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#billycollins
Maybe it's me and my slothful ways but something and I mean something has riled them as they vault somersault and skitter in and out of my bedroom my cats I feel their frustration at my failure to launch into this hot hazy Saturday all my Friday weekend plans rapidly evaporating as if on the freshly tarred sidewalk outside my window whit howland © 2021
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Jul 10, 2021
Jul 10, 2021 at 12:36 PM UTC
Cats on a Summer Saturday Morning
There’s nothing like a frosty winter morning, when the sky has had enough of trying to look nice and welcoming for you today, but instead decided to take the day off and retreat under the soft grey fluff of a blanket, and you too, have done the same, in a show of comraderie, cracking the window open just enough to feel each other’s breath across the zipping air that won’t stop fussing or biting off the skin on your right thumb. There’s nothing like such a morning when a bottomless pit of steaming hot coffee isn’t enough, though your heart-rate is through the roof, but you pretend that’s good for you, as if it’s pumping blood and heating up your insides. A morning when the requirement to stay inside is no longer a discomfort but an opportunity – for some calm piano tunes, just like the wind converging then diverging, to serenade you in the background, while your rough cold hands, stretch out in their familiar spider web but this time in a slower motion stretch and take you to the keyboard once again, because there’s nothing like it on a frosty, freezing, gloomy winter Morning like this.
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Feb 9, 2021
Feb 9, 2021 at 1:23 PM UTC
Winter Morning: Ode to Billy Collins
The other day I was ricocheting slowly off the blue walls of this room, moving as if underwater from typewriter to piano, from bookshelf to an envelope lying on the floor, when I found myself in the L section of the dictionary where my eyes fell upon the word lanyard. No cookie nibbled by a French novelist could send one into the past more suddenly- a past where I sat at a workbench at a camp by a deep Adirondack lake learning how to braid long thin plastic strips into a lanyard, a gift for my mother. I had never seen anyone use a lanyard or wear one, if that’s what you did with them, but that did not keep me from crossing strand over strand again and again until I had made a boxy red and white lanyard for my mother. She gave me life and milk from her ******* and I gave her a lanyard. She nursed me in many a sick room, lifted spoons of medicine to my lips, laid cold face-clothes on my forehead, and then led me out into the air light and taught me to walk and swim, and I, in turn, presented her with a lanyard. Here are thousands of meals, she said, and here is clothing and a good education. And here is your lanyard, I replied, which I made with a little help from a counselor. Here is a breathing body and a beating heart, strong legs, bones and teeth, and two clear eyes to read the world, she whispered, and here, I said, is the lanyard I made at camp. And here, I wish to say to her now, is a smaller gift – not the worn truth that you can never repay your mother, but the rueful admission that when she took the two-toned lanyard from my hand, I was as sure as a boy could be that this useless, worthless thing I wove out of boredom would be enough to make us even.
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Nov 12, 2019
Nov 12, 2019 at 10:54 PM UTC
The Lanyard by Billy Collins
The other day I was ricocheting slowly off the blue walls of this room, moving as if underwater from typewriter to piano, from bookshelf to an envelope lying on the floor, when I found myself in the L section of the dictionary where my eyes fell upon the word lanyard. No cookie nibbled by a French novelist could send one into the past more suddenly- a past where I sat at a workbench at a camp by a deep Adirondack lake learning how to braid long thin plastic strips into a lanyard, a gift for my mother. I had never seen anyone use a lanyard or wear one, if that’s what you did with them, but that did not keep me from crossing strand over strand again and again until I had made a boxy red and white lanyard for my mother. She gave me life and milk from her ******* and I gave her a lanyard. She nursed me in many a sick room, lifted spoons of medicine to my lips, laid cold face-clothes on my forehead, and then led me out into the air light and taught me to walk and swim, and I, in turn, presented her with a lanyard. Here are thousands of meals, she said, and here is clothing and a good education. And here is your lanyard, I replied, which I made with a little help from a counselor. Here is a breathing body and a beating heart, strong legs, bones and teeth, and two clear eyes to read the world, she whispered, and here, I said, is the lanyard I made at camp. And here, I wish to say to her now, is a smaller gift – not the worn truth that you can never repay your mother, but the rueful admission that when she took the two-toned lanyard from my hand, I was as sure as a boy could be that this useless, worthless thing I wove out of boredom would be enough to make us even.
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it may have been a parody may have been in jest written to be awful certainly not his best but in and of itself it doesn't come across as parody or humor more as a gaping dross but I challenge anyone to follow rules precise to form the proper stanzas make them turn out concise an attempted joke by Billy has been turned upon its ear it can be done "correctly" and won't just disappear
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Jul 16, 2018
Jul 16, 2018 at 8:34 PM UTC
The Paradelle
Shakespeare, gazing into a waning sky, said that her eyes were nothing like the sun. Collins, picking fruit from trees, said that she is not the purple wind in the orchard. To follow this long trend of un-blazoned poetry, I want to share with the world that you are not the Charlie Parker jazz jumping from the mouth of a black Phillips radio, nor are you the paper that I am writing this first draft on, nor the morning coordinate geometry that puzzled me today (or maybe you are). Even more so, you are not the moon- light staining trees, the stack of 18th century British literature in the study, your grandmother’s painting in the dining room. Nonetheless, you are you: masterful, opinionated, understanding; a beloved whose beauty is better left unmentioned in some new age poetry.
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Oct 11, 2016
Oct 11, 2016 at 7:21 AM UTC
You Are Not the Charlie Parker Jazz Jumping from the Mouth of a Black Phillips Radio
Billy Collins said "high school is the place poetry goes to die." I would have to disagree. High school is monotonous and horrible and awful and wonderful. Some do not understand poetry and they may hate to read and write it and poetry may not be written. but does it have to be? We are living high school poetry. Poetry is exploding onto life's pages. When else do we have the emotions that we have now? every teenage love affair, every essay, every night of studying until we cannot stay awake, every audition, trying to find yourself over and over again, the practices, the tears, and the accomplishments. That is poetry. We're busy, and may not write it, but poetry is lived by us. Poetry is feeling, emotion, something that matters, jumping in the lake, a late night meeting of friends, staying home alone on Friday, wondering if we are needed. We're living our poems. To let everybody else know all one needs to do is pick up a pen.
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Oct 23, 2015
Oct 23, 2015 at 3:40 PM UTC
High School Poetry