
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Today’s poem is not dissimilar in tone or content to the piece included in Episode 159 recently.
That piece, by Mary Schmich, and now popularly known as “Wear Sunscreen”, was a sort of commencement address, a speech delivered to college graduates as they prepare to enter the “real world” and find their way.
This poem by Max Ehrmann also has that air.
Max Ehrmann was an American writer and poet who died in 1945. Despite producing a number of works he was not well known during his life, which he was all too aware, once noting:
"Perhaps when I am dead, some browser in libraries will come upon me, and, seeing that I was not altogether unworthy, will resurrect me from the dust of things forgotten."
That’s exactly what has happened with Desiderata (from the Latin, “Things desired”), a prose poem he wrote at the age of 55 in the 1920s and only became widely known long after his death and is now commonly seen in framed wallprints.
You can read the poem here
***
For a detailed outline of the mission and purpose behind this podcast, please check out Episode 100, "Why Poems for the Speed of Life?", in your podcast player or click here to listen on Spotify.
If you’re on social media, you can follow on Twitter here, Instagram here and Facebook here.
Subscribe to or follow the show for free wherever you listen to podcasts.
To leave the show a review:
On Spotify. Open the Spotify app (iOS or Android), find the show and tap to rate five-stars. (Details here)On Apple. Open your Apple Podcasts app, find the show and tap to rate five-stars. (Details here)On Podchaser. Open the Podchaser website, find the show and tap to rate five-stars. (Details here)
Music Credit:
Once Upon a Time by Alex-Productions | https://onsound.eu/ | Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com
4.2
55 ratings
Today’s poem is not dissimilar in tone or content to the piece included in Episode 159 recently.
That piece, by Mary Schmich, and now popularly known as “Wear Sunscreen”, was a sort of commencement address, a speech delivered to college graduates as they prepare to enter the “real world” and find their way.
This poem by Max Ehrmann also has that air.
Max Ehrmann was an American writer and poet who died in 1945. Despite producing a number of works he was not well known during his life, which he was all too aware, once noting:
"Perhaps when I am dead, some browser in libraries will come upon me, and, seeing that I was not altogether unworthy, will resurrect me from the dust of things forgotten."
That’s exactly what has happened with Desiderata (from the Latin, “Things desired”), a prose poem he wrote at the age of 55 in the 1920s and only became widely known long after his death and is now commonly seen in framed wallprints.
You can read the poem here
***
For a detailed outline of the mission and purpose behind this podcast, please check out Episode 100, "Why Poems for the Speed of Life?", in your podcast player or click here to listen on Spotify.
If you’re on social media, you can follow on Twitter here, Instagram here and Facebook here.
Subscribe to or follow the show for free wherever you listen to podcasts.
To leave the show a review:
On Spotify. Open the Spotify app (iOS or Android), find the show and tap to rate five-stars. (Details here)On Apple. Open your Apple Podcasts app, find the show and tap to rate five-stars. (Details here)On Podchaser. Open the Podchaser website, find the show and tap to rate five-stars. (Details here)
Music Credit:
Once Upon a Time by Alex-Productions | https://onsound.eu/ | Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com
0 Listeners