Slow and steady, this poem will win your heart
(www.nytimes.com)
js2 21 hours ago mcphage 15 hours ago This works a lot better than the archive link—they have the same text, but the archive link loses all of the JS, and so the page doesn’t make a lot of sense. Here you see it interactive, and—it’s a fun way to read a poem :-)m3kw9 7 hours ago What’s a gift link?zem 1 hours ago a link shared by a subscriber that lets nonsubscribers access an otherwise paywalled article
b0a04gl 17 hours ago thankyou
b0a04gl 17 hours ago >She lives below luck-level, never imagining some lottery will change her load of pottery to wings.nails the mindset where imagining change doesn’t even happen. it’s not about failing to win. it’s about never thinking you’re in the draw. that kind of mental floor sits deep.
dash2 8 hours ago Aaaagh nooo, why have you converted this lovely poem into a feeble fable about a "winning mindset"?
jihadjihad 11 hours ago Poem itself is from 1994. If you'd like to read the text by itself, you can do so here:https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/50611/turtle-56d22dd3...
zem 56 minutes ago "shell-y skylark" was brilliant (:dash2 8 hours ago Here is another poem about a weak, slow creature:https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/57076/the-armadillo
There is a hint of war in there.
tptacek 21 hours ago Why this poem in particular?pvg 21 hours ago Because it's turtles all the way down.defrost 20 hours ago Somewhere Beyond the Last Visible Dog .. https://delphine-angua.blogspot.com/2008/05/why-last-visible...
mrholme 21 hours ago It is not about the particular poem.. It was about the innovative ux aporoach of showing the poem stanza in context of the review.. but unfortunately the archive link strips this javascript feature. Try opening the page in private or alternate browser and If you are able to bypass the paywall, you can enjoy it.b0a04gl 17 hours ago yeah i got what it was going for eventually, but tbh it was annoying at first. the scroll interaction wasn’t clear and it broke the reading flow. felt more like a bug than a feature until i slowed down and figured it out. the context jumps were jarring too. didn’t really help with continuity.goldfeld 9 hours ago > until i slowed downMaybe the poem has a message
IncreasePosts 9 hours ago A gift link was posted in this threadmcphage 15 hours ago > It is not about the particular poem.The particular poem itself is also quite nice.
p3rls 14 hours ago Some things are best left to a youtube production team.
js2 21 hours ago Why not?> Because even as this poem is about what it’s like to be a turtle, it’s also about what it’s like for a turtle to be a metaphor. And — you could say therefore — about how looking at (or as) a turtle illuminates what it’s like to be a person, a woman, a poet.
tptacek 21 hours ago No good reason! I'm genuinely curious.goldfeld 9 hours ago I think maybe the reason is more arbitrary, as here look at this 90s author's symbolism, it's not just the old classics that are readable in-depth; contemporary style etcjs2 12 hours ago I thought it was answered by the article and the line I quoted. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
svat 8 hours ago The "More from A.O. Scott" at the bottom of the article links to:• "Life Isn’t Perfect. But This Poem Might Be." March 21, 2025 (“Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers,” by Adrienne Rich, 1951) https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/03/21/books/adrienn...
• "I Would Follow This Poem to Hell and Back" Feb. 21, 2025 (“my dreams, my works, must wait till after hell,” from SELECTED POEMS, copyright ©1963 by Gwendolyn Brooks) https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/02/21/books/gwendol...
• "I Swear This Poem Didn’t Make Me Cry" Jan. 23, 2025 (“From a Photograph,” from NEW COLLECTED POEMS, copyright ©1962 by George Oppen) https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/01/24/books/george-...
• "Will You Fall in Love With This Poem? I Did." Dec. 18, 2024 (“Romantic Poet,” by Diane Seuss, 2024) https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/12/18/books/romanti...
• "A Poem About Waiting, and Wishing You Had a Drink" Nov. 1, 2024 (“Party Politics,” from “The Complete Poems,” by Philip Larkin. originally 1984?) https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/11/01/books/philip-...
• "A Poem That’s Like a Perfect First Date" April 11, 2024 (“Having a Coke With You,” by Frank O’Hara, copyright © 1971) https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/04/11/books/frank-o...
So it appears that this one is part of a series (previously called "Close Read" as in the last link above: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/arts/close-read.htm...): every few weeks / months, A. O. Scott writes about some poem he's liked, in this format (all of them say "Produced by Aliza Aufrichtig, Alicia DeSantis, Nick Donofrio and Emily Eakin").
darepublic 16 hours ago Patience, the sport of truly chastened thingsneonate 22 hours ago tiktokcoins100 20 hours ago [dead]tiktokcoins100 20 hours ago [dead]troupo 16 hours ago [flagged]spiderfarmer 16 hours ago That’s why I like poems that adhere to a specific structure.
absurdo 22 hours ago [flagged]mrholme 22 hours ago Not an affiliate, nor a fan of nytimes.. Not sure why the title was changed and the context removed from the submission. I was highlighting an interesting ux where the review of the poem appears in context to the verses. And I could skip login in my private window in brave.tomhow 22 hours ago You seem to be a new contributor to HN, so, welcome!It's our policy and well-established convention here that we use the same title as the original article, with the only exception being if the original title is misleading or baity, in which case we'll try and lift an appropriate phrase from the article (including the URL, or a subtitle, or a photo caption).
A title that editorializes or makes a meta-commentary about the article is against that policy.
It's nothing personal! We make these changes to titles every day, and over the years we've found it serves our purposes very well.
evertedsphere 21 hours ago also, you can leave a comment on your own post highlighting what you found interesting about the linkmrholme 21 hours ago Thanks..my bad for not going through the rules on titles..
tomhow 21 hours ago We know it's an imperfect solution but it's the least-worst solution. We'd lose far more than we'd gain if we banned all paywalled content, as it's such a huge share of the total body of content (esp. when weighted by masthead prominence and traffic) on the web. But it's also a policy that it doesn't belong on HN if there's no easy way around the paywall. We don't want to list anything that's not freely accessible for everyone, reasonably easily.pvg 22 hours ago This is a long-settled HN practice - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10178989
tetris11 19 hours ago [flagged]dctoedt 16 hours ago > NYtimes are testing their new AI's summarization capabilities?It's attributed to A.O. Scott, who's been around for awhile.
idiotsecant 14 hours ago The text of the story does seem AI-ish, but I think the idea is that this story has a somewhat unique presentation. I don't understand why it's on HN frontpage, exactly, but it is pretty innovative for the NY Times.
_ink_ 20 hours ago [flagged]