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I recently learned Neruda's "Puedo escribir los versos mas tristes..." (Tonight I can write the saddest verses) for a Spanish course. After my wife's reaction to my recitation of romantic poetry in Spanish I am quite voluntarily memorising "Me gusto cuando callas..." (I like for you to be still). The attraction of memorising poetry depends a lot on the poems assigned!
Sean Richens, Canada
We we're a tough little bunch of Black Country lads in Walsall in the 1950s. But when our secondary modern school teacher recited to us 'The Eagle', with the opening lines "He clasps the crags with crooked hands..." we were all ears.
In our dirty jumble sale clothes, in our green grey classrooms, it was free milk and poetry that unlocked our hearts from our council house misery. Thank you, Lord Tennyson.
Michael Edwards, Canada
As a schoolboy poetry was a mystery, but now I understand it to represent the elixir of life distilled through many greater minds than mine. Eternal thanks to my teachers.
Colin Edwards, USA
I remember agonising over Philip Larkin's 'Mr. Bleany' in high school. The meaning of the poem was laboriously cranked out by the teacher until it was understood by all. I remember every cruel minute of it as if it was yesterday.
Jim Hodges, USA
Making people do things always puts the best off.
R.H.Helm, UK
I rather enjoyed doing poetry at school (part of Higher English), and while I remember few of the words of the poems, I still remember their essence. My personal favourites were Sylvia Plath's "Wuthering Heights" and "Not waving but drowning" but Stevie Smith.
Fiona Steyert, UK
Some are for the Glories of this World
And some sigh for the Prophet's Paradise to come
Ah, take the Cash and let the Credit go
Nor heed the rumbling of a distant drum
Omar Khayyam, Persia
Sometimes beautiful poetry was the only thing that made growing up and all its associated pains bearable. Somehow, words penned down by someone who lived in another age, another time, struck such a chord that one would feel one was not alone, going nuts or whatever in feeling the way one did. Poetry in schools shall enrich the lives of our children.
Anjali, USA
Half of education is about learning things one only comes to value later on in life - sometimes even sooner (Owen rocks). Anyway, surely being beaten up for reading Kerouac on the bus is entirely in keeping with Beatnik self-image?
Fer Staberinde, England
As with all art, poetry is an expression of those things we feel but can never define. It just is. Unfortunately there are a lot of crimes committed in the name of poetry and majority of victims are schoolchildren.
Spike Milligan said that "there is one good poem inside everyone". It only takes one poem to hit the mark for the whole world of poetry to be opened up. However it's unlikely that this will happen at school.
Don MacAskill, Scotland
Oh, poetry was always boring at school.
The most aggravating thing about it was
the teacher trying to explain what it meant.
Explaining metaphors so we could vomit
it out verbatim during the exams. A slight
deviation from her interpretation and there
go the marks. A more open approach to
poetry would be nice - students being
allowed to interpret poetry in their individual
manner would make poetry classes into
something creative. And please... no
recitations in class!
Alekh Bhurke, USA (ex India)
Learning poetry is a wonderful thing to do. I recommend using Ted Hughes' technique, described in 'By Heart: 101 Poems to remember', which involves learning through sounds and pictures created in the mind. This aids the connection of words and forms and is a much more enjoyable way of learning than by rote.
Malcolm Birks, UK
While in 7th grade at a Catholic school,
our choir/English teacher, Sr. Leonard,
had us memorise "The Bells" by Poe.
Then she divided us into groups and we presented the poem as
a choir piece. Even though their was no
music we learned that poetry can be
musical because of the beauty and
strength of the poet's words.
Robin Wintjen, USA
Learning by heart never
has been, nor ever will be, an
effective way of learning. The
motivation must come from within.
Only by encouraging freedom of
expression will you unleash the
imagination of children.
Adrian Thompson, France
Because I could not stop for death, he kindly stopped for me;
The carriage held but just ourselves and immortality;
We slowly drove, he knew no haste and I had put away my labour and leisure too, for his civility.
Emilie Dickinson
Krishna Menon, Canada
While poetry reading can sometimes be frustrating, especially when one has to wrestle with the meanings of archaic diction, it can also be tremendously fruitful for the development of our emotional world.
Haider Kikabhoy, Hong Kong/England