J. Patrick Lewis

cantfindit

Former Children’s Poet Laureate J. Patrick Lewis grew up in Gary, Indiana and earned a BA at Saint Joseph’s College, an MA at Indiana University, and a PhD in economics at the Ohio State University. Lewis taught in the department of Business, Accounting and Economics at Otterbein College in Westerville, Ohio until 1998 when he became a full-time writer. Lewis is the author of more than 50 books of poetry for children, which find their shape in both free and formal verse and engage a wide range of subjects from history to mathematics, Russian folklore to the animal kingdom. His children’s poetry has been widely anthologized, and his contributions to children’s literature have been recognized with the 2011 Poetry Award from the National Council of Teachers of English and the Ohioana Awards’ 2004 Alice Louise Wood Memorial Prize, among others. Lewis served as the nation’s third Children’s Poet Laureate, now called the Young People’s Poet Laureate, from 2011 to 2013. He lives in Westerville, Ohio. Source 

Everything Is a Poem

A garden is a poem

Lined with rows of similes

Like lyrical chrysanthemums

And epic peonies.

 

A spider web’s a poem

Composed upon the air,

Silk-designed and deftly lined to

catch the unaware.

 

A mirror is a poem

Revealing truths about

The poet, but it often leaves

The shadow of a doubt.

 

A firefly’s a poem,

A flashy verse sublime

That’s ready by other fireflies

One sparkle at a time.

 

A picture is a poem

If it’s painted in disguise

On a canvas of emotion

From a palette of surprise.

 

A rainbow is a poem

A phenomenon so rare,

It’s not that it is written

But is written on the air.

 

A shining star’s a poem

Penned by ghostwriter, the Moon,

Who publishes her verses

In a book called Clair de Lune. 

 

A busy bee’s a poem

With nectar that’s so fine

A reader-eater laps up every

Honey of a line. 

Published:

2010

Length:

Regular

Literary Movements:

Children's

Anthology Years:

2023

Themes:

Ars Poetica

Nature

Poems of the Everyday

Literary Devices:

Metaphor

a comparison between two unrelated things through a shared characteristic

Repetition

a recurrence of the same word or phrase two or more times

Rhyme

correspondence of sound between words or the endings of words, especially when these are used at the ends of lines of poetry