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a post on a retired blog, Bookland

Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?

No comments | Posted Jan 28, 2006 in Bookland, Poetry

After watch­ing Willoughby recite a Shake­spearean sonnet by heart in Sense and Sen­si­bil­ity last night, I’ve been taken with the idea of learn­ing poetry by heart. So I started with the scrip­tures this morn­ing, mem­o­riz­ing part of the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 6:25-34). Good stuff. I’ll con­tinue doing that in the morn­ings, and at night I’ll tackle var­i­ous poems (the shorter ones at first, but I do want to build up to where I can retain some of the longer poems).

Why? As a writer, I believe that one can’t write well unless one reads well. When one comes across a strik­ing pas­sage, what better way to make it one’s own than to mem­o­rize it? I’d rather be known for quot­ing Wordsworth and Longfel­low than for quot­ing Adam San­dler and Friends. (And it’s tempt­ing to launch into a full tirade against the woes of modern pop cul­ture, but alas, now is not the time. Soon, though, soon.) When the words of the poets are part of me, I feel fuller, richer, more alive than before. It’s great. :)

[tags]Shakespeare, poetry, memorization[/tags]

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