Baha'i Poets - Famous and Not So Famous - I
Little did I realize where this research would take me, what I would learn, and who I would meet along the way. It has been quite a learning experience for me. Not only that, it brought up some old memories. So, first: Sorry about that, but I could not resist. My first experience with poetry was probably good old Mother Goose, but what I remember most from my childhood was a little book called A Child's Garden of Verses, by Robert Lewis Stevenson. My father still has the copy my mother read to me, and I still look through it when I visit. Then, somewhere between the first and third grades I found a late night/early morning talk show that I would listen to if I happened to wake up at those odd hours. One morning I happened on this show and the host read The Highwayman. I hung on every word. I can still remember, "And the highwayman came riding-- Riding--riding--" Another night, I happened to wake up as he read Edgar Allen Poe's The Bells. I can still hear the ringing of those bells. Those two poems are favorites of mine today, some 40+ years later. I do not know who the host of that show was, but he and the poems he read those two nights made a lasting impression on me. I thank him. Now, enough about me. I have found out that a Baha'i Poet does not just write poetry about the Baha'i Faith, but that they are Baha'is who write poetry. At this point, I feel I must say that poets and poetry have been a part of the history of the Baha'i Faith. In a previous article, I wrote of Tahirih. Although that article dealt with her fight for Woman's Rights in Persia, she was also a renowned poetess, as this link will show:
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