To Learn What I've Forgotten

To learn what I've forgotten:
A very great thing, indeed.
To know the names of heros and kings,
To know the facts and figures of things,
To learn what I've forgotten.

To learn what I've forgotten:
A very wise thing, indeed.
To speak with words of perfect choice
To speak with confidence in my voice,
To learn what I've forgotten.

To learn what I've forgotten:
A very hard thing, indeed.
To remember the things I have studied,
To remember the things time has muddied,
To learn what I've forgotten.

Comments

This is why we have reference books. They free up time for us to add to human knowledge rather than regurgitate stuff that has been learned by 1 trillion people before.
serapio said…
To flee what time's begotten:
A grander dream, forsooth.
To let go the themes of fallen kings,
To loose your larynx-binding strings,
To flee what time's begotten.

To flee what time's begotten:
A finer thing, forsooth.
To lose the brand of horrid sights,
Ignore our unrelenting blights,
To flee what time's begotten.

To flee what time's begotten:
A harder thing, forsooth.
To hide the harrowing world from view,
To know only blossoms, birds and dew,
To flee what time's begotten.
slowlane said…
I was mostly just mourning the fact that I've forgotten just about all of the Greek I once learned, all of the ASL signs I once knew, most of the higher math I once could figure, and the IPA I once could write in.
serapio said…
Such are the consequences of old age. It will be even worse when you're as old as I am. I can still do the math, but my Greek, ASL and IPA are pretty sorry. I can't even remember what it was like to know Greek or ASL.

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