- Oliver Goldsmith was born on 11/10/1730. “Where wealth accumulates, men decay.” (The Vicar of Wakefield; The Deserted Village; She Stoops to Conquer)
- Friedrich Schiller was born on 11/10/1759. “Will it, and set to work briskly.” (Ode to Joy; The Robbers; The Maid of Orleans) Continue reading
Tag Archives: Poetry
Daily Diversion #66: Give Me More Wine
Halloween is My Favourite Holiday
Halloween is not my favourite holiday because of its free pass to dress up in a ridiculous or obscure costume, drink wildly, and eat too much cheap drugstore candy (I’m looking at you, candy corn). No, Halloween is my favourite holiday because it marks the birthday of the smartest, funniest, sweetest, sexiest man I know. My husband. Lest he think that an alien has taken up residence in my brain, I will leave it at this: he is awesome, he is mine, and I love him. Oh, dear readers, how I love him!
Voices from the Grave #43: Sylvia Plath Reading ‘The Applicant’
Sylvia Plath reading The Applicant.
[News] These Thieves Must Not Be Fans of Jane Eyre, or: I Cannot Believe I’m Posting a Link to the Daily Mail
The Brontë Bell Chapel in Thornton, West Yorkshire was vandalized. (Courtesy of Mail Online)
Daily Diversion #61: Dublin Writers Postcard
Quote
“Reading is important-read between the lines. Don’t swallow everything.”-Gwendolyn Brooks
[Intermezzo] I bought this mug because it reminded me of Sylvia Plath
Cold, mossy gravestones whisper laments as I stroll past them in the shadowy pathways on an autumn morning. The tree swaying outside my apartment shouts poetry through the window. The pavement beneath my mobile feet croons a love song to the beauty of the late afternoon sunlight that dances across its craggy surface. Squirrels leaping across wires recite snippets of stories. I experience words everywhere I go: sometimes they are new combinations, asking or demanding to be written down. Stories waiting to be told. Sometimes they belong to other people. Stories waiting to be retold.
The bus stop across from the gallery would like permission to transform into flash fiction./The memory of a creepy photograph, seen briefly weeks ago, wants to be reborn as a horror story.
Chilly October evenings evoke the landscape of Hardy, so I’ve been reading The Return of the Native after the sun sets./ The Roebling Bridge, which connects Ohio to Kentucky, brings to mind Hart Crane./Then there’s my Sylvia Plath mug.
*From The Moon and the Yew Tree by Sylvia Plath.
Voices from the Grave #42: Gwendolyn Brooks Reading ‘A Song in the Front Yard’
Gwendolyn Brooks reading A Song in the Front Yard.
Take a Tour of Robert Frost’s Home
Take a tour of Robert Frost’s Vermont home (courtesy of Huffington Post).



