The Book Review: A poetic coda

sábado, 17 de mayo de 2025

A very merry response to our first-ever Poetry Challenge. View in browser | nytimes.com May 17, 2025 Hannah Robinson By A.O. Scott "W...
A very merry response to our first-ever Poetry Challenge.
Books
May 17, 2025
This is an illustration of a person flying in a cloud of books and pages alongside two birds.
Hannah Robinson

"We were very tired, we were very merry
We had gone back and forth all night on the ferry."

Remember those lines? If you do, you probably recall the first-ever New York Times Poetry Challenge, which wrapped up two weeks ago. (If you missed the fun, click here to immerse yourself in five days' worth of games, videos and mini-essays about Edna St. Vincent Millay's infectious "Recuerdo.")

Those of us who worked on the project are still merry about the response. Thousands of readers took to the comments to share their enthusiasm for poetry and their delight in learning a bit of it by heart.

For some participants, the exercise tested mental muscles they hadn't used since childhood.

"In high school I spent hours memorizing sonnets from Shakespeare and the poems of the best known poets such as Gerard Manley Hopkins. Thank you Fr. Caroluzza!" wrote Stephen Francis Callahan of Annandale, Va. "Today, I begin again."

For others, finding "Recuerdo" confirmed a longstanding devotion in poetry or to Edna St. Vincent Millay, whose candle still burns bright more than 130 years after her birth. Each day's comments were garlanded with citations and sometimes whole stanzas, from Millay, Robert Frost and other favorites.

Perhaps best of all were the many readers who arrived with a desire to find some room in their lives for poetry.

"My husband literally said to me today, apropos of nothing, that he wished he had been made to memorize poetry as a child," wrote Kristin Gilbert of Louisville, Ky. "Now we are memorizing this poem together."

There were a lot of good notes and thoughtful suggestions, and — this being poetry, and these being New York Times readers — a few nits to be picked. Mostly though, there was a clamor for more: more poetry, more challenges, more "reprieve" and "diversion" from the torrent of news. A new poem every day! A new challenge every week! That may be more than we can manage — did I mention that we were very tired at the end of that ride — but we hear you, and we agree with the general sentiment.

Meanwhile, God bless you for the apples and the pears.

🍎🍐🍎🍐

— A.O.

THE POETRY CHALLENGE

A playful illustration in which a person stands at the front of a boat with their arms spread wide. They wear a red shirt and is holding open a red book. There are birds in the air and a city in the background, presumably New York.

Hannah Robinson

The Poetry Challenge Day 1: Learn a poem with us this week. Keep it for a lifetime.

Starting today, we'll have a week of games, videos and essays to help you along the way. First up: readings by Ina Garten, Ethan Hawke and Ada Limón.

By A.O. Scott and Aliza Aufrichtig

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Hannah Robinson

The Poetry Challenge Day 2: How rhythm and rhyme make a poem memorable.

Today, we help you pay attention to the sound and feel of this week's poem. Play our game to see how much you've already learned.

By A.O. Scott and Aliza Aufrichtig

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Hannah Robinson

The Poetry Challenge Day 3: This is a New York poem. Once you learn it, you can take it anywhere.

You can take a poem with you anywhere, but knowing its origins can help make it yours. Practice by playing our poetry emoji game.

By A.O. Scott and Aliza Aufrichtig

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Hannah Robinson

The Poetry Challenge Day 4: This poem is about staying up all night. Use it to greet the day.

One day remains to memorize this week's poem. (You probably already know more than you realize!) Let's stay merry.

By A.O. Scott and Aliza Aufrichtig

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Hannah Robinson

The Poetry Challenge Day 5: We've learned a poem this week. Now it's yours.

We've reached the last stanza of our adventure in verse. Now it's time to show off what you've learned. As a bonus: our critic on why memorizing a poem is as much about what you forget.

By A.O. Scott and Aliza Aufrichtig

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