without celebrating National Poetry Month. For this assignment, please share with us something about poetry. Tell us about your favorite poet, or quote us a few lines of your favorite poem, or if poetry doesn't happen to be something you enjoy, tell us why!
April (and the weekend) wrapped up before I could get to the assignment, but I'll give it a shot anyway.
When I first saw the assignment, I was all set to start a diatribe about how much I really don't like poetry. I studied it enough in my younger days that I understand the concept, but as Heinlein would say, I don't grok it. I don't get it on some basic level of understanding. If you want to tell me about something important, give me a few solidly written paragraphs of prose and I'll understand it better.
But after thinking about it some more, I realized that I do like poetry. Just make it rhyme (even if just a little), put it to music and sing it, and I'll get it.
When I was a young tyke, my mother went back to school. One of her textbooks treated some of the pop and rock lyrics of the day -- Simon and Garfunkel, the Byrds, Bob Dylan songs -- as poetry. As I leafed through the book and picked out songs I knew, it gave me a deeper appreciation of them -- that they were important enough to be considered "poetry." Even now, I sometimes have the crazy notion that some of our greatest poets are not exactly poets after all -- they're songwriters.
Continuing on that idea, I'll tell you about a favorite poem, the Baby Boomer generation's "Beowulf "(or maybe it's their "Rime of the Ancient Mariner"). In the late '70s, the rock band Jethro Tull released the album Aqualung. Ian Anderson, the leader of the band, was dismayed that rock critics were calling it a concept album, and said, "If the critics want a concept album we'll give the mother of all concept albums and we'll make it so bombastic and so over the top."
The album cover was another parody, a spoof of an English community newspaper. The main story was about young Gerald being disqualified from a literary competition "following the hundreds of protests and threats received after the reading of his epic poem 'Thick as a Brick' on B.B.C. Television last Monday night."
The entire epic poem, "Thick as a Brick," actually written entirely by Ian Anderson, is after the jump if you're interested. You can hear the song by Googling "Thick as a Brick."