A Thursday Love Poem by Edna St. Vincent Millay

Edna St. Vincent Millay
Edna St. Vincent Millay

This blog seems to get a lot of hits from people googling for “love poems.” Internet searches for love poems in general peak every February because of St. Valentine’s Day, but the Dad Poet gets at least a few searches for them every day.

So I have decided to add a new feature, the Thursday Love Poem. I don’t want you to expect this every Thursday. I mean I’m not committing myself here. This is just for fun, and like Edna St. Vincent Millay I don’t want to be tied down.

To be honest, I hope you don’t take such jokes too seriously. Millay was married to her husband for 26 years, until the day of his death, and she followed just over a year later. Whatever you think of any “arrangements” she and her husband may have had, it appears they loved and were committed to each other.

Millay still gets a lot of flack for some of the poems in A Few Figs From Thistles. I believe she was well aware of the dangers of burning candles at both ends, and building houses in the sand. But in her beautiful, seemingly glib little pieces were gems of truth about how we all really are at the heart. They were telling commentary too about the spirit of the women’s movement at the time. I think the point was that if men can act this way, why not women?

Whether a poet is writing about historical fact or not is never the point. It’s whether the emotions are honest even if the facts are fabricated or exaggerated. But many who wish to make every poem a poet’s confession in morality court will miss the point. I could go on, but I am writing a response to an article by a jealous moralist who doesn’t know what she’s gotten herself into, and I will share that here when I am done.

Meanwhile I’ve promised a Thursday Love Poem, and what should a Thursday Love Poem be here on The Dad Poet? Well, let’s face it, it’s got to be a bit unconventional. No Hallmark cards of course, and none of Shakespeare’s Sonnets. Not that your sweetheart doesn’t deserve a nice greeting card, and not they the Bard’s love poems are not a delight (actually one or two could fit in here). It’s not that Blake’s verses didn’t walk “in beauty as the night.” But we have already read Robert Burns’, “my luv is like a red red rose.” Here I want to share something different, off center, unexpected, something that resonates, though it doesn’t fit the traditional love poem mold.

On the other side of love’s penny, I do not wish to act as if true love and romance in a poem is “dishonest,” as some writers claim. But for a poem to be a Thursday Love Poem it will have to look at that tenderness squinting sideways, maybe standing on its head, in order to give us a unique view, one other than what the masses have come to expect of a love poem.

In other words a Thursday Love Poem isn’t your grandmother’s love poem, baby.

As an example I present to you now the flagship poem of this new Thursday feature, the biting little satire on the fickleness of the human heart, by Edna St. Vincent Millay. It’s entitled appropriately (She wrote this just for the Thursday Love Poem feature and has been waiting a very long time for me to post this) “Thursday.”

           THURSDAY

AND if I loved you Wednesday,
Well, what is that to you?
I do not love you Thursday–
So much is true.

And why you come complaining
Is more than I can see.
I loved you Wednesday,–yes–but what
Is that to me?


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33 responses to “A Thursday Love Poem by Edna St. Vincent Millay”

  1. Well read and nice narrative … I apprecate the sideways view of romantic love and so apparently did Edna … yes! I think she was waiting for you. Although I have been know to write love poems, I have found them to be eligiac.

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    1. Yes, I’ve written a few such poems too. I know what you mean, I think. And I have a few very lovely, but unconventional ones in mind that might make it into this Thursday feature in the future. Thanks for the feedback, and the sweet response!

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  2. Great poem. You also have a really good reading voice. You should try and get a gig narrating audioboks.

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    1. Thank you, James. I have a bit of a history in radio and broadcasting, and have pondered getting back into a bit of that business again eventually. A poetry podcast could be fun too. And audio books, I have thought about. I almost did a volunteer thing years ago, reading books on tape at the library. I appreciate the compliment!

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  3. Well David, I’ve been wanting to get back into doing another podcast recently. I had a 2-hour call-in show with a buddy of mine for a few years but it’s been over year since we last did it. Scheduling conflicts got the best of us.

    Now I don’t know very much about poetry at all but if you’d like to consider having a broad array of current events/politics/ etc., perhaps we could try and join up on one and just see how it goes.

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    1. With grad school considerations (I figure I’m not dead just yet), that might be difficult to pull off for me in the near future. But it’s worth kicking around. 🙂 I’m honored to be asked, James!

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  4. LOVED this post. I’d always found this particular poem a bit quirky. I never knew what to do with it until now. Thank you! I’m seeing it in a whole new light – you’re right there was a “gem of truth” to this poem. I’d just never seen it for myself before. Again, thank you.

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    1. Michelle, what a wonderful compliment you give me. Thank you. I love that you enjoyed it.

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  5. May I recommend Sir John Suckling’s “Why so pale and wan, fond lover?” It has been one of my favorite “love” poems since high school, and it seems to fit your template here… :o)

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    1. I don’t know if I have read i but I will give it a try.

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  6. Reblogged this on The ObamaCrat™.

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    1. Thank you, Jueseppi! Very sweet of you. 🙂

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    2. My pleasure Mr. David. 😉

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  7. I would not expect anything less from you than such unique view of love poetry…I shall be looking forward to these posts. Do you recall what Mae West said about love? “I never loved another person the way I loved myself.” 🙂

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    1. haha, great quote! 🙂 I’ll do my best not to let you down with future editions. I already have next week’s recorded.

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  8. The best part of Millay is her humor — sometimes it’s subtle, sometimes its as sharp as anything Dorothy Parker ever wrote.

    A nice poem to begin the series with …. Love in all its many forms.

    And, as always, a stellar reading.

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    1. Thank you so much, John! I appreciate it. Isn’t it cool to know, from your recent post, that Edna St. Vincent Millay has stimulated our medial temporal lobes! 🙂

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  9. […] a Thursday Love Poem, you ask? Well, let me quote myself from last Thursday, when we enjoyed the first ever Thursday Love Poem here on the blog. Last week we were dumped unceremoniously by Edna St. Vincent Millay via the […]

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  10. […] A Thursday Love Poem by Edna St. Vincent Millay (dadpoet.wordpress.com) […]

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  11. […] A Thursday Love Poem by Edna St. Vincent Millay (dadpoet.wordpress.com) […]

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  12. […] and sometimes it’s a downright anti-love poem, as in the flagship poem of this feature, Edna Saint Vincent Millay’s “Thursday.”  If you aren’t familiar with it I encourage you to follow the link, but for now, here is the […]

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  13. […] to thinking of our new-ish Thursday Love Poem feature, inspired by the flagship poem of lot, “Thursday,” by Edna St. Vincent […]

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  14. […] Thursday Love Poem, a feature based on the quirky poem by Edna St. Vincent Millay called “Thursday.” In that flagship post I said that a Thursday Poem has “got to be a bit […]

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  15. […] started this occasional feature back in October with the poem which serves as its flagship piece, “Thursday,” by Edna St. Vincent Millay. If you want to get an idea of what a Thursday Love Poem is here on the Dad Poet, just remember the […]

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  16. […] due for another Thursday Love poem feature, and so in the spirit of “Thursday,” a sort-of love poem by one of my poetic heroines, Edna St. Vincent Millay, I give you a […]

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  17. […] it is Thursday, the day for the infamous Thursday Love Poem . But it’s only Thursday for a little while so maybe we are close enough to Flashback Friday […]

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  18. […] Now, it’s been a while since our last Thursday Love Poem feature, since September in fact, so let’s review. What exactly qualifies? Well, a Thursday Love Poem is a love poem that is unique, not quite what you’d expect, a very different way of looking at love, and possibly not one fit for a Valentine’s Card. You can click right here to see all of the Thursday Love Poems we’ve shared, including Richard Blanco’s “Killing Mark,” my own poem about a Chinese cleaver, Dorothy Parker’s “One Perfect Rose,” and of course the TLP’s namesake, “Thursday,” by Edna St. Vincent Millay. […]

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  19. […] Meanwhile, it is Thursday and we are way overdue for one of those peculiar animals we call Thursday Love Poems. If you remember, the Thursday Love Poem “is not your grandmother’s love poem, baby.” It’s something rather different, usually unconventional, and generally not appropriate for Valentine’s Day. To get the idea, just look at our flagship poem for this feature, a tart little piece by Edna St. Vincent Millay called “Thursday.” […]

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  20. […] throughout the year is the Thursday Love Poem, inspired by Edna St. Vincent Milay’s “Thursday,” though I confess that “Killing Mark,” by Richard Blanco is my favorite in that […]

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  21. […] you’re a new visitor and don’t know what a Thursday Love Poem is, you can check out the original here.  The feature is based on Edna St. Vincent Millay’s  poem called “Thursday,” […]

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  22. […] her works quite frequently, in over a half a dozen posts, in fact. And she keeps showing up in our Thursday Love Poem feature as well since it is based on her little piece called […]

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  23. […] was posted almost five years ago, and you can check it out with my reading of that little piece by clicking here. An […]

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  24. […] feature, but if I haven’t already linked you to death in part one of this post, check out the original Thursday Love Poem feature about the poem that is the flagship and namesake of TLP, a poem by Edna […]

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