Archive for Love

Heartwrenching

Operation

The town froze, close as a fist.

Winter was setting about us.

Like birds the bare trees shivered,

Birds without leaves or nests

As the fog took over.

 

My words were all gone, my tongue sour.

We sat in the car like the dead

Awaiting the dead. Your hair

Wept round your face like a willow

Unstirring. Your eyes were dry.

 

Unbodied, like smoke in the crowd,

You vanished. Later came violence.

Not that you felt it or cared,

Swaddled in drugs, apart

In some fractured, offensive dream,

While a bog-Irish nurse mopped up.

 

“Leave me. I’m bleeding. I bleed

Still. But he didn’t hurt me.”

Pale as the dead. As the dead

Fragile. Vague as the city

Now the fog chokes down again.

A life was pitched out like garbage.

 

“I bleed still. A boy, they said.”

My blood stings like a river

Lurching over the falls.

My hands are bloody. My mind

Is rinsed with it. Blood fails me.

You lie like the dead, still bleeding,

While his fingers, unformed, unerring,

Hold us and pick us to pieces.

-A. Alvarez

 

 

When I first read the first couple stanzas of this poem I immediately pictured a movie scene depicting a couple sitting in a car breaking up or fighting. I don’t know why this image came to mind, but it did, so I kept reading. As I read further into the poem the “movie scene” seemed to develop more and more in my minds eye. The last stanza caught me a little off-guard because it was so seemingly gruesome with all of the talk of blood. Unlike most poems this one seemed more like a story and I think that’s because of the mental image that automatically came to me somehow. I reread this poem and decided that- to me- the last stanza isn’t meant to be disturbingly gruesome, but is meant to show the true emotional pain felt by the victim of the situation.

I really like how Alvarez starts off by shutting down the city and describing how the fog takes over. It’s almost as if he is describing that single moment you hear the worst news you can think of. Everything shuts down and confusion (fog) sets in. He then continues to write as the victim (who I picture as a girl) and she says that her words have all run out and her mouth unable to form any. It’s in that moment that nothing matters, all other pain- no matter how bad- doesn’t seem to hurt, just like the line where he wrote “Later came violence./Not that you felt it or cared…” Reading through the poem was like walking through a treacherous path of bad news, worlds crashing down, confused thoughts, lack of emotion and physical feeling (to the pain) then transforming into anger still flooded with confusion, finally breaking down and feeling the pain, everyone around you slowly coming back into view and seeing your pain and then reflecting back on him and how he tore you to peices… such is the line “While his fingers, unformed, unerring,/hold us and pick us to pieces.”

I think it was a greatly written poem and it took a lot to digest and understand. It was a little more difficult than most poems I choose, but I thoroughly enjoyed and I think it is slowly becoming one of my favorites.

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Advice that I never take

Title: Song in Spite of Myself

Author: Countee Cullen

 

Never love with all your heart,

     It only ends in aching;

And bit by bit to the smallest part

    That organ will be breaking.

 

Never love with all your mind,

     It only ends in fretting;

In musing on sweet joys behind,

     Too poignant for forgetting.

 

Never love with all your soul,

    For such there is no ending,

Though a mind that frets may find control,

     And a shattered heart find mending.

 

Give but a grain of the heart’s rich seed,

     Confine some under cover,

And when love goes, bid him God-speed.

     And find another lover.

 

 

I chose this poem because it is the advice that I never take when getting into a relationship. I agree completely with the poem, and yet I never listen to what it says when I’m caught up in the moment of love. I think it means a lot to love, but the hurt that comes from the ending love is never worth all of the pain that one goes through. This poem describes love and heartache to a tee and gives great wisdom and insight into the matter. I think it is a good poem because it after each statement it gives the reason for why not to do what it says. For example, I don’t find myself asking why not to fall in love with all my heart.

Countee Cullen was a great poet and wrote many other sorts of things such as plays, he was also an anthologist and a black activist minister. I think he wrote about something that is very easy to connect with and something that everyone can understand at some point or another in life. That is why I find it to be such a great and greatly written poem.

 

I like the way Countee wrote this poem. The way he states his opinion, then gives a reason for why he feels that way. It also gives it a nice flow the way every other line rhymes. This way- without making every line rhyme- it gives it a more mature and yet still continuous, easy flowing feeling. I believe part of the reason he wrote it the way that he did has something to do with the fact that he was a minister. It has that church sort of state and respond feel to it. Although I am not a huge religious fanatic (I belive my own things), I like his point of view and can very easily relate to the messages in this poem. The messages being that love is hard, it can hurt if you put everything you have into it and get nothing back or if the love ends.

 

My favorite part is the ending. Throughout the entire poem Countee is giving reasons not to love with all your heart and all your soul, but in the 2nd to last stanza he admits that one can find control and be mended. Then in the last stanza he makes for one last push of advice to save some of the “heart’s rich seed” and keep it hidden in case your heart should break, at least you’ll have this small part to go back to and start again.

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