Wordsworth’s DaffodilsInspired by “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud” by William Wordsworth
Where one may see a field of flowersWordsworth saw a golden host,Not just a bed of daffodils,But a dancing court of yellow ghosts.Though one may see a simple flower,He saw starlight glowing bright,Not just a scene of earthy bloomsBut living heavens’ shining light.If you are to come uponSuch a glorious scene as this,Regard it all as Wordsworth did,Its wealthy wonders fondly missed
Literary ImmortalityInspired by “Sonnet 18” by William Shakespeare
With the dawning of the sun, you were born,But such as silver falls, you too will fade.Falling from this world, perfect golden morn,Into a hollow grave, a darker shade.When time, a thief, will execute her skill,You’ll drift into a darkness never known.A hunter standing over his fresh kill,Death holds a scythe, reaping what life has sown.And yet as poets, we can wield a swordTo slay the grim beast killing what we love.We write a ballad about our adored.We weave a sonnet for the dead above.I mark history and keep you alive.So long as this shall live, you too survive.
An Ode to FrostInspired by “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” by Robert Frost
The gentle flakes were falling down,There was no noise so far from town,The woods were darkened, like the sea,And I felt sure that he would seeThe snow, and ice, and wind the same.So standing there, I said his name,A gentle word to find the lost;Amid the wood, I whispered “Frost”.
Dickinson and Her BirdInspired by “Hope is a Thing With Feathers” by Emily Dickinson
She heard a pet canarySitting in a silver cage,Then glanced out her bedroom windowTo view a cursed world rich with rage.She heard the simple creature's songAnd smiled despite the sadness,Then wrote the words that touched us all,Turning despair to gladness.And now, in life, when nights are hard,When lost, when there’s no way to cope,We may turn our ears to the wind,Listen to birdsong, and hear hope.
Yeat’s Song of SorrowInspired by “The Song of Wandering Aengus” by William Butler Yeats
There is a man who chases blossoms,Plucking apples from the trees,Sitting streamside, lost in sadness,Sick for a love that used to be.He scans the depths for silver trout,Yearning for shimmering silver there,To hold her by the firesideAnd kiss the blossoms in her hair.
Challenging DespairInspired by “Binsey Poplars” by Gerard Manley Hopkins
Humanity had failed them on that day.Those tender trees, that once on warm wind swayed,Had fallen. They fell hard as bodies fall.Once standing strong on roots, now they just recallThe joyous life they lived, thriving and free,But man has made a carcass from the tree.Lying on moss, it is crushed underfoot,Soon to become flanker, flame, ash, and soot.Yet underneath the corpse, an acorn lies,Nurtured by the earth, watered by the skies.The smallest bud of hope is born at last.A small ember of hope to mend the past.Beneath the death that haunts us, it survives,Even in sorrow, there’s strength that stays alive.
Early Bird PoetInspired by “An Hymn to the Morning” by Phillis Wheatley
She could have lay in bed all morning,Ignored the birds on sweet wind soaring.She would have been well justifiedTo sleep till noon, but thrust asideHer quilts were, and the floorboards creakedUnder her sure and steady feet.She burst forth and opened the door!Let none neglect, let none ignoreThe ribbons God was sweetly weavingInto the light so softly streaming.The heavens painted every hueOf holy colors beaming new,The daylight beasts proclaim their tune,Singing of dawn, morning, and noon.The winds joined in the chorus, then,And o’r the forest, field, and fen,Quickly fading, was revealedA sunrise graced with Godly zeal.
Confronting the NightmareInspired by “Darkness” by Lord Byron
I like to think that even during Armageddon,At the end of times, when all we know has fallen,When darkness consumes each edge of the earth,When we have lost all hope of our rebirth,I will have faith that we shall not despair and quit.I have faith that we will find the joy that remains in it.Perhaps you’d think me naive and innocentThat I would hope for light in darkness imminent,But I believe in us, in all that we could be.At the end of time, I would have faith in humanity
EndureInspired by “The Quitter” by Robert Service
Some men meet death and breathe their last breathAlone on the Yukon’s expanse.When scrounging for gold they face the cruel cold,Surrendering their life to chance.In moments like these, your last words on the breeze,As Service found many a day,Death clutching your skin, you mustn't give in.Hold your head up, grasp life, and stay
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