We, the living knowledge, remember it –
difficult ideas, things of beauty – struggle was
the gift given up voluntarily, like a
candy comforter, where rotten teeth bring pleasure.
We build new campfires with old tales to listen to
and think on the past – it was a pleasure to burn.
Written for dVerse – golden shovel and, once again, utilising Punam’s dVerse prompt, which asked us to use opening lines from books as closing lines to poems. This one is “It was a pleasure to burn,” from Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury. Could this then be considered a golden triangle?
Today’s Daily Stoic poem:

Interesting selection in which to base your golden shovel. It is definitely a two for one in prompts. A golden triangle? perhaps….it can be whatever you want it to be…
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Thanks Truedessa 🙏 What was interesting for you about using this as a base?
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I found it an interesting selection as it is relevant in today’s world. Censorship and distorted reality seems to be everywhere. We need to contemplate the past to understand where we are headed.
Much to ponder….
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Great. This is the direction I most want to give my writing. Thanks Truedessa 🙏
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I think it’s cool that you combined the two prompts with this burning idea.
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Thanks D. 🙏
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I’ve read your post three times….much to think about here. “We, the living knowledge, remember it” is striking to me, especially in today’s political climate. We are the containers of history….we can attest to it after being in it. The inhabitants of history inevitably die and then the stories and evidence of it that are passed on to the next generations, via a museum or oral history or photo albums or artifacts becomes our view. And how horiffic when individuals or a “movement” seek to change the “truth”. Deny what was seen and heard by some still living. Or rewrite history by erasing it, or telling lies so many times that repetition seems to become and “alternative truth”. We recently saw the 2025 documentary The Librarians. I highly recommend it. It documents the ban the books movement that is happening across the country. From the perspective of the librarians.
Thank you for this post….obviously really has me thinking.
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Thanks for your thoughts Lillian 🙏 I don’t know that documentary but will look out for it. It sounds interesting 👍
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I agree with Liliian, lots of ideas to unwrap in this poem, also I loved the idea of a new form of poetry the golden triangle. You made it fit so well both the last words and the sum of the words at the end.Moreover, there’s nothing as satisfying as an ‘ol fashioned fire and letting it burn 🔥
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Thanks so much Cara 🙏
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I never read a “banned” book ( or burned one) but I did watch a supposedly inflammatory film that you had to request the university library to view, Leni Riefenstahl’s “Triumph of the Will”. Today, there are far more lies floating round with free access and everybody in separate bubbles – so no debate. Perhaps we all need to get round a campfire…
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I just looked up that film. If it was made by Trump today, do you think it would be subject to the same scrutiny?
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Never read these Andrew?
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
*1984* by George Orwell
Animal Farm by George Orwell
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
Ulysses by James Joyce
Lady Chatterley’s Lover by D.H. Lawrence
Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller
The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck
*Catch-22* by Joseph Heller
Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
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Oh no, I have read slmost all of those, I meant I have never been told I couldn’t read a book and accepted it – we don’t go in for book banning much here although Lady Chatterley was, but not by the time I read it. We just watched Cacth 22 directed by George Clooney. I don’t think Slaughterhouse 5 has been dramatised but Kurt Voonnegut is one of my favourite authors.
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I still haven’t read Catch-22 yet. How was the movie version?
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We can learn a lot from history but some of us don’t and so we repeat the “mistakes” of the past. Thanks for trying out the shovel form and incorporating the last line. Always good to experiment with forms.
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Thanks Grace 🙏.
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“struggle was
the gift given up voluntarily”
What a great line.
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Agreed! I like that one too and it is something I have to remember as the school semester is about to start again! Thanks Mish 🙏
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Oh dear! You keep amazing me, Shaun. This little verse packs so much. I love the opening line as well as the line Mish quoted. So much to think, so much to delve into. I also love the idea of golden triangle. Thanks, Shaun.🙏🏼
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Thanks Punam 🙏 I have another one for you tomorrow (if I remember correctly). 👍
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You are welcome, Shaun. Great! I look forward to it
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