Sunday, June 14, 2015

Preface

My poetry anthology is about childhood and the memories and lessons that come along with it. The order in which these poems are presented are in order from which you’ll see goes from childhood relationships, to childhood memories, and then the struggles of adulthood.
          I chose the theme childhood because I believe it’s the most beautiful and most important part of our lives. We wouldn’t be who are today if we had skipped that step in our life. It is something we look back on when we are facing a rough patch in our life. Adulthood isn’t always bad, but it can never compare the great memories you had as a child. I chose these song/poems that you are about to read because I think they go very well with the theme I chose. They all differ, but each one of them can relate back to childhood. They each send you back in time and lets your mind replay a sweet memory from your past, a memory that you will never forget. 

Rock Me To Sleep by Elizabeth Akers Allen (1997)


Backward, turn backward, O time, in your flight;
Make me a child again, just for tonight!
Mother, come back from that echoless shore;
Take me again in your heart as of yore --
Kiss from my forehead the furrows of care,
Smooth the few silver threads out of my hair,
Over my slumbers your loving watch keep --
Rock me to sleep, mother -- rock me to sleep
Backward, turn backward, O tide of the years!

 I am so weary of toil and of tears --
Toil without recompense, tears all in vain --
Take them and give me my childhood again!
I have grown weary of dust and decay --
Weary of flinging my soul-wealth away --
Weary of sowing for others to reap --

Rock me to sleep, mother -- rock me to sleep!


Tired of the hollow, the base, the untrue,
Mother, O mother, my heart calls for you!
Many a summer the grass has grown green,
Blossomed and faded -- our faces between --
Yet with strong yearning and passionate pain,
Long I tonight for your presence again;
Come from the silence,
mother -- rock me to sleep!

Come, let your brown hair, just lighted with gold,
Fall on your shoulders again as of old --
Let it drop over my forehead tonight,
Shading my faint eyes away from the light!
For, with its sunny-edged shadows once more,
Haply will throng all the visions of yore;
Lovingly, softly, its bright billows sweep --
Rock me to sleep, mother -- rock me to sleep!

Mother, dear mother! the years have been long
Since I last listened to your lullaby song;
Sing, then, and unto my soul it shall seem
Womanhood's years have been only a dream;
With your light lashes just sweeping my face,
Never hereafter to wake or to weep --
Rock me sleep, mother -- rock me to sleep!



Source: http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/182732

Analysis:
              I chose the poem “Rock Me to Sleep” by Elizabeth Akers Allen to relate to my theme on childhood. I love the way the poet uses the daughters sweet memories of her childhood and the connection with her mother and compare it to the feelings that she is facing now. The poet does a great job explaining that special bond a mother and daughter have together, the nurturing and confront of a mother figure, it really can’t compare to anything. Allen made this poem easy to understand and used a past and present timeline that I think made this poem stronger.
This poem gives us a story that is about a daughter who is talking about her mother, who had passed away and how she wishes to be a child again, so she can be in her mother’s arms one last time. This poem really gives off a really strong emotion, not just because of the deceased mother, but of the powerful connection a parent and child have between each other. Sometimes we don’t realize just how much a mother (guardian) means to us, until they’re gone. “Backward, turn backward, O time, in your flight; Make me a child again, just for one night! Mother, come back from that echoless shore; Take me again in your heart as of your—“ I know sometimes, many of us that go through a rough patch in life and we automatically wish we could go back in time. That moment of our mother tucking us in bed, reading us a story, and feeling the warmth of her hug when she tells a goodnight, that moment where nothing else in the world matters.  

"Rock me to sleep, mother -- rock me to sleep!" was used as the title and throughout the poem to symbolize a sweet childhood, a moment in your life that you wish you could return to. I think the poet did an amazing job putting such and indescribable bond, between a mother and child, into words.  This is such touching poem and something that almost everyone can relate to and a feeling that everyone deserves to experience. 

Old Friends by Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton (1840)

HOW are they waned and faded from our hearts,
The old companions of our early days!
Of all the many loved, which name imparts
Regret when blamed, or rapture at its praise?
What are their several fates, by Heaven decreed,
They of the jocund heart, and careless brow?
Alas! we scarcely know and scarcely heed,
Where, in this world of sighs, they wander now.

See, how with cold faint smile, and courtly nod,

They pass, whom wealth and revelry divide—
Who walked together to the house of God,
Read from one book, and rested side by side;
No look of recognition lights the eye
Which laughingly hath met that fellow-face;
With careless hands they greet and wander by,
Who parted once with tears and long embrace.



Oh, childhood! blessed time of hope and love,
When all we knew was Nature's simple law,
How may we yearn again that time to prove,
When we looked round, and loved whate'er we saw.
Now dark suspicion wakes, and love departs,
And cold distrust its well-feigned smile displays;
And they are waned and faded from our hearts,
The old companions of our early days!
  http://allpoetry.com/poem/8532799-Old-Friends-by-Caroline-Elizabeth-Sarah-Norton



Analysis:
I chose the poem “Old Friends” by Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton because reflects on childhood friendships. The poem is about a childhood friendship that ended after they started to grow older. I like this poem because it is very accurate to how friendships start to fade away as you get older and sometimes you don’t even realize what’s happening. This poem was very effective by making you rethink your past, to question what went wrong or if maybe life just got in the way.
It’s actually quite sad if you think about, how did we become so busy that we no longer could make time for the people who made such a huge impact on our life? Our childhood friends are people that we never will forget, they were family at one point, but yet we treat each other like strangers. When you see your “old friend” in the store, you may wave or nod your head, but you don’t say no more to them even though when you see them, a sweet memory from your past replays in your head. “Oh, childhood! Blessed time of hope and love, When all we knew was Nature's simple law, How may we yearn again that time to prove, When we looked round, and loved whate'er we saw”. It’s really devastating how we let life get in the way have such a beautiful thing.
I like how the poet used “Old Friends” instead of “Strangers” or something along those lines because I think “Old Friends” is a reminder that they were once an important part in your life. Even though you may treat each other like strangers, there will always be that connection with them. You will always remember and treasure your childhood friendships.


This poem is a great look on reality and just how life works in ways we don’t always understand. Friendships are a big part of our life, we all need them from time to time. I just wish we were able to keep them together as we grow older.

To A Daughter Leaving Home by Linda Pastan (1998)



When I taught you
at eight to ride
a bicycle, loping along
beside you
as you wobbled away
on two round wheels
my own mouth rounding
In surprise when you             pulled ahead down the curved
path of the park,

I kept waiting
for the thud
of your crash as I
sprinted to catch up,
while you grew
smaller, more breakable
with distance,
pumping, pumping
for your life, screaming
with laughter,
the hair flapping
behind you like a
handkerchief waving
goodbye.
http://pascal.eblib.com.stacks.tridenttech.edu/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=1915405



Analysis:
I chose the poem “A Daughter Leaving Home” by Linda Patasan because it presents a view point from the parents’ thoughts on how fast their children grow up. This poem relates to my first poem “Rock Me to Sleep” by Elizabeth Allen, showing us again the special bond we have with our parents. This poem is about a parent, which I interpret it to be a father figure, who is teaching his daughter to ride a bike. I like that they use this reference to represent a childhood memory because if you ask anyone about the memory of learning how to ride a bike, most people could tell you like it happened yesterday.
Most fathers have the hardest time letting go of their “baby girl”. Fathers tend to more protective and compassionate to their daughters, they hate the idea of sending them off in the real world. I think this poem does a great job at briefly describing the fearful emotions of a father. As a child, your daddy was most likely your biggest hero. He is was the first man you ever loved and he made huge impact on your childhood. While your mother was nurturing and comforting, your father was most likely the “fun parent” who did the physical activities with you like riding a bike.
From the title of this poem, I see it being said by a proud parent. It says just enough to make you think just how much your parents taught you. You probably wouldn’t be who you are today without them. This isn’t just toward parents, it’s about anyone who played the role of a mother or father figure in a child’s life.
The story in this poem symbolizes just how fast we grow up “I kept waiting for the thud of your crash as I sprinted to catch up, while you grew smaller, more breakable with distance, pumping, pumping for your life, screaming with laughter, the hair flapping behind you like a handkerchief waving goodbye”. One day we are learning to ride a bike, the next day we are waving goodbye to our parents and entering adulthood.



Pure Imagination by Anthony Newly and Leslie Bricusse (1971)




Come with me and you'll be

In a world of pure imagination
Take a look and you'll see
Into your imagination

We'll begin with a spin

Trav'ling in the world of my creation
What we'll see will defy
Explanation

{Refrain}


If you want to view paradise

Simply look around and view it
Anything you want to, do it
Want to change the world, there's nothing to it

There is no life I know

To compare with pure imagination
Living there, you'll be free
If you truly wish to be

{Refrain}

Come with me and you'll be
In a world of pure imagination
Take a look and you'll see
 Into your imagination
   


Source: http://www.allmusic.com/song/pure-imagination-mt0015526726/lyrics







Analysis: 
I chose the song “Pure Imagination” by Anthony Newly and Leslie Bricusse because it goes so well with my theme on “childhood”. This song was used in the movie “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Fountain” and the lyrics really fit the scene from this movie like in the video shown above. The lyrics of this song really helps explain the limitless imaginations that children have. They are capable of exploring things way beyond the actually reality. I like how the artist uses the title “pure imagination” repetitively throughout the song to give its true meaning. I believe anyone who just reads the title would interpret it to be about childhood because we’ve all heard the saying that, “children have the most powerful imagination”, which is quite true.
This poem is really effective by showing you just how children minds work. They see what they want to see and turn reality into something amazing. Imagination as a kid made life more fun and joyful. Children have visions, dreams, and believe in themselves. They are capable of seeing and doing anything they set their minds to “If you want to view paradise. Simply look around and view it. Anything you want to, do it Want to change the world, there's nothing to it” As you get older, life gets more stressful, and you seem to slowly start to lose that great imagination you had as a child. It’s actually quite sad, if you think about it, that we just let go of such a beautiful and creative side of us as we enter the “real world”.
 While reading the lyrics to this song, it starts to make you imagine and relive all the play dates you had as a child, when you would “play house”, "lava" or pretend to“fight off the dragons” with your cardboard swords. It’s truly amazing how children are capable of developing such a vision that creates a whole new world that nobody else can see “We'll begin with a spin. Trav'ling in the world of my creation”.
            This song is a reminder of how precious and easy life really was as a child. No matter where you are in life, there is really nothing you can compare to the world you created for yourself as a kid “There is no life I know To compare with pure imagination Living there, you'll be free If you truly wish to be”. 






Innocent by Taylor Swift (2009)




I guess you really did it this time
Left yourself in your warpath
Lost your balance on a tightrope
Lost your mind tryin' to get it back

Wasn't it easier in your lunchbox days?
Always a bigger bed to crawl into
Wasn't it beautiful when you believed in everything?
And everybody believed in you?

It's alright, just wait and see
Your string of lights is still bright to me
Oh, who you are is not where you've been
You're still an innocent
You're still an innocent

Did some things you can't speak of
But at night you'll live it all again
You wouldn't be shattered on the floor now
If only you had seen what you know now then

Wasn't it easier in your firefly-catchin' days?
And everything out of reach, someone bigger brought down to you
Wasn't it beautiful runnin' wild 'til you fell asleep?
Before the monsters caught up to you?

It's alright, just wait and see
Your string of lights is still bright to me
Oh, who you are is not where you've been
You're still an innocent
It's okay, life is a tough crowd
Thirty two and still growin' up now
Who you are is not what you did
You're still an innocent

Time turns flames to embers
You'll have new Septembers
Every one of us has messed up too

Lives change like the weather
I hope you remember
Today is never too late to
Be brand new

It's all right, just wait and see
Your string of lights are still bright to me
Oh, who you are is not where you've been
You're still an innocent

It's okay, life is a tough crowd
Thirty two and still growin' up now
Who you are is not what you did
You're still an innocent
You're still an innocent

Lost your balance on a tight rope, oh
It's never too late to get it back










http://genius.com/Taylor-swift-innocent-lyrics

Analysis: 
I chose the song “Innocent” by Taylor Swift because the lyrics from this song really relate to childhood memories. This song is talking about a person who has made a mistake in their life and compares it to who they used to be as a child. Taylor Swift’s lyrics to this song really makes it easy for anyone to relate to. The song is very soothing and encouraging. Everyone has a rough patch, we just have to remember the great memories in our life instead of dwelling on the bad memories.
This song has a lot of uplifting words that everyone needs to hear every once in a while, it’s a song that lets you know that it’s alright to forgive yourself.  The words “Time turns flames to embers. You'll have new Septembers. Every one of us has messed up too” is so encouraging and reminds us that everyone makes mistakes, but we have to keep moving forward. It also shows us how life gets harder as we grow older, but the great memories that we treasure from our childhood is a reminder just how beautiful life can be if we let it. “Wasn't it easier in your lunchbox days? Always a bigger bed to crawl into. Wasn't it beautiful when you believed in everything? And everybody believed in you?”


            “Innocent” I believe is a great title for this song, it’s a word we use to describe a child. They also use the word throughout the song “It's okay, life is a tough crowd. Thirty two and still growin' up now. Who you are is not what you did. You're still an innocent. Which I interpret to mean that we will always be learning what’s right from wrong and no matter what mistakes you make in life, you’re still that kind hearted, joyful kid that you used to be.

"You're Going to Miss This" written by Ashley Gorley and Lea Thomas Miller and recorded by Trace Adkins (2008)




She was staring out that window, of that SUV
Complaining, saying I can't wait to turn 18
She said I'll make my own money, and I'll make my own rules
Mamma put the car in park out there in front of the school
Then she kissed her head and said I was just like you

[Chorus]
You're gonna miss this
You're gonna want this back
You're gonna wish these days hadn't gone by so fast
These Are Some Good Times
So take a good look around
You may not know it now 
But you're gonna miss this

Before she knows it she's a brand new bride
In a one-bedroom apartment, and her daddy stops by
He tells her It's a nice place
She says It'll do for now
Starts talking about babies and buying a house
Daddy shakes his head and says Baby, just slow down

[Chorus]
You're gonna miss this
You're gonna want this back
You're gonna wish these days hadn't gone by so fast
These Are Some Good Times
So take a good look around
You may not know it now 
But you're gonna miss this

Five years later there's a plumber workin' on the water heater
Dog's barkin', phone's ringin'
One kid's cryin', one kid's screamin'
She keeps apologizin'
He says They don't bother me. 
I've got 2 babies of my own. 
One's 36, one's 23.
Huh, it's hard to believe, but ...

[Chorus]
You're gonna miss this
You're gonna want this back

You're gonna wish these days hadn't gone by so fast
These Are Some Good Times
So take a good look around 
You may not know it now 
But you're gonna miss this
You're gonna miss this
Yeah, you're gonna miss this

http://www.metrolyrics.com/youre-gonna-miss-this-lyrics-trace-adkins.html


Analysis:
I chose the song “You’re going to Miss this” sung by Trace Adkins because it’s a reminder that we need to slow down and stop growing up so fast like the message in the poem "I taught you how to ride a bike".This song is about a teenage girl, who couldn’t wait to eighteen, get married, and have kids. The father tries to keep reminding her to slow down and how she needs to savor her childhood. I like that this poem is from a father’s point of view because he knows from experience and we’ve all heard our parents “Give it a few year, you’ll be wishing to be a kid again” and parents are usually right, for the most part.
I really like the chorus in this song “You're gonna want this back
You're gonna wish these days hadn't gone by so fast These Are Some Good Times So take a good look around” which really sums up the meaning of the song. When we reach a certain age, we are so anxious to grow up and forget just how easy life as a child can be. Childhood is the most important part of your life, it’s where you learn and develop who you are. Childhood is where we get our most precious memories from.
            The title of this song “You’re Going to Miss this” means exactly what it says. As life moves forward, you start to miss you past and all the great friendships and memories that came with it. You’re going to miss everything and everyone that doesn’t fit in your busy life as an adult.


            I think Trace Adkins does a great job explaining the big transformation from childhood to adulthood. He is very straight forward in this song, reminding us to slow down and that we shouldn’t be in hurry to grow up. Childhood is a beautiful experience that you should try to hold onto as long as you can.