Poem

Courage

Jack Kerouac
Wonder if my poem title will be acceptable. (The Absence of Courage) I. Courage is an interesting virtue. The only difference between courage and unrealistic hopefulness is success. Courage to me means standing up against injustice, or atleast finding the strength to do something your character or the outside world would rather you didn't do. It's that noble buck with big horns we admire and have the deepest of respect for, it's that noble buck with big horns we like to shoot down and hang on our walls. Like the tobacco in a cigarette, the only way to draw it out from the depths of your character is to embrace it and set it on fire. But don't take more than you can handle, or you might find yourself coughing up the illogical notion, the practicality of your subconscious triumphing. Bite off just enough, enough to sustain hope, but not enough to defeat the cowardice in your soul to the point where you altogether snuff restraint and self doubt. II. I have seen courage in a number of places, in the sun for it's miraculous overpowering of darkness every morning, in a woman who decides to have a child despite life threatening consequences. I've seen it mainly in action movies, where it exists without the natural predators of insecurity and sensibility found in the real world. I've seen it in the insurrection of children who decide to just say yes, I've seen it in the cynical gaze of withered old addicts who are trying to say no. Courage, it's a wonderful thing. It's both a blessing and a curse. Embrace it and harness it, but do it in moderation, or it might get the better of your self-doubt and sensibility.

One poem every morning.

6,130 poems from Shakespeare to Tupac. Read one a day. Save the ones that stay.
Free on the App Store.