Showing posts with label good poems for hard times. Show all posts
Showing posts with label good poems for hard times. Show all posts

Saturday, March 23, 2013

To David, About His Education

To David, About His Education
by Howard Nemerov

This world is full of mostly invisible things,
And there is no way but putting the mind's eye,
Or its nose, in a book, to find them out,
Things like the square root of Everest
Or how many times Byron goes to Texas,
Or whether the law of the excluded middle
Applies west of the Rockies. For these
And the like reasons, you have to go to school
And study books and listen to what you are told,
And sometimes try to remember. Though I don't know
What you will do with the mean annual rainfall
On Plato's Republic, or the calorie content
Of the Diet of Worms, such things are said to be
Good for you, and you will have to learn them
In order to become one of the grown-ups
Who sees invisible things neither steadily nor whole,
But keeps gravely the grand confusion of the world
Under his hat, which is where it belongs,
And teaches small children to do this in their turn.


I have my feelings about public education, and the poem sums it up pretty well. For the less poetic, there's always a TEDtalk.

For those less inclined to poetry or TEDtalks, those who just like reading a story about something to understand it, there's "The Little Prince," by Antoine de Saint-ExupĂ©ry.


Friday, February 22, 2013

My Cup


My Cup
by Robert Friend

They tell me I am going to die.
Why don't I seem to care?
My cup is full. Let it spill.


It's interesting to read this after a close friend has passed away. Especially a friend who let her cup spill so generously.

We spend our whole lives trying to fill ourselves with something, and there are so many things that just don't matter, that don't put anything in our cup, per se. If we spend our time wisely, focus on the small things, help others, share the multitude of blessings that God sees fit to give to us, we will spend our lives filled to the brim, ready to overflow. Whether we die young or live to be a hundred and two, I believe that we should live with a "Let it spill" kind of attitude. My cup is full. To quote the psalmist, it "runneth over", it's overflowing. If I can let that goodness spill out over others, I will only have room for more.