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"Write fourteen lines on Growing Up, a sonnet," the teacher told us. "Don't forget, the rhymes must make a pattern; I've told you several times. The subject's easy. You've all got ideas on it." Who does he think I am? Some second Milton? Another Shakespeare? An Eliot? A Tennyson? Compared to theirs, my mind's as dead as venison, slightly less fresh than over-ripened Stilton. "A poem's the equivalent in words of something I once felt," the poet said. Clues to another's feelings, like the sherds of ancient pots, or jigsaws in the head. A few curt words my feelings clearly tell, one simple sentence: Growing Up is hell.
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Aug 20, 2018
Aug 20, 2018 at 3:30 PM UTC
Growing up (sonnet)
"Write fourteen lines on Growing Up, a sonnet," the teacher told us. "Don't forget, the rhymes must make a pattern; I've told you several times. The subject's easy. You've all got ideas on it." Who does he think I am? Some second Milton? Another Shakespeare? An Eliot? A Tennyson? Compared to theirs, my mind's as dead as venison, slightly less fresh than over-ripened Stilton. "A poem's the equivalent in words of something I once felt," the poet said. Clues to another's feelings, like the sherds of ancient pots, or jigsaws in the head. A few curt words my feelings clearly tell, one simple sentence: Growing Up is hell.
The subject of this poem was set as homework for my 15-year-old son, Jonathan, but I thought I might do one for myself. It was written in 1984. The poet I mention in verse 4 was T.S. Eliot
paul-hansford
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Aug 20, 2018
Aug 20, 2018 at 3:30 PM UTC
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