Friday, January 24, 2014

Poetry Blog

Analysis for Richard Cory by By Edwin Arlington Robinson.
Page 327

This poem depicts the situation of a man who has what some would call everything. Power, wealth and class, he is seen from the view point of the lower class, those who had nothing as somebody who must have everything he could want. He is envied for his status by the starving lower class, who wish that they could be in his place. All of this envy is contradicted when Richard Cory kills himself. This creates an ironic situation, as everyone around him wanted to be him, and yet, as seen from his suicide, he was depressed despite all of the wealth and status. The tone of this poem is one of reality, and a shattering of perceptions of what makes someone value their life. The idea that no one is immune to sadness and depression show how all humans are in essence the same, that rather then the lower class starving people wishing for death, it was the upper class with a comfortable life who would seek their own end. The lower class who envied Richard Cory actually hold onto hope and the wishful idea that their lives could improve. The tone of this poem proves to be a depiction of the great equalizer of humanities general similarities, nobody is immune to apathy or depression.

My personal interpretation of this poem is that it describes human thoughts and interactions through the comparison of success and wealth to poverty and lack of status. In the poem it is clearly represented that depression is not limited by status, and that hope and willingness to go on can be held by someone of any status. I found these to be strong representations of how humans are all, at the most basic level, the same and that while social status can aid in comfortable living, it is still a human construct, and does little to change the tendencies and feelings the human mind experiences.


Analysis for There's a certain slant of light by Emily Dickinson
Page 283

In There's a certain slant of light by Emily Dickinson, a scene is set of the light on a winter day, which acts as a symbol for the coming of death. Dickinson describes this light as "An imperial affliction, sent us of the air." which can be seen as metaphor for ascent to heaven, as the poem describes the light as it comes upon the landscape, as being on the look of death. The symbol of death and the metaphor of the light being a path to heaven are continued by the use of winter afternoons, as winter is a season of dying, and the afternoon being the later part of the day. The poem also states that the light is heavenly hurt, and it speaks of internal difference where meanings are, these could be interpreted to be an explanation of the feelings that those swept up in the death of winter feel, as the lines "where the meanings are" could refer to a search for understanding about the slant of light, or an understanding of death, and heaven.

In my interpretation of this poem, I found there to be a strong feeling of wonder about the inevitability of what can be viewed as a heavenly light, coming to collect from earth for death. I viewed the lines "None may teach it any- 'Tis the seal despair, an imperial affliction sent us of the air" to be a commentary of the unyielding and uncompromising of death, and how no one has anything to do or say that might change it.