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Baby poems
On account of the happy announcement by Peter Chipman down here on General Talk, I'm starting a thread for baby poems.
To start us, here's a link to A.E. Stallings's "Lullaby for a Colicky Baby." And if there's an older thread on this subject I didn't find, do please point me to it. |
I'm glad you started this, Maryann. Since I read your 'Circadian Lament, Sung to a Wakeful Baby' -- which I won't include here, only because it seem to be a work in progress -- I'd been thinking about how few baby poems have actually stayed with me, as that one has. I hope my fellow Eratospherians can remedy that.
I do like Auden's 'Munds et Infans,' but it's not the sort of thing you can rattle off (no pun intended) -- well, at least I can't. Thanks for the poem by A.E. Stallings. Best, Ed |
How young does a child have to be to be a baby? Are they babies until they are one? In which case I have written baby poems myself. When they just lie about - or in the case of our daughter, lie about and scream the place down, they are not very conducive to the Muse. But if they can DO stuff....
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Maryann, you workshopped a poem a while ago - not this current one - do you remember which one I'm thinking of?
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Here's a throwaway that I didn't throw away, but this is D&A so here goes:
STRAINING CREDULITY Your three-month-old knows how to walk? I'll take you at your word. What's that? The little guy can talk? I won't say that's absurd. After all, his father's you and you're the perfect sire. What's that? He sleeps the whole night through? That does it. You're a liar! |
Roger, I love it.
Mary, I think you might mean "Security." That makes me think a bit: many "baby" poems are more properly "mother" poems. I'm trying to hunt down specimens I think I remember by Geoff Brock, Anne Stevenson, and, of all people, Sylvia Plath. John, by all means let's see the poem. |
The children other folk beget
Are dreadful little bores. I think that I have never yet Seen any worse than yours. But take a look at our sweet Miss: She's one of Nature's flowers. So leave your baby out of this And concentrate on ours. --Anon |
Too true, David.
Here's the Brock poem--found nearby! It's "Lauds." Scroll way down past the photos. |
I'm partial to the mer-creature in this other poem by Alicia:
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/arch...html?id=181166 (And he didn't get a brother. He got a sister!) |
Julie, thanks for reminding me of that one. And that one reminds me of another kid-in-the-bed poem. The kid is older than a baby, but the love is the same.
Galway Kinnell's "After Making Love We Hear Footsteps" |
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