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The Tufts Daily
Where you read it first | Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Kevin Criscione | Ill Literates

Try as you might, it's quite a hard deed

To find appropriate time to read

Novels for pleasure throughout the semester

Without it becoming a lame source of pester,

Know this, there's a way to stay literary

That isn't nearly as time-consuming or scary

As committing yourself to the vast hours needed

To ensure your new book will get read-ed,

Literature comes in all kinds of forms

Including one category that always bends norms,

Whether haikus or free verse or whatever you call 'em

That's right, this is the poetry column!

So please excuse this gimmick and these lame rhymes

But you wouldn't believe the number of times

I've found myself torn between dueling desires

Raging in me like unquenchable fires

The desire to pursue my bookish ways

To satiate curiosity or vanquish malaise

And the need to do all the things I must do

The studies and whatnot I commit myself to,

Sometimes it seems that I can't catch a break

To get time to myself for some bookish intake

But luckily poetry offers a way

To ingest dreams and stories that won't take all day,

Sure, there are lyrical poems and epics and stuff

But as for short poems, there's more than enough 

For bite-sized punches of words so pristine

That can fit nice and cozy into any routine 

A poem a day keeps illiteracy away

... is something this one dude named Kevin will say

Okay, this poem is losing its steam 

Maybe a better choice for a theme

Would have been...

 

Okay, I'll just go on ahead and call it quits right there. 

Many of you probably reserve summers and breaks for leisure reading, but for those of us that want to keep our literary diets interesting during a semester that may not have any room for the more liberal artsy courses, poetry offers an ideal solution for bite-sized/grab-and-go/other-fast-food-cliche imaginative stimulation. From E.E. Cummings to Shel Silverstein, there are a variety of popular poets that work with short form poetry one could pick up read with just a few free minutes. 

Book of the week: "Life on Mars" by Tracy K. Smith. For the past few weeks, I've been occasionally picking up this cosmic collection of interplanetary poetry, reading a poem or two now and then and it's made for a wonderful reading experience. In fact, I'm just going to use the rest of this column to rave about this volume of poetry. In almost every poem, Smith makes use of intergalactic imagery to express and complement forays into her feelings, memories of her father (who incidentally worked on the Hubble telescope), her thoughts of the future and our collective imagination in relation to the final frontier. The space-age wordplay and references to the cosmos help her personal sentiments and thoughts resonate more deeply, adding a sense of wonder that magnifies the emotions without overpowering them. By alternating between grandiose poetic explorations of our society's relationship with the future and bittersweet personal recollections, frequently within the same poem, Smith manages to bring universality and cosmic significance to what otherwise might just ordinary sentimentalism. Highlights include the titular poem, "My God, It's Full of Stars," and the poems whose titles end "&co." 

 

Kevin Criscione is a junior majoring in English. He can be reached at Kevin.Criscione@tufts.edu.