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Author and Novelist Glynn Young

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poem

Longfellow’s “Paul Revere’s Ride”: Creaing a National Legend 

April 17, 2025 By Glynn Young Leave a Comment

It’s a tossup as to whether the most famous or best-known poem in America is Clement Moore”s “A Visit from St. Nicholas” (aka “Twas the Night Before Christmas”), first published in 1823, or Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s “Paul Revere’s Ride,” (1860). My money is on “Paul Revere’s Ride.” Whole generations of schoolchildren, myself included, grew up reciting the lines that begin “Listen my children, and you shall hear…” 

Both poems are no longer taught in most of America’s public schools, but I know from my grandsons’ experience that they are taught (with great gusto) in many private schools, especially those offering a classical education. “Paul Revere’s Ride” commemorates one of the significant of the beginning of the American Revolution, a horseback ride at night to warn the cities of Lexington and Concord that British troops were coming.

That ride occurred 250 years ago tomorrow.

To continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak Poetry.

Artwork: the illustration accompanying the poem in the January 1861 edition of The Atlantic Magazine.

The Etiquette of the Walk (in the Days of the Coronavirus)

March 24, 2020 By Glynn Young Leave a Comment

In the days of the coronavirus,
we may be self-isolated or
we may be quarantined, but
one thing we’re encouraged
to do is walk.

Walk in the neighborhood.
Walk in the park (even if
facilities are closed).
Walk in the vacated downtown
streets so empty, streets framed
by silent concrete canyons.

Walk in the forest, if one
is close by; even a woodland
trail will suffice.

But in these days of the coronavirus,
a process has quickly put itself
in place, a process we might call
the Etiquette of the Walk.

If you walk faster than
the walker ahead, you pass
on the left or the right
by a good six feet.

If you encounter 
a walker coming 
toward you, follow
the etiquette of the walk.

If the walker is 
older than you, 
you yield and 
swerve left
or right by your
6 or 8 feet.

If the walker is
a mother or father
with children or
a baby carriage,
you yield. Always.
No exceptions.

Dog walkers yield 
to all others;
no exceptions.
Dog walkers 
encountering
dog walkers
yield to each
other; both 
swerve, no matter
how badly the dogs
seek acquaintance.

Singles encountering
couples always yield,
unless the single
is older.

If you cannot swerve
by your 6 or 8 feet, 
you swerve by as much
space as possible.

In all cases,
you smile and
say hello.

You will know
the apocalypse
has arrived
when cyclists
yield to walkers
in crosswalks.
It happened
to me yesterday,
and I expected
the sky to split
open and 
the four horsemen
to appear.

They didn’t, but
you know what
I mean, in these days
of the coronavirus.

Photograph by Iwoji Iwata via Unsplash. Used with permission.

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Meet the Man

An award-winning speechwriter and communications professional, Glynn Young is the author of three novels and the non-fiction book Poetry at Work.

 

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