James Russell Lowell wrote a poem called "A Deer for an earl" Phillip Bishop: Poetry simultaneously makes us notice things or allows us to see things with fresh eyes. It's taken me a lifetime to understand my family, and I think at every age, I thought I understood them,. But the older you get, the more insight you've got.
When he was a child, poet Dana Gioia's mother would come home from a long day of work and recite poems while she cleaned. It was a way, he realized later, for her to express the feelings she didn't want to describe directly, and to vent her sorrows without burdening her son. This, he believes, is what makes poetry so compelling: It's the secret language of emotions, a bit of magic that gets us through the day. Listen as Gioia speaks with EconTalk's Russ Roberts about poems, mortality, and loved ones who died too young. Gioia also explains the fundamental role of allusions in poems, and how--if they’re really good--they have the power to summon the dead.