Read Love Poetry Out Loud Online
Authors: Robert Alden Rubin
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LOVE AND ROCKETS
Sometimes fireworks go off, trumpets blare, and choirs sing. Who cares if people look at you oddly? You're in love! Here Robert Penn Warren and Nikki Giovanni exult in the sheer, intoxicating, silly wonder of it all. Can you blame them?
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Spume =
Foam
.
Winds =
A verb here (with a long i), evoking the image of a watch's mechanical mainspring, with wind wound by the heart
.
Robert Penn Warren
1. Mediterranean Beach, Day after Storm
How instant joy, how clang
And whang the sun, how
Whoop the sea, and oh,
Sun, sing, as whiter than
Rage of snow, let sea the spume
Fling.
Let sea the spume, white, fling,
White on blue wild
With wind, let sun
Sing, while the world
Scuds, clouds boom and belly,
Creak like sails, whiter than,
Brighter than,
Spume in sun-song, oho!
The wind is bright.
Wind the heart winds
In constant coil, turning
In the â forever â light.
Give me your hand.
2. Deciduous Spring
Now, now, the world
All gabbles joy like geese, for
An idiot glory the sky
Bangs. Look!
All leaves are new, are
Now, are
Bangles dangling and
Spangling, in a sudden air
Wangling, then
Hanging quiet, bright.
The world comes back, and again
Is gabbling, and yes,
Remarkably worse, for
The world is a whirl of
Green mirrors gone wild with
Deceit, and the world
Whirls green on a string, then
The leaves go quiet, wink
From their own shade, secretly.
Keep still, just a moment, leaves.
There is something I am trying to remember.
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Sensations
Warren's poem celebrates the sensesâsound, sight, taste, touch, smellâperceptions that all point to something deeper. Read these vignettes like a joyful shout, letting the exuberant sound of the words explode into life. Notice how alliteration (the repetition of sounds at the beginning of words) creates a percussive rhythm
.
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Pop Art
Where Warren turns to exuberant nature for his imagery. Nikki Giovanni draws upon popular culture and contemporary turns of phrase. Here she throws up her hands and “resigns” from the everyday business of acting like a responsible, mature person, giving herself up entirely to the silliness and wonder of being in love
.
Nikki Giovanni
I
love you
because the Earth turns round the sun
because the North wind blows north
sometimes
because the Pope is Catholic
and most Rabbis Jewish
because winters flow into springs
and the air clears after a storm
because only my love for you
despite the charms of gravity
keeps me from falling off this Earth
into another dimension
I love you
because it is the natural order of things
I love you
like the habit I picked up in college
of sleeping through lectures
or saying I'm sorry
when I get stopped for speeding
because I drink a glass of water
in the morning
and chain-smoke cigarettes
all through the day
because I take my coffee Black
and my milk with chocolate
because you keep my feet warm
though my life a mess
I love you
because I don't want it
any other way
I am helpless
in my love for you
It makes me so happy
to hear you call my name
I am amazed you can resist
locking me in an echo chamber
where your voice reverberates
through the four walls
sending me into spasmatic ecstasy
I love you
because its been so good
for so long
that if I didn't love you
I'd have to be born again
and that is not a theological statement I am pitiful in my love for you
The Dells tell me Love
is so simple
the thought though of you
sends indescribably delicious multitudinous
thrills throughout and through-in my body
I love you
because no two snowflakes are alike
and it is possible
if you stand tippy-toe
to walk between the raindrops
I love you
because I am afraid of the dark
and can't sleep in the light
because I rub my eyes
when I wake up in the morning
and find you there
because you with all your magic powers were
determined that
I should love you
because there was nothing for you but that
I would love you
I love you
because you made me
want to love you
more than I love my privacy
my freedom my commitments and responsibilities
I love you 'cause I changed my life
to love you
because you saw me one friday
afternoon and decided that I would
love you
I love you I love you I love you
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Helpless =
Try reading this poem as if you're someone swept away by the silliness and sensation of pure infatuation. Like Billy Collins (
page 1
), Giovanni has written a litany of things that might not make sense to someone who's not in love
.
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“Love Is So Simple” =
Title of a 1968 song by the Dells, a soul group best known for the 1956 hit “Oh. What a Night.”
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LIGHT IN THE DARKNESS
Love is optimistic, even when there's little reason for optimism. These two lyrics from Elizabethan England make the best of bad situations
.
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Jest Fooling
Feste, the court jester to Countess Olivia in Shakespeare's play, sings this even though the palace is officially in mourning and everyone is supposed to be walking around with long faces. It's meant to be sung to music, unlike most of the love poems in this book; the original tune was probably a traditional melody
.
'Tis not hereafter =
A frequent theme of love poetry is to enjoy love while you can, as expressed in the classical motto “carpe diem” (seize the day)
.
William Shakespeare
O
mistress mine, where are you roaming?
O, stay and hear, your true-love's coming,
That can sing both high and low.
Trip no further, pretty sweeting;
Journeys end in lovers meeting,
Every wise man's son doth know.
What is love? 'Tis not hereafter;
Present mirth hath present laughter;
What's to come is still unsure.
In delay there lies no plenty,
Then come kiss me sweet and twenty,
Youth's a stuff will not endure.
Michael Drayton
N
othing but no and I, and I and no,
How falls it out so strangely you reply?
I tell ye, fair, I'll not be answered so,
With this affirming no, denying I.
I say, I love, you sleightly answer, I:
I say, you love, you pule me out a no:
I say, I die, you echo me with I:
Save me, I cry, you sigh me out a no;
Must woe and I have nought but no and I?
No I am, if I no more can have;
Answer no more, with silence make reply,
And let me take myself what I do crave,
Let no and I, with I and you be so:
Then answer no and I, and I and no.
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There's “Yes! Yes!” in Your Ayes
Drayton's sonnet plays with a Petrarchan tradition in which the beloved is a cruel mistress who torments the lover by refusing him. Here, though, a pun provides the poet with cause for optimism
.
Sleightly =
Misleadingly
.
Pule =
Whimper
.
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“But she was much perplexed by his words and pondered what sort of greeting this might be.”
âLuke 1:29
GOOD MORNING AND GOOD NIGHT
Love in the abstract is well and good, but, as songwriters Nickolas Ashford and Valerie Simpson remind us, “Ain't nothing like the real thing, baby.” Perhaps that's why poets spend their days thinking about love and pondering its mysteriesâmysteries that tend to reveal themselves only under cover of darkness or in the clear light of dawn
.
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Troth =
Good faith
.
Country pleasures =
Wealthy urban families sometimes sent infants off to “wet nurses” in rural areas
.
Snorted =
Snored
.
Seven sleepers =
Legendary early Christian martyrs who fled to a cave where, like Rip van Winkle, they fell asleep and awakened after years had passed, thinking it only a night's sleep
.
Each hath one =
The lovers' worlds are united by possessing each other
.
John Donne
I
wonder by my troth, what thou, and I
Did, till we loved? were we not weaned till then?
But sucked on country pleasures, childishly?
Or snorted we in the seven sleepers' den?
'Twas so; but this, all pleasures fancies be.
If ever any beauty I did see,
Which I desired, and got, 'twas but a dream of thee.
And now good morrow to our waking souls,
Which watch not one another out of fear;
For love, all love of other sights controls,
And makes one little room, an every where.
Let sea-discoverers to new worlds have gone,
Let maps to others, worlds on worlds have shown,
Let us possess one world, each hath one, and is one.
My face in thine eye, thine in mine appears,
And true plain hearts do in the faces rest,
Where can we find two better hemispheres
Without sharp north, without declining west?
What ever dies, was not mixed equally;
If our two loves be one, or, thou and I
Love so alike, that none do slacken, none can die.
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Awakenings
John Donne (1572â1613) lived about the same time as Shakespeare (1564â1616). His poems shake up the abstract conventions of Elizabethan love poetry by using striking images from real life (such as a flea or a compass or, as here, waking up in bed with one's lover) to anchor poems about universal themes in particular details
.
Good morrow =
Good morning (a salutation)
.
Declining west =
During the Dark Ages, the Byzantine, or eastern Roman Empire, was thought to be the center of a world that became more barbaric the farther west you went
.
Mixed equally =
A balance of the “bodily humors” was considered essential to life in classical medicine
.
None can die =
Elizabethans often punned to “die” to mean both death and sexual climax. Here, the arousal will go on forever
.
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A Dark and Stormy Night
The reclusive Emily Dickinson imagines this night us a storm at sea outside her room, and what it would be like to share her room with a lover. Within the safe Edenic harbor of passionate love, wind and thunder become oddly comforting
.
Luxury =
Lust and excess
.
Emily Dickinson
W
ild NightsâWild Nights!
Were I with thee
Wild Nights should be
Our luxury!
Futile â the Winds â
To a Heart in portâ
Done with the Compassâ
Done with the Chart!
Rowing in Edenâ
Ah, the Sea!
Might I but moorâTonightâ