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Reconsidering Icarus

This beautiful poem connects perfectly to this issue’s play, “Into the Burning Sun.”

By Jennifer Dignan
From the February 2020 Issue

Reconsidering Icarus

Imagining staring at the rough stone walls

and the cold dirt floor

listening to the laughs and screams

of hyenas just outside.

Did it not require

a measure of hubris to think

“I will find another way”?


Absent outsize ambition

outsize courage

outsize confidence

would we ever have left our caves?


And everything that followed—

pyramids and ocean crossings

the Mona Lisa

Shakespeare’s plays

horseless carriages and electric lights

heart surgery, airplanes, iPhones

rockets blasting into space—


would any of it have come about

had no one ever dipped

into the spray of breaking waves

or soared to where the sun could melt

the wax on their beautiful wings?

This poem was originally published in the February 2020 issue.

Step-by-Step Lesson Plan

Close Reading, Critical Thinking, Skill Building

1. READING THE POEM

2. ANALYZING THE POEM

  • A man with wings flies toward the sun

    Drama

    Into the Burning Sun

    Icarus receives an amazing power. Can he handle it?

  • A woman jogging through a city.

    Fiction

    Aftershocks

    An earthquake ripped apart her country. Now it’s ripping apart her family.

  • A boy laughs and points at a TikTok video of himself. A girl gives the thumbs down to a cat video

    Debate Scavenger Hunt

    Does TikTok Belong in School?

    Two students at Elmwood Middle School face off in their school newspaper. Who makes the stronger argument?

  • Article

    Poem

    Your World

    This sweet poem by Georgia Douglas Johnson, the celebrated poet of the Harlem Renaissance, is the perfect note to end the year on.

  • Article

    Poem

    Valentine for Ernest Mann

    A beautiful poem by Naomi Shihab Nye

  • Article

    Poem

    What My Name Means

    A beautiful poem about identity by Jennifer Dignan

Text-to-Speech