Tuesday, February 12, 2008

my mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun

this poem has a humerous side to it because the speaker is making fun of someone. he is picking out aspects that we are used to hearing boasted about and instead is downgrading them. he does this in a nonchalant way; not a mean, point-your-finger obvious kind of way. the author uses similies to enhance his picece by comparing red coral to the mistress' lips. he also uses a metaphore where he compares her hair to black wires. this poem makes me think that the speaker must have thought very hard over how much he dislikes his mistress' appearence to be able to come up with words and ideas such as these.

on her loving two equally

i thought the title for this poem was interesting and i dwelled a bit on it before reading the actual poem. it caught my eye becuase of the way it is structured. we don't normally see words phrased like these. the poem has a dramatic tone. the speaker is caught between loving two men. she can't make up her mind which she wants to be with. the poem is structured in a unique way in which she numbers her stanzas. this makes me think that the speaker is having three complete and different thoughts. when i read the poem i got an image of a woman musing over two men, thinking and daydreaming about it at random intervals. the first two stanzas seem more connected than the third one. in the third stanza the speaker seems cross and desperate about deciding which boy she wants to be with.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Emily Dickinson

Idiosyncrasy- a characteristic, habit, mannerism, or the like, that is peculiar to an individual.

This poem was fun to read because of it’s sing-songy rhyming scheme, and also because it is humorous, and also because it makes a very good point. Emily Dickinson’s work is confusing and hard to read sometimes, but since she was so good at what she did, she got away with it.

Metrical feet

This poem is one of the most interesting I’ve ever read. The first thing that caught my eye was that it almost has two different titles “metrical feet” and “lesson for a boy”. I think this is really significant because the poem does have a double meaning. It teaches the reader about metrical feet and it seems as though it is also a lesson for a young boy. The speaker is someone who cares about the child and his fond of him as hinted in lines 17 through 20. I also enjoyed the creativity with which the author used personification throughout the piece. I wonder if this piece really helped the kids it was written about and for or if they looked at it and rolled their eyes.

Saturday, February 9, 2008

the word plum

i think this poem would work great as a slam poetry in mpiece. they way it is written with some words in italics already hints at how different words should be spoken outloud. this poem is tight because the words seem to express what goes on in a person's mind and mouth when they bite into a plum. when i read this poem, in mind i see a person's mouth in profile, their teeth pushing into a purple fruit. i like how the words chosen for this piece are abstract, yet they describe the action of eating a plum perfectly.

i am like a rose

this poem seemed to me to be about a man who is very pleased and proud of himself. he says he is like that one perfect rose that you single out from a bunch of average roses. it seems like he feels he is above anyone right now. like he has worked really hard and made it to the top by his sweat and blood and hard work alone.

song

i really liked this poem becuase it seemed so happy. i really got a sense of young love. roses seem like something that young loves give one another. once the relationship gets older, roses seem to steriotypically end after awhile so it just made me think that this was still a strong, budding relationship. the man is telling the rose what he actually wants to tell his lover. that she should not be shy, but should come with him and go out and about where she can be seen as beautiful.

lenigrad cemery, winter of 1941

this poem was one of those morbid ones about death i deffinatly don't like, but some of the imagery helped to paint better pictures to make it bearable. the similies were cool, like in the third stanza where the speaker compares the wrapped corpses to butterflys in caccoons where a "new life inside is prepared". i interpreted this as these are the me going to heaven, the ones who are saved. they have a new life in heaven. the next two lines after this seem to refer to the men who are not religious and are not saved. the last three lines where interesting becuase they hint that even though life is so hard in this war that these men are in, they don't want to leave it, that they would keep fighting forever if they could.

wild nights-wild nights!

this poem by emily dickinson was amusing to me because there was a definate hint of sexual playfulness in it. i interpreted the first line and title of the piece to mean the speaker is referring to hot, wild nights ful of lustfull loving. the first stanza with the word "should" makes me think that the author doesn't get these wild nights all the time that she speaks about. the lines "done with the compass/done with the chart reminded me of a woma's menstral cycle. some couples keep a chart of the woman's period so that they can have sex when she is least likely to get pregnant. the third stanza seems to speak compleatly about a sexal act. she is saying she wants to be in "Eden" in a place of perfection and bliss with her lover.

Monday, February 4, 2008

marks

marks by linda pastan is a great metaphorical poem that is in someways also humerous. the protagonist is a wife and mother who is being graded rather harshly by her husband and children. she is given a range of grades from an A to an average C, and it is concluded that over all she passes at her position. just passing, however, is not good enough for her and she announces that she will leave them all because they don't appreciate her enough. it is interesting that the speaker doesn't show any hostility or remorse toward her decision. she announces it as if it is her triumph over them. she thinks she's gonna show them all once she is not there to do everything for them.

Sunday, February 3, 2008

what time of year thou mayst in me behold

this poem had an immediate tone of sadness to it. the fact that it compared the dying of the year to the dying individual was not unique, but nonetheless it's clever. usually shhakespeare is extreamly difficult for me to understand, but with this poem i didn't have too much trouble. most of it was written in words that we still use today which helped. the first two lines which talked about few yellow leaves refered to autumn or winter, the time when the year is coming to an end and not only the year, but everything is dying. the part about the "boughs which shake against the cold" gave me the impression that the individual is afraid of dying. in the fifth line "the twilight of such a day" seems to refer as well to the protagonist dying because his life is coming to an end. as twilight comes to the end of the day. in the eight line i thought the word "rest" was significat becuase the line refers to sleep taking over, but rest makes me think of how we write "rest in peace" on tombstones and so i relate this line to death as well. the next two lines are interesting because they relate the man's dying youth to his dying self in the present time. i am a little confused as to who the 'he' is in the tenth line. throughout the poem it seems as though the speaker in the poem is talking to someone about how they would see him. the person the speaker is referring to must be a lover as hinted in the last two lines. the speaker refers to her love becoming "more strong" and then refers back to his death when she must leave him before long.

Friday, February 1, 2008

delight in disorder

this poem seemed to me to be about a man who is expressing his love for women who are not perfect but who are all over the place. he calls disorder "sweet"and calls distraction "fine". i think it turns him on to see woman whoe's clothes are all in disarray. i like his use of the word "wantonness". it's very creative and different. when i first read this poem i took the first line literally in that he was refering to a woman as a "sweet disorder" which clothes wants to automatically be on. i'm not sure why the speaker is so infatuated with woman who appear this way, but my guess it's the same raw infatuation that guys find with girls who have just awoken in the morning.

my papa's waltz

i believe this poem was written from a man looking back on his childhood because it was written about in past tense and in an adult voice. i though the use of the word death in the third line was harsh for this poem, but it made the boy sound as if he were afraid. afraid to let go and didnt' compleatly trust his father to support him. in the second stanza we are introduced to the mother and we get a hint in the 8th and 9th lines that she is always unhappy with her husband's drinking behavior. the father is described as having battered knuckles and dirt smudged hands hinting that he is a rough houser and used to difficult work and a difficult way of survival.

slim cunning hands

cozen: To mislead by means of a petty trick or fraud; deceive

this poem caught my attention because poems about death usually to. it's a really common subject, so it's interesting to see how people write about it so differently. the word choice in this poem is awsome. the author used words such as cunning, cozen, and false to constantly declare how deciving this person was in life. the poem says no one could write on her stone how untrue she was. then in the next line it controdicts itself and says that she was more beautful than any flower on earth. what i gathered from this poem that it was about a whore who was killed at a young age who was never true to any man nor herself, but was beautiful even in death.

the golf links lie so near the mill

this poem sounds ironic and sad at the same time. it almost has a sarcastic tone. the children who work in the mills are watching the grown men play golf. the word choice is interesting because the author chose to use "laboring" instead of just labor. the "ing" makes the word slow down and makes it feel like the work the children do is long and tedious. the "men at play" line sounds ironic becuase we are used to hearing children at play instead.

hawthorne

young goodman brown was a hard story for me to get through. i found it compleatly boring and the fact that i had so fuch figurative language in it made it difficult to get a jist of it at a glance. it requires some deep thinking to really understand the story the way the author intended. im not sure if i believe goodman brown actually met with the devil or if he simply went into the forest and had a dream. i'm curious to know if his father and his father before him really met up with the devil as the evil man said they had, if they had been as profoudly effected as goodman brown was. it seemed significant in the story that the goodman was so shocked that his elders whoem he thought so highly of, were to go the same evil path that he was taking. i think using the name Faith in the story really enhanced it because it has such a double meaning. we know the husband is literally afraid of loosing his wife, as well as he is afraid of loosing his faith with God. all the symbolism, such as the devil carrying a stick that looks like an evil respresenting snake, made this story so deep and powerful.