Monday, April 30, 2007

A Blessing by James Wright

I chose this poem because of my ability to actually paint a picture in my mind of what this poet is writing about. He uses such wonderful imagery and descriptive words that it is very easy to really understand what the poet is speaking about. I also really like the tone that is provided in the poem. I think that is makes the reader fell a sense of calmness because of the calmness of the ponies and their meeting with the friends. What is also interesting is that the poet tells us that the ponies love each other, how does he know that? I believe that it is sensed by his meeting them and seeing them graze together. The last lines of the poem really show the great expression that is coming from the people that have met the ponies. They feel such wonderful feelings that to woman believes that if she were having an outerbody experience that she would be in blossom like a flower. This poem is beautiful in many ways but I really love the way that it makes the reader feel.

The Picnic, an Homage to Civil Rights

I liked this poem because it relates something a simple as a picnic to our freedom as citizens of our country. The idea that we are free to set up "camp" and enjoy the environment is something that we take for granted. I think that his poem opens up the readers eye to this and the importance of our forefathers and all they did for us. This poem brings about new language in a way about being free. I would not normally think of freedom and a picnic as going hand in hand. Yet, they are so similar in a way. On a picnic one is free to enjoy the outdoors and not be shut up in a house. We are able to eat our food prepared from the earth and enjoy it while sitting on the very ground that it came from. This in a way is poignant because you are enjoying both events in nature. The idea of being with your family is another thing that this poem points out and it is all about being silly and free with them. Being able to do what you want and enjoy the day together is what family is all about. Without our civil rights we would not be able to play baseball or jump in a community pool. I think that this poem is one that allows this freedom to be thought about on a deeper level.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Keeping Things Whole by Mark Strand

After reading all of the assigned poems for today's blog I came back to this one only. This poem to be is very interesting because it is written about a topic that no one ever really talks about. The idea that the space that you are occuping is no longer filled with air, but with you, is an idea that is odd to think about. Yet, the idea is still there, when you are somewhere, that space is then different. I think that this poem holds a lot of poignancy within it because it does address the idea that when you are somewhere, you are the absense of that very place. Does this make you feel empty inside? Because when you are just in air's space, does that mean that your insides don't count. To be wherever you and be what is missing in fact is something that is hard to understand fully. I had to go over this idea in my mind before it made sense to me, I think that is what I like about this poem exactly. This idea of occupying a space but then becoming what was in that space before is reason enough to keep moving to keep things "whole". This poem deals with the time/space measurement because in a way you are measuring what is taking up the space at the given point in time. This poem to me poses an interesting idea and I think is written well.

Monday, April 23, 2007

Richard Cory by Edwin Arlington Robinson

I like this poem because it speaks the truth. It is often the person that has everything that essentially has nothing. The story of this man that had everything and the way that peopled admired him made me believe that something bad was going to happen to him, therefore I guess you could say that this poem is predictable. But, in a way it is very poignant because it is full of wisdom. The idea of having everything you could ever want is something that most people dream about, but what is there to look forward to in life without a dream. I think that Richard Cory's life is very much kept private from outsiders but they all see him walking down the streets and make a stereotype about him. They want to know more about his life and in the end, I guess they get what they want because once he is dead they will probably know everything that they wanted to know. This poem is teaching us that no matter how much you have in life you will not necessarily be happy, you must be happy with what you have and have a goal and live for that goal. It sounds very "fantasy like" but in all honesty it is true. "Too much of a good thing is never enough" is a common saying that expresses so much of what this poem is all about. I think that the author of the poem got their point across very clearly.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

The Middle-Aged by Adrienne Rich

I choose this poem because of the new language that it held for me. This poem speaks of the idea of happiness not really being our in our parent's house. It was their happiness and we just lived in it. It was them who made the nice atmosphere and the comfort of our bedrooms. What is interesing to me, poignant maybe, is that when we become middle-aged ourselves is when we are able to see that this was not our happiness in our childhood homes and that all the secrets that you were unaware of are more conscious now. I think that this poem is speaking about public life because it is something that happends to everyone, as believed by the poet. I, believe that you are happy IN your families happiness, you add to it and make it your own. I think that this poets belief is rather negative. I would like to believe that after returing to your childhood home you remember all the great things that occured there and remember the fond memories that were made there. The idea of getting old in a house is happiness, but it is shared with those who occupy it. I'm not sure if I am taking this poem too literally, but I think of this idea of unhappiness and it makes me disagree, that is my stand on the poem.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Edge by Sylvia Plath

I chose this poem because it is written purely about the public spectre of this woman's life. She, her dead body, is being viewed and people are commenting on her body and life. They say that she is of perfection and looks like she has accomplished a lot in her life by the way her feet look. I too, believe that you can tell a lot about a person by the way that they look, but it is of noone's business to be judging someone that way. I think in a way that the persona that this poem is projecting is one that is judgemental. This Greek woman, in her toga, is being judged on display. What is interesting to me is that the children that are around her are said to be "folded" back into her body. This image is one that is hard to put to life but I believe the poet is expressing that this woman was caring and loved children. I am not actually all positive that I am taking this poem the correct way, but I find it hard to see more into this poem that its literal language. I guess this poem to me is new language because I am unaware of what the last line of this poem is referring to. Is she actually a black woman? Is she the owner of slaves who follow her? What I like about this poem is that there are so many unanswered questions and there is a lot of room for interpretation.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Ave Maria by Frank O'Hara

This poem stuck me as interesting because of the poignancy that is related through the story. The poet is explaining the difficulty that children have when they lead sheltered lives, they are willing to try anything that they have not tried before and do not know what is wrong or right. On the other hand, he is explaining that children that are allowed to go out of their houses and experience life, even through the movies, have an understanding of life decisions and their effects. This is poignant to me because the children that lead sheltered lives are usually the ones that lash out against their upbringing once they are set "free", when the children that have been exposed to life are more respectful of their upbringing. The poet depicts the situation of being allowed to go to the movies because when you watch a movie you are almost in another world, you are allowed to leave your life and pretend to be in another. This experience is one that can not be imitated and the poet believes that it is an important one to experience. The way that he presents his poem is interesting because of his line spacing. In a way it looks like he is seperating different thoughts but when read together make sense. I think that this poem is teaching a lesson to parents and therefore is full of wisdom by the way that it is poignant.