Sunday, October 3, 2010

Rivers that lead to Happiness



James Langston Hughes was born on February 1, 1902. Overall he had a very simple life and began to write his poetry in Lincoln Illinois. He did attend Columbia University in Mexico and than took on a few odd jobs as an assistant cook, launderer, and a busboy, and than traveled to Africa and Europe working as a seaman. Reading his biography i noticed that Hughes claimed Paul Laurence, Carl Sandburg and Walt Whitman as his primary influences. He is particularly known for his insightful, colorful portrayals of black life in America from the twenties through the sixties. I felt that is important to realize that all of the poets named above influenced his writing. Each one of this individuals had an important impact on the way that Hughes wrote and i felt that it was important for one to understand how each one of the poets influenced Hughes in their own way.

Paul Laurence was one of the first African Americans to gain national recognition. During his day he freed slaves from Kentucky. Both of his parents separated shortly after his birth, however Laurence would talk about the stories of plantation life throughout all of his works. Even though Laurence was a fine student he was unable to attend college because of his finical situation so he took a job as a elevator operator. He went on to make a self published collection called Oak and Ivy and sold copies in his elevator for a dollar for the people that rode his elevator. With that being said he had an overall successful carrer but i feel influenced Hughes because of his writing about life on the plantation. In Hughes poem The Negro Speaks of River he talks about many rivers and how life was during the time period in which he lived in. This poem was talking about how dangerous the rivers were during this period because slavery was very popular. One could be sold down the Mississippi River and be working for the rest of their lives. I feel like Hughes had a direct affect on Hughes poetry because of him describing the slavery life, like Laurence talked about in his poems of the days on the planation.

Carl Sandburg was a poet that had a different life. His life was a rough one and he had emigrated from Sweden. His family was very poor and Carl left school at the age of 13 to take on odd jobs from laying bricks to dishwashing to try to support his family. He traveled to Kansas as a hobo, than served in the Spanish American War. He attended Lombard for four years and was able to become known as a poet. Over time his work became known by others and he was starting to write in the free verse like Whitman had cultivated in college. I feel like Carl Sandburg contributed to the way that he wrote because of his free verse poetry. There was no one structure to the way that everything was said. It was all freely put into a poem and had a lot of meaning that was built deep inside of the words.

Last but not least Walt Whitman was the last influence that Hughes had. He had a family with 9 sisters and brothers. At the age of 12 he began to learn the printers trade and fell in love with the written word. He was a man that taught himself most of the things that he learned and he read a lot becoming familiar with the works of Homer, Dante, Shakespeare along with the Bible. He founded a newspapers called the Long Islander and edited a large group of Brooklyn and New York papers. There is not a doubt in my mind that this man could not have had any affect of Hughes. He worked hard all of his life and did everything himself. He did not go to others for help and basically self taught himself everything he was able to accomplish. He was very successful writing in many places and becoming well known. I feel that because of his reliance on nobody it helped Hughes to write poetry that way and to not have to rely on anyone to get the things he wanted done.







Sunday, September 26, 2010

E.E. Cummings Cake: Sexy and Scrumptious


         E.E. Cummings is to poetry as red velvet or chocolate is to cake, the sexy version. Edward Estlin Cummings, born on October 14, 1894, is mostly known for his radical experimentation “with form, punctuation, spelling and syntax, abandoning traditional techniques and structures.” He also attained great popularity for the playful mode of his poetry and his attention to subjects such as war and, of course, SEX. In cake terms, Cummings' poem "may i feel said he" is reminiscent of perhaps a sweet German triple-chocolate cake with a fudge icing and strawberries abound. Needless to say, this poem is sexy and scandalous. It has bad written all over it, just like chocolate cake. The poem describes the actual process of adultery being acted. His message is that one action leads to another and everything comes down to choice. Will you choose to be unfaithful? Will you choose to eat yet another piece of that sinfully scrumptious cake? It's all about the choices we make, good or bad.
        Many of the poems written by Cummings are of sexual and romantic love that delight and provoke. A collection of his such poetry was published, fittingly entitled Erotic Poems. This collection includes several poems with illustrations (by him) that are sure to get your pulse racing. Cummings' highly provocative poetry won over his young readers who were able to relate to the informality and naivete found within his poems. However, he was popular among older readers as well. A highly celebrated poet of all ages, Cummings was awarded several honors and awards including the Academy of American Poets Fellowship in 1950, two Guggenheim Fellowships in 1933, and the Bollingen Prize in Poetry in 1957. Having created a new, highly idiosyncratic means of poetic expression, E.E. Cummings was one of the most widely-read poets of his generation. He died on September 3, 1962. However, his wonderfully exotic and boundary-pushing poems will live on forever. Suffice it to say, the red velvet/chocolate cakes his poems are compared to, in all their lavishness, will not.



Passion, Pleasure, Pain.

You weaken my cries for stability
You clear my soul
You overthrow any insecurity
You make me whole

You crush me slowly
You puncture my heart
leaving it lifeless
remaining in parts

But...

You love so beautifully
You claim my existing
Without You, Pain's unceasing
Lifeline decreasing

You're killing me softly
with with all of me that you gain
Don't know where i would be
without you Passion
Your Pleasure,
Your Pain.

The balance of passion, pleasure, and pain in a relationship is absolutely vital in my opinion. I feel as though these three power houses word cohesively to maintain a strong relationship between two people. If there is no pain, then your passion isn't strong enough. The thought of even sharing your mate with someone else should cause you pain to some degree. If your have no pleasure, then your passion isn't strong enough. I have learned from personal experiences that if you aren't excited to see the one you are with, if it doesn't pleasure you to be around that person, then there is no passion there. Therefore, one should reconsider the reasons why they are with that person. The title of this post was inspired by the contemporary singer Trey Songz. His songs are basically about the strengths, weaknesses and the intensity of love in relationships. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xPd4Qp-Pdew&ob=av2e. I believe that loving someone is one of the hardest things someone can do. Maintaining that love is even harder. Maybe considering reasons for being in love would make the whole process a piece of cake!

Its a Hard Knock Life

Its a hard knock life and was a tough one for one of my favorite poets Dorothy Paker. She started writing many poems at a young age and did not even get to finish school, being a high-school dropout at age 14. However this did not stop her one bit from becoming a successful poet, hence the fact that her childhood was a very unhappy one. Her mother and step-mother died when she was young; her uncle, Martin Rothschild went down on the Titanic in 1912; and her father had died the following year. In the year of 1914 she sold her first poem to Vanity fair and took an editorial position at Vogue. Even though she had such a harsh life following all the deaths she lived a successful life but did suffer from depression and alcoholism and attempted suicide.
Parker is one of my favorite poets without a doubt. She uses Parallelismus Membrorum in which she evokes many different emotions by the different words and phrases that she uses. An example of this would be the poem "Resume". This is a direct connection of her life, she uses deep imagery by using these powerful words to allow to reader to feel a certain way. This is a very strong poem especially because she is talking about suicide, and the various ways that one can take their life through this poem. When she states "razors pain you... gas smells awful: you might as well live". She is telling her readers that she has been through a very tough life. She describes the pain that she's been through with the razors and says that even though even though her life has been a huge downfall she lived through it and was successful. Her poems give me the chills because of how she writes. I feel like i am viewing her life through her eyes because of how vivd she makes her poems.
Another example would be "The Lady's Reward" because of the rhyme scheme that she sets up. She does such a great job with this because she is able to give the reader a snapshot of her life within this poem. I feel that i can relate to this poem because of a specific line within the poem which was to "never speak of the tears that burn your cheek". This shows me that no matter how much something is bothering you, don't be yourself around other people. It just makes me feel like i can relate because sometimes one doesn't want to express themselves about what is going on in their life because it is just to painful to tell to other people. However i feel that there is hope to let certain people know about what is going on so it just doesn't build up inside and become worse. She makes me feel this way because i don't want to have the same thoughts about leaving this earth before my time.
I have to say that Parkers is a very powerful poet in general because of what she is able to express through her poems. She evokes several feelings and even though she had a "hard knock life" she was able to be successful. Everyone has rough times in life and nothing is ever perfect. However it all gets better in time.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Frost-ing

         I'm serving up my weekly slice of vanilla cake with loads of Robert Frost-ing. That was clever wasn't it? I thought so. Robert Frost, a world-renowned poet to this day, stood at the crossroads of nineteenth-century American poetry and Modernism. To put it in cake terms, his poetry was marble, not all chocolate and not all vanilla. His poetry had the best of both…flavors. Similar to the nineteenth-century Romantics of poetry, Frost states that a poem is “never a put-up job… it begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a loneliness. It is never a thought to begin with. It is at its best when it is a tantalizing vagueness.” A little melancholy of Frost, wouldn’t you say? His romantic heart needs some comfort food; cake perhaps? In the more modern sense, Frost “upheld T.S. Eliot’s idea that the man who suffers and the artist who creates are totally separate.”
         Robert Frost is one of my favorite poets! He is a true New Englander at heart, and really includes regionalism and “sound of sense” into his many, many poems. One characteristic that I particularly like about Frost is that he steers clear of politics, religion, or mysticism in his poetry. Rather, he reflects on the realism, the beauty of nature and simplicity in the world. His poetry cake is not cluttered and masked by mounds of sprinkles and icing designs; it is delicious within itself. However, Frost’s poetry cakes are certainly layered. Some can even stretch to five or more tiers. To the reader (or taster) it’s like looking at the cake from the top. The idea is simple and there is one layer of cake to eat. But as the taster discovers and examines the different layers, it becomes a much more complicated and significant cake. I hope I’m not being too complicated in my cake metaphors. To put it simply, Frost bakes in hidden meanings within his poems. You may need to read a poem several times, but after a while, the tiers start to fall away and new meanings emerge. Stated in his own words, “Poetry provides the one permissible way of saying one thing and meaning another.” Genius!
         One popular example of this method is Frost’s poem, “The Road Not Taken.” This poem can be interpreted in seemingly infinite ways. The literal interpretation of this poem is that one man actually stood in the middle of the woods at a fork in the road with two pathways. He pondered the idea of each path before choosing one. The poem can also be interpreted as a metaphor for life. Some man (or woman) found themselves at a crossroads/ an important decision in their life that would change the course of their life forever. Once they have made the decision, they would never be in that same exact place again. In cake terms, if someone decides to eat an entire cake on such and such date at such and such time, they will never make that decision again at that exact time. We are always moving forward, and we can never go back.
         Frost made many of these important crossroad decisions and had many great accomplishments through his life. He published several compilations of poetry, won two Pulitzer Prizes, read one of his poems at the 1961 presidential inauguration of John F. Kennedy, had a mountain named after him in Ripton, Vermont and a library named after him in Amherst, Massachusetts. Frost once stated, “if poetry isn’t understanding all, the whole world, then it isn’t worth anything.”
         A truly celebrated individual, Robert Frost is like the Cake Boss of poetry. 

Right or Wrong?

While taking this poetry class it has made me ponder a lot about the basic ideas of poetry. I have always been timid whether to discuss how I feel on a certain piece of work because I was worried whether my response would be right or wrong. Whether or not I would be made fun of because of my interpretation on the certain work, or maybe because my response didn't agree with everyone else's. However I have learned to break this barrier and have quickly learned that there is no right or wrong to the way that poetry is viewed. In "The Road not Taken" by Robert Frost he has shown me that there is no right or wrong way in the way that things are viewed. There isn't just one interpretation to something that is read such as his poem. Like Frost stated in his poem one of the roads was more grassy than the other and "needed wear". With this I feel that it is more unique to stray away from the normal way of thinking. With taking the road that needs wear, you are taking more of a chance to have other people think about the ideas that you put dish out on the table. As long as you have evidence to support your idea why should one be wrong? Robert Frost believed that poetry comes from a lump in the throat. This meant a lot me because I felt this means that it comes from what you are feeling at a certain moment in time. When writing poems for this class I felt that there always had to be a correct idea that everyone had to agree on, a correct structure and a rhyme scheme that was well organized. However when Frost rhymed erratically and lacked everything that I thought needed to be there I quickly learned that there was no right or wrong to poetry. All in all reading many different types of works has lead me to the conclusion that there is not a right or wrong to poetry. This has been a learning process with reading all the different types of poetry. A right or wrong is not possible because it is simply an interpretation on how you feel on a certain subject.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Educational or Destructive?

I love poetry, it's as simple as that. I always have. Like most of my generation, I have been taught to read, write, analyze, and depict meaning out of poems from the beginning of my education. As a kid, my favorite authors were Shel Silverstein and Doctor Seuss, both classics. I would read their collections of poetry cover to cover. Last week, I read a few children's poems at the age of sixteen. With my now more accute ability to analyze and understand a poem, what I came to find was rather unsettling. Many of the poems presented incredibly mature and quite morbid ideas for their audience. I wondered if the children reading these poems were able to understand the dark meanings that lie underneath, or if that was left undiscovered by their naive eyes. I hoped that they were not yet able to depict the meaning of certain poems, because some could certainly traumatize and negatively affect their poor innocent and curious minds. With all of the rising issues in mental health, including suicide, eating disorders, and social disorders, I wonder, is an introduction to such mature and advanced poetry at this age to blame?

Sunday, September 12, 2010

The Light Side of Love

The Light Side of Love

Roses are red
Violets are blue
The sky constantly reminds me of you

Just so you know theres a space
that only you can fill
Just so you know i loved you then
and always will

To be honest this is one of the best english classes that i have ever taken. Poetry has opened my eyes up to something new. It has showed me that it is extremely crucial to be able to express oneself in many ways. In addition it has showed me that words can be extremely powerful and have a great deal of meaning when writing Poetry. This is something that i did not realize before coming into this class. I would never have thought that I would be writing about my gorgeous girlfriend, or how i felt on a certain day, or about describing a tomato. Without a doubt i felt it extremely hard to write and overall read my poetry out loud to others. However i now i feel that a comfortable environment has been created, and i am no longer worried about reading my work aloud to other people. I always had a view that poetry was just for girls but i now know that it is not and there is nothing wrong with expressing yourself. I enjoy this class ALOT and am looking forward to future assignments. In my opinion i feel that it was important to see when Tennyson waited forever for Emily Sellwood because he did not have financial support in
the beginning. Even though that this man waited so long to finally marry the woman of his dreams it made his life incredibly happier in the long run. His marriage to emily sellwood made his life happier, especially with the two children that they had.Through reading this poem it has shown me that this without question this was true love. To be able to wait so many years and finally be happy to be with the one that you waited so long to be with. In Robert Brownings "How They Brought the Good News From Ghent to Aix" it describes a trip that occurs with all of the horses. It shows how important the news was that needed to get to the destination and how each of the horses struggled to get to the place. Each of the horses had broke down but finally the last horse Roland got him to the finally place. It shows the strong connection between character and horse. How he carried on no matter how hard the going got. It broke my heart when he poured his last bit of wine down the horses throat. Overall in the class it has taught me to analyze poems for meaning as well as strong connections. I feel by the end of this class i might be a poet myself pouring poetry icing all over the place.