Showing posts with label Poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poetry. Show all posts

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Pupils compete in learning poetry

8 January 2013 Last updated at 04:58 ET By Sean Coughlan BBC News education correspondent Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey Poets' Corner, Westminster Abbey: Pupils are being encouraged to memorise verse An online anthology representing eight centuries of poetry in English has been published - to be used as part of a National Poetry Competition for secondary school pupils.

The competition invites teenagers in England to memorise and recite poems from the anthology.

It wants to rekindle the idea of pupils learning poetry by heart.

Education Secretary Michael Gove praised the "richness and diversity" of the competition's poetry collection.

The anthology, selected by former poet laureate Sir Andrew Motion and poet Jean Sprackland, runs from the medieval Gawain poet through to Jacob Sam-La Rose, born in 1976 and described on the website as a "cultural architect".

Making the cut

Such anthologies are always examined for who is included and who is left behind.

WB Yeats at the BBC in 1937 WB Yeats, among the poets included in the anthology, performing his work at the BBC in 1937

And this official competition selection takes in literary giants such as Chaucer, Shakespeare, Blake, Wordsworth, Shelley and Hardy.

Among the post-1914 poets, it includes the likes of Yeats, Eliot, Lowell, Auden, Betjeman, Thomas and Heaney.

There are notable numbers of women in the collection. Philip Sidney doesn't make it, but his sister Mary Sidney Herbert is included. There is no AE Housman but there is Anna Wickham.

Among the 18th Century writers, there is no Oliver Goldsmith but Joanna Baillie gets a place.

The four younger poets included - under the age of 40 - are Vahni Capildeo, Choman Hardi, Jacob Polley and Jacob Sam-La Rose.

The competition for 14 to 18-year-olds, with funding from the Department for Education, wants to bring back the custom of pupils memorising and reciting poems.

It also wants to use such public reading of poetry as a way of building teenagers' self-confidence.

Pupils will be judged on how accurately they remember poems and how well they perform them to an audience.

Dylan Thomas, 1948 Dylan Thomas broadcasting his poems in 1948

There will be regional rounds before a national final in April.

The anthology, published at the beginning of the new school term, was chosen for work that could be read aloud, said Sir Andrew.

"We preferred poems that make a powerful impact when they are heard aloud - not because they are theatrical, but because they dramatise experiences that surprise us into a new apprehension of ourselves and our capacity for imagining, thinking and marvelling."

Mr Gove said the project would ensure that more children would be captivated by great poetry and it would help "pass our cultural legacy on to the next generation".


View the original article here

Pupils compete in learning poetry

8 January 2013 Last updated at 09:58 GMT By Sean Coughlan BBC News education correspondent Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey Poets' Corner, Westminster Abbey: Pupils are being encouraged to memorise verse An online anthology representing eight centuries of poetry in English has been published - to be used as part of a National Poetry Competition for secondary school pupils.

The competition invites teenagers in England to memorise and recite poems from the anthology.

It wants to rekindle the idea of pupils learning poetry by heart.

Education Secretary Michael Gove praised the "richness and diversity" of the competition's poetry collection.

The anthology, selected by former poet laureate Sir Andrew Motion and poet Jean Sprackland, runs from the medieval Gawain poet through to Jacob Sam-La Rose, born in 1976 and described on the website as a "cultural architect".

Making the cut

Such anthologies are always examined for who is included and who is left behind.

WB Yeats at the BBC in 1937 WB Yeats, among the poets included in the anthology, performing his work at the BBC in 1937

And this official competition selection takes in literary giants such as Chaucer, Shakespeare, Blake, Wordsworth, Shelley and Hardy.

Among the post-1914 poets, it includes the likes of Yeats, Eliot, Lowell, Auden, Betjeman, Thomas and Heaney.

There are notable numbers of women in the collection. Philip Sidney doesn't make it, but his sister Mary Sidney Herbert is included. There is no AE Housman but there is Anna Wickham.

Among the 18th Century writers, there is no Oliver Goldsmith but Joanna Baillie gets a place.

The four younger poets included - under the age of 40 - are Vahni Capildeo, Choman Hardi, Jacob Polley and Jacob Sam-La Rose.

The competition for 14 to 18-year-olds, with funding from the Department for Education, wants to bring back the custom of pupils memorising and reciting poems.

It also wants to use such public reading of poetry as a way of building teenagers' self-confidence.

Pupils will be judged on how accurately they remember poems and how well they perform them to an audience.

Dylan Thomas, 1948 Dylan Thomas broadcasting his poems in 1948

There will be regional rounds before a national final in April.

The anthology, published at the beginning of the new school term, was chosen for work that could be read aloud, said Sir Andrew.

"We preferred poems that make a powerful impact when they are heard aloud - not because they are theatrical, but because they dramatise experiences that surprise us into a new apprehension of ourselves and our capacity for imagining, thinking and marvelling."

Mr Gove said the project would ensure that more children would be captivated by great poetry and it would help "pass our cultural legacy on to the next generation".


View the original article here

Sunday, 6 January 2013

Going To Explode (Poetry)

lene21 By lene21, 18th Jul 2012 | Follow this author | | Short URL http://nut.bz/2g5q82ic/
Posted in Wikinut>Writing>Poetry

Sometimes it feels like there isn't enough hours in the day to get everything done, and people have such high expectations of you, but you never feel good enough. This poem reflects how I was feeling at the time.

Going To Explode

Sometimes I feel like I have all these voices nagging in my ear
I can't ever get any peace in my head
Everything is getting to much for me to handle
I just want to end it all
I just want to feel free
There's always to much to do
And not enough time to do it all
I feel like there's to much pressure on me
To be perfect
For everything to be immaculate
Is it ever going to happen
It's like I'm going around in circles
Over and over
Feeling like nothing is ever good enough
As the pressure keeps building
I'm going to have to release it soon
Otherwise I'm going to explode.


View the original article here

Everything Reminds Me Of You (Poetry)

lene21 By lene21, 19th Jul 2012 | Follow this author | | Short URL http://nut.bz/vrldobjm/
Posted in Wikinut>Writing>Poetry

You love someone so much it hurts. You try everything in your power to forget them but it isn't that easy. Everything still reminds you of them.

I Miss You

As I lay upon my bed, I gaze out the window at the stars in the night sky
They remind me of you and I start to cry
I remember all the times we took a midnight stroll
Walking hand in hand without a care in the world
When I was with you, time seemed to stand still
I know it's been a long, long time
But it feels like only yesterday that you promised me the world, then cruelly snatched it away
It broke my heart the first time I saw you with someone else
She was the new girl that you called 'the one'
I wanted to try and make you jealous, and make you want me as much as I wanted you
So I went and bagged myself a new man
Paraded him around in front of you and your friends
But when I was with him, I could only think of you
And when I was kissing him
I was wishing I was kissing you
I didn't want anyone else to be 'my one'
No-one was capable of mending my heart but you
Everyday I tore myself apart, thinking about what I could have done wrong
The pain of losing you was taking over my life
I would've died to have you back
And believe me when I say
I tried everything in my power to erase the memories of you and I
But nothing seemed to work
Because everything in my life still reminds me of you...


View the original article here

God Will Help Me Through (Poetry)

lene21 By lene21, 18th Jul 2012 | Follow this author | | Short URL http://nut.bz/370v7ib6/
Posted in Wikinut>Writing>Poetry

A poem I wrote after I had my heart broken. Its about how I was feeling at the time and that I believed god would help heal my heartbreak.

Gods Love

You knew from the start all the stuff that I held back
You knew everything he had put me through
But you still did it
You chose to act the way you did
Please just tell me
Why
Because it's killing me
Yes on the outside I'm still smiling
But on the inside I'm slowly dying
I poured out all my problems
You knew I had to cut
You knew I had to cry
Sometimes because of you
And now I just want to curl up and die
You must be so proud
Its like you get a kick out of hurting me
Over and over
But you know what babe
I know I'll get over you
I know over time my heart will heal
I'll no longer cry for you
Because there is a God up there
And I believe that he'll help me make it through.


View the original article here

Hurt The One You Love (Poetry)

lene21 By lene21, 16th Jul 2012 | Follow this author | | Short URL http://nut.bz/13v_ajb7/
Posted in Wikinut>Writing>Poetry

A poem I wrote about hurting the one you love. You get someone who'll stand by you no matter what but you end up taking all your anger and resentment out on them.

Sadness

I lash out at the one I love the most
I make him feel all the hurt and pain I suffered
I can't help it
I try to stop
I just seem to explode
The tears and the pleads should be enough
Enough to make it stop
But it doesn't
I sit and cry
What have I done
Why do I do this to myself
And most importantly
Everyone else
I'm going to be left with no-one
Even the one I love the most will leave
I just want to make this hurt go away
I take it out on others
In the hope it will
It doesn't
It only makes things worse
I'm left with the guilt and even more tears
How do I stop
How do I stop hurting him
The scars run deep
I know that myself
I don't want my loved one to be scarred
Will he hate me
Can he stand looking me in the eyes
I can't
When I look in my eyes
I see flashes of anger
All the volatile emotions bubble to the surface
I wanted someone to love
I got someone to love
And now I'm going to lose my one and only love.


View the original article here