Just time for a short post presenting a short musical piece made from a short poem by Sara Teasdale. Teasdale’s “A Prayer” goes over some of the same ground (or gravely, below ground) as her better-known poem “I Shall Not Care,” each poem ending a telling stanza with a variation of and end-of-life caring not.* But of the two, “A Prayer” is more positive and less bitter. “I Shall Not Care” posits the grave’s lack of care as justice for lack of care from a lover, “A Prayer’s” poetic voice vows careless love throughout a lifetime regardless of the elusiveness of mutual love.
Simple enough music for this short piece, though the F Major 7th is a favorite alternative flavor of mine. I also enjoyed coming up with the snap modulation in the little section between the two verses.
.
While working with this poem this past week I thought too of Teasdale’s contemporary Robert Frost’s proposed epitaph that he wrote at the end of a much longer poem of his:
I would have written of me on my stone:
I had a lover’s quarrel with the world.
You can hear my musical performance of Teasdale’s poem with the audio player gadget below. If you can’t see that gadget, I shall not care, because I’ve provided this highlighted link for you that will instead open a new browser tab with it’s own audio player.
*”I Shall Not Care” was my introduction to Teasdale’s work, as I recount it this post from early in the Parlando Project about how a musical performance of it helped inspire how I do these things.