Favorite Childhood Poem?

WordSoup

Found her way back here
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 15, 2005
Messages
222
Reaction score
29
Location
I'm a Hoosier AGAIN
What was your favorite poem as a child?

I had so many, but the one that I remember my mom and I laughing about the most was called "ELETELEPHONY"

I'm sitting here with Volume #1 Childcraft, The How and Why Library, Poems and Rhymes, copyright 1972. (Took this book with me when I moved out because I am the world's greatest pack-rat.) :eek:

Pg. 224

Eletelephony
by Laura E. Richards

Once there was an elephant,
Who tried to use the telephant-
No! No! I mean an elephone
Who tried to use the telephone-
(Dear me! I am not certain quite
That even now I've got it right.)

Howe'er it was, he got his trunk
Entangled in the telephunk;
The more he tried to get it free,
the louder buzzed the telephee-
(I fear I'd better drop the song
Of elephop and telephong!)

(Well, it was hilarious when I was 3)

OK---- WHO'S NEXT?
 

Betty W01

Empress of Cyberworld
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 11, 2005
Messages
717
Reaction score
141
Location
right here, silly
I remember that one from when I was a kid, too!

My favorite was Robert Louis Stevenson's "The Swing".

And one of my recent favorites is A.A. Milne's "James James Morrison Morrison Weatherby George Dupree" (and I can recite it pretty much from memory!)
 

WhisperingBard

Wary...and weary
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 12, 2005
Messages
350
Reaction score
239
Location
In a far-off land of make-believe...
The *entire* A Child's Garden of Verses by Stevenson was a favorite. All-time favorite, though, is a Shel Silverstein poem, "Listen to the Mustn'ts, Child":

Listen to the Mustn'ts, child, listen to the Don'ts.
Listen to the Shouldn'ts, the Impossibles, the Won'ts.
Listen to the Never Haves, then listen close to me.
Anything can happen, child. Anything can be.
 

William Haskins

poet
Kind Benefactor
Absolute Sage
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 12, 2005
Messages
29,113
Reaction score
8,865
Age
58
Website
www.poisonpen.net
shel yeah!

i second shel silverstein... a prolific and giant of a talent. i'd rate "the giving tree" as my favorite. before i was out of elementary school, i had fallen in love with some of robert frost's more accessible work ("stopping by the woods...", "mending wall", etc.).

soon after i discovered e.a. robinson's "richard cory" and stormed the gates of the darker frontiers.
 

Betty W01

Empress of Cyberworld
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 11, 2005
Messages
717
Reaction score
141
Location
right here, silly
If you're talking grown-up poetry, I like Robert Frost ("The Road Not Taken", "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening", "Mending Wall"), Langston Hughes ("Mother to Son", Lullaby for a Black Mother", "Death of an Old Seaman", "Alabama Earth"), Joe Bayly ("A Psalm on the Death of an 18-Year-Old Son"), Annie Flint Johnson ("The Blessings That Remain"), George Ella Lyon ("Invocation"), and several poems by Rabindranath Tagore whose titles I never knew. Oh, and I love the entire book of poems by Carmen Bernos De Gatztold, Prayers from the Ark.


[I'm a poet and I love to read good poetry. Can you tell?]
 

MacAllister

'Twas but a dream of thee
Staff member
Boss Mare
Administrator
Super Moderator
Moderator
Kind Benefactor
VPX
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 11, 2005
Messages
22,010
Reaction score
10,707
Location
Out on a limb
Website
macallisterstone.com
I stuttered rather badly as a child, so my mother taught me about a million limericks (or maybe she and the speech therapist conspired) and I still have a fondness for them. :)

But she also read me "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" and I just loved it. Still do.
 

Susan Gable

Dreamer of dreams, teller of tales
Absolute Sage
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 12, 2005
Messages
3,110
Reaction score
755
Location
Pennsylvania
Website
www.susangable.com
I didn't read them as a child, but as a grown-up I adore Shel Silverstein and Jack Prelutsky's work. Funny! Great stuff!

Their works are a wonderful introduction to poetry, IMHO. In fact, I think if more kids were exposed to poetry like that, they wouldn't moan and roll their eyes when a high school or college teacher mentioned the word poetry.
Susan G.
 

WordSoup

Found her way back here
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 15, 2005
Messages
222
Reaction score
29
Location
I'm a Hoosier AGAIN
Amen, Susan!

Silverstein & Frost :Clap:


Ray, can you give us one of those Deng Dynasty poems?