“I think that I shall never see
A billboard lovely as a tree.
Indeed, unless the billboards fall,
I'll never see a tree at all.”

—  Ogden Nash

"Song of the Open Road" — this poem is a parody of "Trees" by Joyce Kilmer
Many Long Years Ago (1945)

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Do you have more details about the quote "I think that I shall never see A billboard lovely as a tree. Indeed, unless the billboards fall, I'll never see a tr…" by Ogden Nash?
Ogden Nash photo
Ogden Nash 125
American poet 1902–1971

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“I think that I shall never see
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"Trees" - This poem was first published in Poetry: A Magazine of Verse Vol. 2 (August 1913). The first two lines were first written down on the 2nd of February 1913.
Trees and Other Poems (1914)
Source: Trees & Other Poems
Context: I think that I shall never see
A poem lovely as a tree.
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Against the earth's sweet flowing breast;
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“Sometimes I think I would love to see … just to see the beauty of flowers and trees and birds and the earth and grass. … Being as I've never seen, I don't know what it's like to see. So in a sense I'm complete.”

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“This is not seeing the trees instead of the forest, this is seeing the bark on the trees, this very concreteness.”

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Context: Schizophrenics have a whole lot of trouble telling the level of abstraction of a story. They're always biased in the direction of interpreting things more concretely than is actually the case. You would take a schizopohrenic and say, "Okay, what do apples, bananas and oranges have in common?" and they would say, "They all are multi-syllabic words."
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