First, A Poem Must Be Magical
Jose Garcia Villa
First, a poem must be magical,
Then musical as a seagull.
It must be a brightness moving
And hold secret a bird’s flowering
It must be slender as a bell
, And it must hold fire as well.
It must have the wisdom of bows
And it must kneel like a rose.
It must be able to hear
The luminance of dove and deer.
It must be able to hide
What it seeks, like a bride.
And over all I would like to hover
God, smiling from the poem’s cover.
The poem is a presentation of the characteristics of a great poem. Basically, it is an instructional poem
about writing a poem. Like the first poem we focused on, it is presented in a direct manner wherein it
already stated its main point on the first line clearly that a poem must be magical. Then other
characteristics in connection with being magical followed. Notice that the structure of the poem has the
traditional rhyme scheme of two consecutive lines: A, A, B, B, C, C, D, D, E, E, F, F, G, G. The imageries,
choices of words and figures of speech suggested literal meanings. The structure and the technique
made the poem easy to decode. The poem turned out to be an informative one because of the over-all
way of writing it