Tuesday, October 25, 2016

"NOT BAD, DAD, NOT BAD " by Jan Heller Levi the writer is telling us about a father and daughter relationship.The writer uses "swimming" through out the poem to show metaphor of the relationship between the daughter and father. For instance " I think you are most yourself when you're swimming;"(1). This lines shows that using the word swimming means struggle and trying to be the best that you can for me.
I really like this poem because the speaker shows the struggle that one father can have when raising a daughter. " I think how different everything might have been / had I judged your loving / like I judge your sidestroke, your butterfly, / your Australian crawl." I noticed this stanza out of all the stanzas because it talks about how the daughter thinks her father is doing everything wrong raising her "every stroke" was different and always wrong.
However, out of everything she understands what really matters. that effort is worth more than anything. Like in the last stanza, " But I always thought I was drowning / in that icy ocean between us, / I always thought you were moving too slowly to save me, / when you were moving as fast as you can." The writer explains that you can only do so much.  

Wednesday, October 12, 2016



The Total Opposite
By Kendrick Young

“If you look closely at a word, you'll find it contains its opposite” by Stephanie Gray is a very good poem. It's so weird with what she talks about but very true and it makes you really really think about it. Gray makes you think of the bad in something and then the good in something bad.

In the poem she uses repetition and she talks about a different topic every 4 lines or so. In the poem Gray starts talking about music hearing from lines 1-9. My favorite part of the poem is lines 2-5. Gary states “What part of deaf is hearing. What part of hearing is silence. What part of silence is noise. What part of I don't know is i totally know. What part of I totally know is i don't, really”. It makes you think what is she talking about. If you are deaf you can't hear period so there is no part of hearing anything. You can kind of hear silence because it's very quiet. Then she loses me by describing the i don't know part.

Gray also states in lines 22-23 “ what part of tickets to poetry are roads to nowhere. What part of roads to nowhere are keys to something. What I admire about them lines is how she mentions the road to poetry in a poem. I feel as if a road anywhere is a key to something because a journey anywhere has a destination and your destination impacts your life no matter what. I think that's what she means by that line.

Overall it's a good poem, she really makes you think and try to contradict yourself, because she has a lot of weird but interesting topics.

Sunday, October 9, 2016

"Die soon"

                In the poem "We real cool" by Gwendolyn Brooks, Brooks uses only 4 stanzas to show that every action has a consequence especially with people who try to portray themselves as "cool", Which I personally think is great because some people don't understand the concept of consequences and they should know those who choose to do the wrong thing "Die soon" as quoted from line 8 in the poem, Brooks uses We a lot in the poem but instead of using it at the beginning of a line she uses "we" at the end, like a reverse litany.
                Brooks begins the poem with "We real cool. We/ Left school"  in lines 1-2 so they're obviously students, in the next lines 3-4 Brooks writes "We/ lurk late. We/ Strike straight", I would assume they would start fights with others throughout the night. But the line that stands out most to me or anyone for that matter would be the last line. Line #8 "We/ jazz June. We/ Die soon" because throughout the poem every action has had a sort of negative consequence and the last consequence of living a bad life would be a death that has come early.

Saturday, October 8, 2016

Beautiful Woman of Terror


     In "Night Madness Poem" by Sandra Cisneros, the author uses profound diction and imagery. The speaker elaborates on her own characteristics, which reflect how pretentious she is. What makes everything a bit more interesting is that she knows it and also enjoys it.
     Line 29 says, "I'm a woman delighted with her disasters." The speaker is being provocative which actually is the tone of this entire piece. A prideful woman is boasting throughout this poem, which was the purpose of Cisneros. This poem allows the reader to feel every word written in this poem because it feels as though every word that drips from the speaker is softly spoken but very harsh at the same time. The combination of two completely different attitudes is sweet and sour, which is very appealing to the audience.
     In Lines 7-10, we see the speaker say "I'm the crazy lady they warned you about. / The she of rumor talked about - / and worse, who talks." The speaker is describing her lack of silence as the poet presents to us diction.  This woman isn't afraid of what others think, therefore she lets her tongue loose, although she knows it may backfire.
     The 9th stanza says, "Choose your weapon. / Mine- the telephone, my tongue. / Both black as a gun." Here, we see POWER! This is where we see the beauty! The Speaker understands that she may be a bit terrifying with her attitude and with her words but she also tells us that she understands that these are weapons which makes this entire poem exciting. Remember, that your words have a lot of power behind them, use them wisely!

Friday, October 7, 2016

Poetry Response 3


Makayla Sheffield
AP-Literature 1st hour
7 October, 2016
Poetry Response #3

“Potions” by Yusef Komunyakaa the speaker is telling us a story about how you can give people hope. In the poem the speaker states “They carried /Photos, locks of hair, nail clippings,/ & the first three words of a wish.” ( lines 14-16). These lines signify that the people visiting the potion lady were hopeful she could grant their three wishes.
The Speaker is presumably telling a story about a witch. Obviously why the title is
“Potions”. I can most definitely relate to lines (2-3), “ Candy for children/ Who’d bolt through her front door.” These specific lines are relatable because as a kid I would run for ice cream or to the liquor store to get a sweet treat. Komunyakaa connects with a younger audience by appealing to something that they would like. I believe this is a great way to generate a larger audience on one genre.
Also Komunyakaa organizes his poem so that each stanza is 4 lines exactly. This is unique because maybe the  number four holds some type of significance to the speaker of the poem or reflects him in some way.

Yusef Komunyakaa personalizes the story maybe to reflect some of his personal life but to also allow his reader to connect with him and stay interested.

Interchanges

Shaylia Smith
Ms. Locano
Ap Literature-1        
7 October 2016

                                                         Interchanges

     Interchanges by Yannis Ritsos is an extraordinary poem that has depth to it. It's a very simple poem which is one of the main reasons why I like it. It's simplicity has depth to it and it intrigues me a lot. It is very evident that she's the author of the poem, not the speaker.This short poem uses syntax, tone and imagery to help build the elements of this perfect poem.

      Ritsos uses the literary device syntax to his/her advantage. Her wordplay that helps the poem be unique in it's own way is beautiful. "If only you knew how beautiful your mouth is / you would kiss me on the eyes that I might not see you." lines (9-10). What the last stanza of the poem is expressing the desire of another person. It has a meaning of hope and I can relate to that. I believe that everyone should have hope. 

    The tone of this story is so calming. It really brings out the simplicity and bountifulness of the poem. The poem uses tone all throughout the poem and it gives off a vibe that I think is good to have and that I like. "They took the plough to the field, / they brought the field into the house— / an endless interchange shaped / the meaning of things." lines (1-4). The first stanza of the poem gives off an aura that is spread throughout the poem. The tone is so natural. I really enjoy the tone because it's easy to understand. I also noticed that Ritsos used a hyphen as an structural shift to show that the poem was about to get more into depth.

      Imagery in a poem is the best thing ever. It's better for me as a reader to be able to picture what the author is trying to write and what the speaker is trying to say. Imagery in this poem is an important element to notice and understand. "The woman changed places with the swallow, / she sat in the swallow’s nest on the roof and warbled. / The swallow sat at the woman’s loom and wove / stars, birds, flowers, fishing boats, and fish." lines (5-8). This stanza is an example of how important imagery is. This stanza helps readers understand what's going on in the story, what's happening, and etc.. Knowing what the setting was like and what the people in the poem are doing is very important. I like how Ritsos made sure to include some.


     This poem that is beautifully written by Ritsos is a poem that stands out. It stands out to me in a beautiful antique type of way. It embodies simplicity, is natural and is full of hope and I couldn't help but like it. It embodies all of the qualities and elements that is great for any poem and reader.



Interchanges by Yannis Ritsos
Kyannah Harris
AP Literature- 4th
October 7, 2016

Poetry Response #3

Nikki Giovanni's poem "The Girl with the Flaxen Hair" shows us a very vivid comparison between blacks and whites. In the poem the speakers talks about having to pick cotton meanwhile the other woman (white) has the luxury to sit inside all day and do nothing but have people cater to her. Giovanni uses imagery, and diction to depict slavery. 

In lines 5-6 Giovanni writes "she has lips soft and pink/" "my woman's lips burn in midday sun." This imagery helps show us how hard the work of this black woman actually is. And Giovanni also uses fiction to help her audience know that the woman whom she is comparing the woman of color to is  indefinitely white. She writes "The Girl with the Flaxen Hair," which really translate to the girl with blonde hair. But Giovanni makes her audience mind wonder what the heck is flaxen and what does this have to do with the character and that is your answer.

Nikki Giovanni is an excellent poet and I look forward to reading more of her poetry in the future! 

Just Another Poetry Response

            "The Victims" by Sharon Olds is a longer poem about the speaker talking to their father. At the start of the poem the speaker says, "When Mother divorced you, we were glad" (1). By only reading the first line of Olds' poem you can clearly tell that this is a story about a child and a father. As I continued to read the poem I noticed that the speaker hated their father just as much as their mother did. I felt like this happened because the mother wanted her kids to hate their father. You notice this when the speaker says, "She had taught us to take it, to hate you and take it / until we pricked with her for your / annihilation, Father" ( 15-17). In these lines, I can clearly tell that the mother wanted her kids to hate their father so that the mother can eventually get a divorce. As stated by the speaker earlier in the poem, the speaker, and their siblings were finally happy as their father left only because the mother helped to nurture that hatred.
            Later on, in Olds' poem you can notice a meaning shift from the speaker. The first half of the poem the speaker was talking about their hatred for their father and how the speaker was happy when he left. The second half of the poem the speaker goes to talk about their own self and how they realized just exactly what their father's life was like. This meaning shift happens in lines 16 - 18 when the speaker says, "until we pricked with her for your / annihilation, Father. Now I / pass the bums in doorways".


"The Victims" By Sharon Olds

In “Dis Poetry”, Benjamin Zephaniah gives his perspective on how his poetry is composed. Throughout the entire piece, I can tell that Zephaniah does not care to obtain praise or criticism for his poetry. He writes in a way that readers can understand what he feels, something that I very much admire. “Dis Poetry” is written in its own unique language with each line carrying its own powerful meaning.
Zephaniah mentions in the first stanza that the speaker explains how his poetry is different and isn’t really meant to be analyzed. This is evident when the poem states, “Dis poetry is not Party Political / Not designed fe dose who are critical.” (8-9). I like the thought of poetry not being categorized and not having to over think what some lines mean, even though I’m doing that now.
In the second stanza, I enjoy how the speaker talks about who poetry is written for. The poem explains, “Dis poetry is quick an childish / Dis poetry is fe de wise an foolish, / Anybody can do it fe free, / Dis poetry is fe yu an me, / DonÕt stretch yu imagination / Dis poetry is fe de good of de Nation,” (29-34). Basically the speaker is saying poetry can be and should be understood by everyone.

Obviously, Zephaniah is very creative in his writing style. The colloquialism used in this poem makes the statements in the lines a little more familiar. The familiarity and combination of the words give the perspective Zephaniah was shooting for. “Dis Poetry” inspires me to become a little more creative in the way I write. 
Poetry Response #3 

   After reading "I can write the saddest verses tonight" by Pablo Neruda a couple times, I noticed that he uses the repetition of "I can write the saddest verses tonight" as a way of getting the words to stick and stand out. 
  
  I like this poem a lot because it's yet another poem that i'm able to relate and connect through from past experiences. It's like after each repetition of the phrase there's lines that basically explains the phrase and tells a story. For example, lines 11-12 "I can write the saddest verses tonight. / To think that I don't have her.To feel that I have lost her." Not only was that line helping tell the story but it also stuck with me because immediately after reading those lines, I could image what the speaker was feeling, how I was feeling, and who came to mind.
  
  What i also found interesting about the poem is the fact that the speaker used an example before telling the story, lines 2-3 "Write, for example, ""The night is full of star, / twinkling blue, in the distance."" It gave me an idea of what can be considered 'sad'.

Love VS Pain

Ariana Towns
Poetry Response #3


“is it true the ribs can tell
The kick of a beast from a
Lover’s fist? The bruised
Bones recorded well
The sudden shock, the
Hard impact. Then swollen lids,
Sorry eyes, spoke not
Of lost romance, but hurt.
Hate often is confused. Its
Limits are in zones beyond itself. And
Sadists will not learn that
Love, by nature, exacts a pain
Unequalled on the rack.”

                                                         "Some kind of love, some say"

               In the poem "Some kind of love, some say" by Maya Angelou, it talks about physical abuse being looked at as some form of love to those who believe abuse is only done because of it. In the poem, the speaker who is unknown implies that others do not understand the love and abuse that everyone else does. I interpreted this because it says in lines 11-13, "Sadists will not learn / Love, by nature, exacts a pain / Unequalled on the rack". The speaker is telling us that people who enjoy inflicting pain on others will never know that love by itself can cause a type of pain that isn't equal to the physical or sexual pain one causes. Sometimes it's merely something more than just sexual abuse. The poem helps the readers understand that so often abuse, violence or rape is couched as love. It is described as caring to try to lessen the harsh reality of power and control. It is placed in a category that some would say is love but others will not.

                Angelou believes poetry is a spiritual role and I agree with her because you have to be able to see something within one's writing. Two lines that stick out to me in the poem said, "Hate is often confused. / Its limits are in zones beyond itself" (9- 10). This caught my attention because the society I was raised in hate could only mean one simple thing. For it to be able to get confused with something else made me question what exactly qualifies as hate. The poem talks about the ribs being able to tell the difference between a violent and loving touch. How it keeps a record of shock, hits, and hurt. Although, how does the body know whether the violent hit is out of love or not? In my mind, this is how a person who deals with physical abuse would manipulate the situation into seeming less harmful. The speaker, however, wants readers to understand that there are limits to love and limits to violence and once those limits are crossed nothing will be equal ever again. 
                         



Poetry Response #3

Kirin Tate 
Ms. Locano 
AP Lit 
6 October 2016 
Poetry Response #3 - Don't Change On My Account 
     Shel Silverstein’s poem “Don't Change On My Account” is probably one of many poems by him 
that I love. Growing up I read so many poems by Shel Silverstein and didn't even know. I think that's why I'm in love with poems that rhyme so much because, I've grown up reading his poems. Almost all of his poems are super relatable and make me laugh. This poem in particular made me laugh because if it didn't have a title already the title would be “Kirin”. When I read the title of this poem I thought for sure that it was going to be sentimental, and about why you shouldn't change your personality for others. In the poem it even says “whatever you are is all okay” (line 9). I was reading and thought “wow this is such an inspiring poem.” The narrator tells the reader “If you're fat, that's fine with me. // If you're skinny let it be.” (Line 3,4) I was thinking the total opposite of what the poem actually was, and boy was I in for a surprise. 
     When I finally read the last line of the poem, I bust out laughing. The way the reader is lead on to believe something completely different from the actual meaning of the poem is so funny to me. Silverstein uses a great shift right at the end of the poem. He set the mood and then totally switched it up. My favorite line, if it wasn't, obvious already is “I don't like you anyway.” (Line 10). That line made this one of my all time favorite poems. I do actually like people but sometimes that is exactly how I feel. There is always a Shel Silverstein poem to express my mood, or make me laugh. That's why he's one of my favorite poets. 

Thursday, October 6, 2016

Home in Our Hearts


In the poem "Home" by Warsan Shire, she dives into the hardships of immigrants. The poem dips into several things you would see on your way out of a war torn country, like young children being apart of militia groups, having to hide inside trucks over long distances, and the painful choices you have to make along the way. In my opinion this poem means that your survival is more important than your pride. The speaker says in lines 29-34, "no one spends days and nights on the stomach of a truck / feeding on newspaper unless the miles traveled / means something more than the journey / no one crawls under fences / no one wants to be beaten / pitied..." Shire is expressing in these lines that even though this is something no one wants to do they do it because if they don't they may die or be subjected to more horrors. As you go on the road to a better life you must forget pride and accept help and shame to survive. That message is so powerful to me since I've never had to forget my pride for my survival, and this poem stresses how one may not be viable at all times with the other.

I love this poem because she uses so much imagery and tone to carry a powerful message to all readers. She emulates so many exhausting emotions that real immigration and refugees feel. Shire writes in lines 15-22, "it’s not something you ever thought of doing / until the blade burnt threats into / your neck / and even then you carried the anthem under / your breath / only tearing up your passport in an airport toilets / sobbing as each mouthful of paper / made it clear that you wouldn’t be going back." Tone and imagery are both at work there, it expresses that your country is no longer safe you have now been forced to leave and its very sad, but you still love your country. Doing the best for yourself is always hard when it's something you shouldn't be made to do. Which is why these lines, and this poem as a whole is so emotional and raw.

Poetry response to "My father's loveletters"


ANESHA PORTER-GRIFFIN

 In the poem "My Father's Loveletters " by Yusef  Komunyakaa, the author really reaches me on a personal level. The poem is about having parents in an abusive relationship and being there to witness it.
      The speaker says in lines 7-9 "I was almost happy / she was gone, & sometimes wanted / to slip in something bad." The speaker portrays the same feelings I had except I was gone with her, the dread of knowing that one day it can go back to how it once was is present in the words.
    In lines 5-7 "He'd beg her / return & promised to never beat her again"  words that are always said for a trap. Komunyakaa uses familiarity and mood to portray the emotions in the speaker.  In line 3 it says "the same letter" , meaning these are reprated words to the mother, broken promises she refuses to acknowledge.
       The author wrote of such a realistic experience it's hard not to become enticed all that's being spoken to me.
The author also used diction calling the silence they sit in "quiet brutality"(17). The lack of sound expressing their inner thoughts of either she'll fall for it and come back or that she'll rise above and stay gone never to return.
   The speakers story is beautifully portrayed by Komunyakaa.
   AP LIT(1st)
Poetry Response 3
      “If I Were Paul” by Mark Jarman is a religious poem. In the poem, the speaker is unknown but speaks as if they were Paul from the biblical story. The beginning of the stanzas begin with the word “consider” , making us think about the beauty of our lives. I interpreted this poem as Paul’s message when he sent the letter out to various churches. I gathered this from the last lines of the second stanza. “I send you this not knowing if you will receive it, or if having received it, / you will read it, or if / having read it, you will know that it contains my blessing.”(40-42). This poem is very dear to my heart especially since my family is deeply religious and I am familiar with the story of Paul.
     One line that resonated with me was in the eighth stanza. The lines read, “Bless each other with the heart and soul, the hand and eye, the head and / foot, the lips, tongue,”(33-34). This drew me in because it was what I was taught growing up. This is a lesson I still hold dearly today even if I do question my religion sometimes. Bless one another even if you are feuding, fighting, or scrapping. Bless and love with every fiber of your being because what you give is what you get. Love and don’t let go until the cows come home.

Patrick Responds to "Jasmine" by Yusef Komunyakaa

In "Jasmine" by Yusef Komunyakaa. The speaker (a first person narrator) expresses the atmosphere of a jazz club while also telling the reader about a scent that takes him back to a familiar place.
 I admire the way the imagery allows you to be apart of the story. From lines 1-6 the speaker sets the tone for the reader and gives insight on how he feels.  He drifts between what's currently happening in the club, how he feels about it, and the sweet smell of jasmine that he can't figure out which of the two ladies he's sitting with is wearing.
 The insights to the club, /Elvin's sticks/ and /the blue fantasia of the clubs atmosphere/ (lines 2 & 3) and again with /Richard Davis plucks at the fat notes/ /of chance on his uprights/ (lines 14 and 15) allows the speaker to transition from his mind to the club and back to the women.
The speaker also shows how he's grown and  talks about people that have affected his life and how he views this very situation. In lines 5-7 he recollects / how I'd cross the street/ /if a woman like these two walked/ /towards me/. He the goes on and gives us this golden view of what his grandmother's would say if the saw him now /They'd say ,Boy the devil never sleeps/ (lines 11).
 The fragrance of jasmine close by is what the speaker comes back to repetitively. His thoughts about the past  and his in depth imagery of the club always ends back up with the scent of jasmine. The scent the woman (we later find out its the brunette) is wearing  bring the speaker to a place of attraction and lush.
 The way Komunyakaa has the poem flowing and shifting the reader's attention from point to point is what drew me to appreciate the poem as a whole. It's some references that went over my head on the first read but, I later figured out the intentions the more I  read it. The line breaks in the poem shifted focus with ease and the power that gave the poem was outstanding.

Liberty needs Glasses

https://allpoetry.com/Liberty-Needs-Glasses


Tupac Shakur's "Liberty needs glasses" Is just as true now as it was in the past. The speaker speaks  of issues and cracks we have in our justice system that we overlook or are sometimes overrode as misinterpertuations and things that should be forgotten when facts clearly state otherwise. When Shakur writes "Justice bumbed into mutulu /  and trippin on geronimo pratt / but stepped right over oliver / and his crooked partner ronnie" (Lines 4-8) talk about how racial injustice in the justice system. People who comitted crimes who were white were punished far less harsh than if you were p a minority. When Shakur writes " while justice is on a rampage / 4 endangered surviving black males" (lines 13-14) ; This is a metaphor for police brutality (our justice system) which is still very apparent today. Cops targeting black men for no reason and then making an excuse that they were resisting arrst or seemed threatening. If these instances do not result in their death they usually result to them losing their lives in jail.

This poem is a look into the past and the future. These things that Shakur wrote about in his poem years ago are still around today but much worse than what they used to be. It kind of shows  a build of how a problem has been festering and now is the response which is backlash and killing, riots and retaliation, and ultimately innocent lives lost . This is  because people are angry because we have been ignoring a problem that liberty and justice need glasses if things were fixed we wouldn't have as many issues as we do now . The speaker is surrounded in a world where our liberty and justice sytem need to be fixed and adjusted and it is much like the world we live in now which is why it resonates with me.

Sunny Side Up with a side of Divorce- PR #3 1st Hour

Owen Bullock

sunny day –
why not get
the divorce papers?

Humor can be found in everything.
Owen Bullock’s haiku lets readers witness the speaker of the poem come to a small and simple revelation. Bullock’s untitled poem is great, partly because he provides a contrast. When we think of divorce, we think of sadness, separation, rainy and lonely days...not sunny ones.

The simplicity of the poem is also great. In stanza 1,“sunny day- / why not get” (line 1 and 2) readers see the beauty in it. These simple words, tell us a little bit about the speaker. They seem to be the type of person who is happy-go-lucky and a go with the flow kind of person. We get another glimpse of the speaker's life in the last line; Line 3, in the one and only stanza, the speaker concludes their question,“The divorce papers?” This concluding part of the question, brings up many more. It makes readers wonder, why is the speaker getting a divorce? Why did a sunny day bring this decision on?
A haiku only has so many syllables to inspire its readers. However, this haiku, is not meant to inspire the readers. Bullock meant for this haiku to give insight to the speaker's life. So, while we do normally associate negative things with divorce. The speaker is inspired. An association between sunny days, divorce, and freedom can be seen. We see the speaker be influenced by the presence of a sunny day to find the strength to “get / the divorce papers” . And this comparison makes all the difference. For it really can just be that simple. To leave behind memories made, and to take a step into a new direction. It can be as simple as being inspired by a sunny day.  
So while this poem contains a contrast and comparison, a simple look at a life, and insight.
What this poem contains, that makes readers enjoy it, is as simple as the decision to get a divorce after witnessing a sunny day… it’s funny.
And that is why it’s great.


-Sonya Williams

Poetry Response #3

La'Coriona Walker
Mrs. Locano
AP Literature- 4
6 October 2016

Poetry Response #3 -The Mother



                Gwendolyn Brooks poem “The Mother”, really opened my eyes to a lot. For starters what’s being said in this poem is quite sad, here you have the speaker telling you the perks of abortions and basically how the situation is looked upon on when woman decide to have abortions. I personally like this poem because it speaks so many volumes. Brooks knew exactly what she was doing when she decided to write this poem, it’s such an eye opening. Personally I think it would have people reconsidering abortions simply because they’re taking away opportunities that never got a chance. The speaker kinds of plays with the people’s conscious by these lines Abortions will not let you forget /You will remember the children you got that you did not get” (1-2). So here you have this powerful line stating how once you get an abortion it’s something that sticks with you forever also not to mention how you conceived this child but yet didn’t even give it a chance on living to see what it would of became.

                Honestly out of Brooks poems this one is the one that I read more than once to really get the gist of it, I didn’t understand it completely until I read it a 3rd time. That’s when I realized what an amazing poem this was and how she put so much effort into it. The speaker indeed makes it emotional even touching my heart when in line 18 how they say, “If I stole your births and your names/”, not only did this line give me chills but just really had me thinking thoroughly on this topic, if our parents gave us a chance why not give this innocent baby a chance as well? If you didn’t want the baby, why not protect yourself more? I defiantly thought about these things when I read the poem, I just love how Brooks never once took it upon herself to bash anyone that had a abortion/ wanted to consider it but just gave them something to really think about when they want to do it. Brooks shows that in the end whether you do it or not at the end of the day you’re the mother and this lives on your conscious but what I got from this poem is, is it really worth taking a baby’s life before it begins.. Just a food for thought.

A Mothers Child Poetry Response #3

In the poem "Ballad Of Birmingham" by Dudley Randall a young girl begs her mother to allow her to attend a freedom march in downtown Birmingham. She does this by saying in stanza 1 lines (1-4)" Mother dear, may I go downtown / instead of out to play, / and march the streets of Birmingham / In a freedom march today.This wonderful poem is made up 9 short stanzas. I loved the way Randall uses line breaks throughout this poem it gives me a better understanding of what is being said.

In my opinion to me this poem meant a mother will always think about their child's safety before anything. No matter the situation.

Response #3

Camron Grant
Mrs. Locano
AP Literature
6 October, 2016                         Poetry Response #3: "Bad Decisions"
                                              CLICK HERE TO READ "WE REAL COOL"
 


      In Gwendolyn Brooks's poem "Bad Decisions" the speaker in four short stanzas let readers know, when you make bad decisions, "We / Die soon." (7-8). I like how she gives examples on what people do when they think they "real cool" and how everything catches up with them when they make bad decisions (hence the title). Brooks puts out a meaning that really means something to me. Every action has a consequence! and the speaker says all the actions they do like in lines 1-3, "We / Left school. We / Lurk late." Leaving school and lurking late is a bad action especially if you are in school . Then will follow their soon to be consequence dying soon. But there is something I don't like in the third stanza, "We / Sing sin." (4-5). What that supposed to mean? I hope the speaker not talking about what I think the speaker talking about. I think... the speaker is talking about rap music, because certain types of rap songs do have a lot of sin imbedded in them. But it could mean something else.



       "We real cool" conveys other meanings other than bad decisions. The speaker uses we (as in two people or more) and is speaking for the other person, already determining his or her death. I feel like one of the people in the word "we" isn't as committed to making bad decisions as the speaker says they are. What if that person was pressured into doing such things just so they can seem "real cool". Only brooks and the speaker truly know the meaning of this poem and I don't think it means what most people might think.


These Little Things - PR#3

                                                                These Little Things

       "Little Things" by Sharon Olds makes me appreciate the smaller things in life, as it leads to the bigger things. The poem starts off with Olds giving a vivid image of the speaker cleaning up her daughter's mess after she goes to camp, "After she's gone to camp, in the early  / evening, I clear our girl's breakfast dishes from the rosewood table" (1-3). The speaker says "our" (2) instead of my because the speaker is speaking to their significant other. The speaker finds a pool of sugary maple syrup and it instantly makes them think about their father. This is when the meaning shift occurs in the poem, "As if I could read it, this raised dot of / amber sugar, and this time, when I think of my father," (8-9).

    This poem is a very detailed poem. I like how Olds uses diction to describe how things are in the poem. She uses words like "Vulcan-blood red" (10) to describe the color of the drink that he had in his glass. She also used these words to put an image in my head. Olds uses similie to make the poem relatable. Comparing a peeling sunburn to the peeling of an insect's wings (18-19), makes the poem more relatable to me. The poem ends with a great message - little things complete the big picture.

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Poetry Response #3


Piper Furman
Ms. Locano
AP Lit & Comp
5 October 2016

Poetry Response #3

           In the poem "The Crazy Woman" by Gwendolyn Brooks, the speaker talks about singing. The speaker expresses what times are correct to sing and how they will be sung. This is not the opinion of others, but the speaker's own opinion. This is not the typical type of singing: "I shall not sing a May song. / A May song should be gay. / I'll wait until November / And sing a song of gray." (1-4) The mood I get from this is depression. I know that's jumping from one thing to another, but that's the tone I feel throughout this poem. Depression isn't a easy thing to just throw on a reader or person. Yet, I think that's what Brooks was trying to convey in "The Crazy Woman."

           Another part in the poem that makes me look at the poem like it has a depressed tone is stanza 3. It talks about the other side of singing a "gray" song: "And all the little people / Will stare at me and say, / "That is the Crazy Woman / Who would not sing in May."" (9-12) When Brooks refers to little people talking about "The Crazy Woman", it makes me think that they don't really know what's going on with the speaker. The little people don't know what the speaker is going through or why she is waiting to sing a gray song in November. I like this poem because it's like Brooks structured the poem to have multiple meanings for reader to look for. 


Kyla Scott
Ms.Locano
AP Literature
5 October 2016 

Poetry Response 
Analysis #2
"Still I Rise"
Maya Angelou 

                 Maya Angelou "Still I Rise" is a poem about strength, endurance, and affirmation. In this poem you can clearly see signs of rejection and racism, for example in the first stanza can be connected to slavery "You may write me down in history/ With your bitter, twisted lines./ You may trod me in the very dirt/ But still, like dust, I'll rise.(lines1-4) consist of the history of slaves in America that has been contolled by whites. Also Angelou's theme of perseverance is present in these lines with the use of the word "dust". Dust has often been referred to as abinding, something that lasts forever.
               The second stanza continues with the speakers tone "Why are you beset with gloom?/ Cause I walk like I've got oil wells/ Pumping in my living room." ( Lines 6-8) the speaker states that they refused to be walked all over on, and while the listener may be expecting her to be broken. The speaker describes their strength and defiance are clear. 
              Angelou also provides the speak of oppression and violence in the following lines "Did you want to see me broken?/ Bowed head and lowered eyes?/ Shoulders falling down like teardrops/ Weakened by my soulful cries" ( lines 13-16) and also in the stanzas " You may shoot me with your words./ You may cut me with your eyes./ You may kill me with your hatefulness./ But still, like air, I'll rise." (Lines 21-24) at this part of the poem we hear a more spiritual tone in the speakers voice. The speaker describes that not even death will destroy their presence.
               I like how the poem transforms itself. The message Angelou was going for was that nothing will destroy someone's will. Her techniques and structural decisions in this poem makes the poem powerful and unique. She uses useful and appropriate words to make the theme clear.

Tuesday, September 27, 2016

'Stopping by'

        In the poem "Stopping by woods on a snowy evening" written by Robert Frost, The speaker seems to be in an unfamiliar location and is curious as to who owns it but knows that during they have goals to reach and knows that they shouldn't rest until they are done as read from lines 13-16 "The woods are lovely, dark and deep,/ But I have promises to keep, / And miles before I sleep, / And miles before I sleep.". The repetition of the line "And miles to go before I sleep" gives me a feeling that the speaker is focused on their plans but are enjoying themselves, It stood out to me because it reminds me of me because I'm so aloof yet I know that I have things I must do. Frost used only a few to capture a deeper meaning and he does it so well reminding me that I often procrastinate even though I know there are more important things to handle but I still choose to enjoy something that will only last for a short time period. The speaker of the story is a very delicate being seeing from line 13 they call woods "lovely"  this story is sort of relatable in a deeper sense         
The Oxymoron in “For a Lamb”
What is an oxymoron? It's a figure of speech in which apparently contradictory appear in conjunction. In layman's terms it's basically when two very unlike things are placed together. One poem that emphasizes this well is the poem, “For a Lamb” by poet, Richard Eberhart.  

Chapter 10 talks about tone and how this poem has more of a realistic tone based on the words he used. However in my honest opinion it seems quite grim. Yes it may be the natural part of life but the words the poet uses change the tone. In line 1 the speaker says, “I saw on the slant hill a putrid lamb,” The word putrid just seems like such a disgusting word. Also, this is one of the points that has evidence of oxymoron. When I think of a lamb I think of something clean, cute, soft, and innocent. However, with the word putrid said in front of lamb it presents a different tone. Based on the word it seems more like death, than life. However in the next two lines  it says, “Propped with daisies. The sleep looked deep, / The face nudged in the green pillow” (2-3) Though these two lines represent the death of the lamb, it seems a lot more peaceful and serine. The words such as sleep and pillow gives it that calmer tone. The next line changes up the tone once more, “But the guts were out for the crows to eat.” (4) It’s this shift in tone that makes it stand out much more, especially since the two lines just before it had a opposite tone.

Desmond Barber Poetry response #2

            In the poem " Dreams" by Langston Hughes, he focuses on a major issue that a lot of people have yet to discover which is the power of a dream.

           I honestly feel like this particular poem is talking to me especially when the speaker says "Hold fast to dreams / For if dreams die / Life us a broken-winged bird / that cannot fly." (1-4). To me this means that no matter what I have to hold on to my dreams, for if I don't there will be nothing to keep me going and striving for what I want. Thats basically what this poem is about. In lines 5-8, the speaker states, "Hold fast to dreams / For when dreams go / Life is a barren field / Frozen in snow." This states that without a dream life is colder than what it's made out to be.  A dream sets a system in your mind, it sets a goal that you, yourself have planned to strive for. 

         Although this poem was very short. It had a gigantic meaning, of striving for something or working for something that has a meaning to you. I think thats why he titled his poem "Dream"; to all in all tell us never to stop dreaming. I really enjoyed that poem out of every poem I've read thus far.  

Makayla Sheffield 2nd Poetry response

  Response to "The Whipping" by Robert Hayden (1913-1980)

In "The Whipping" by Hayden the speaker is recalling an elderly woman chastising a young boy. Later in the poem the speaker changes to the boys perspective for just a brief moment, and then back to the original speaker. In the 4th stanza you can evidently see the shift in speakers that I mentioned. 

Personally I can connect with this poem although it is a child getting in trouble. As a child I most certainly took a couple of whippings ! So it's interesting reading something that I relate to. Especially when the author writes, "She strikes and strikes the shrilly circling boy till the stick breaks in her hand( lines 9-11)./ His tears are rainy weather to wound-like memories: (lines 11-12)/.

 If you grew up in a house hold such as mine you'd know the whipping does not stop until your parents are tired, especially if you did something incredibly wrong. This poem let me walk in the shoes of my past and allowed me to relive an experience. Albeit not a good one. It is easier to read a work of art when you can identify with the main elements.

Although the poem's literal meaning is about a old woman most likely the child's grandmother chastising him, if you dive deeper it's about how a child's outlook changed and how the woman thought she was correcting her wrong doings when she was younger. Truthfully that's the reason a lot of children are punished today, because their parents want better. Mr. Robert Hayden does an excellent job of demonstrating this concept and connecting with his audience

Poetry response to "Ars Poetica"

Anesha Porter-Griffin
4th hour
        In the poem "Ars Poetica" the author Archibald Macleish portrays the expectations of a poem. In lines 1-3 Macleish writes "A poem should be palpable and mute/As a gobbled fruit,/Dumb" it puts into perspective that poetry isn't something that should be extremely complex but something to understand and relate to, for the simplest of minds to comprehend.

   There's a lot of different views as to what a poem should  be Macleish writes in line 23-24 "A poem should not mean/ but be". I feel as though that is a perfect description of poetry. Life is for comprehension the entire poem is about making sure your writing can be understood. Too many poets work to be abstract and unique and they miss giving their poem meaning and depth and a reason to truly read it.

   I strongly relate to the feelings and message being portrayed within this work. I too feel as though poetry is a reminiscence of an experience as said in lines 17-18 "A poem should be equal to/ Not true".  An experience is never just what happens but what it fells like as well, something of equivalent to give the reader more insight. This poem let's me know as a poet to let a reader feel and not just know.

Poetry Reponse #2 ~ Lost Love

Adryanna Hickman
Ms. Locano
AP Lit-1st Hour
27 September 2016



Lost Love


In this emotion packed poem “ Ending,” written by the late Gavin Ewart, he captures his readers by pouring out the feeling of emptiness the speaker experienced. Ewart writes this poem to engulf his readers with the profound sadness the speaker was feeling. In lines 1-4 it states that, “ The love we thought would never stop / now cools like a congealing chop. / The kisses that were ho like curry / are bird-pecks taken in a hurry.” This quote is a prime example of the loneliness he/she is feeling, one in which most people, including me, can relate to. The feeling of utter love, the kind that sweeps you off your feet and you hope that you don’t have to blink because you don’t ever want to miss a second. I can imagine how the speaker must feel to loose something that you never thought could be lost nor replaced.
I am currently in a long term relationship with a guy I want to marry, therefore the poem speaks to me in a fearful way. When I read this poem I instantly thought of my boyfriend. What if we don’t last? What if I turn out to be like the speaker? Are our electric charges going to die out too? This poem was emotional and relatable because of the fact that most readers have a heartfelt breakup. “ The feet  that ran to meet a date / are running slow and running late / The eyes that shone and seldom shut / are victims of power cuts.” (7-10) These quotes mean that at one point you had all this energy but now you suddenly don’t want to be bothered. I can relate this quote to one of my exes who I broke up with because I  was bored in the relationship and it came to the point where I forgot I was even  in a relationship.
Even though this poem really confirmed a huge fear of mine I still loved it because of the straightforwardness, addition of pathos to connect with  the reader, and use of diction. Examples of diction would be “victims of a power cut,”(10) and “ congealing chop.”(2) The poem is very easy to comprehend and decipher, but also promotes deep thought.
In conclusion, I would refer this poem to anyone who has gone through a breakup and can relate to the speaker's situation.

Poetry response #2

In the poem "A study of reading habits" By Phillip Larkin the speaker tells a story about how school helped him in many aspects rather applied academically or socially. Through out the poem Larkin states how his school career has changed as he became older. In this poem Larkin used an abundance of Imagery asa literally device in his poem for example; "Later, with inch-thick specs,/ Evil was just my lark." (lines 7-8) he uses very descriptive words to give an outlook or an image in your head. Also I noticed a meaning shift during line 13, that states "don't read much now: the dude/ who lets the girl down before/ the hero arrives,..." here the poems shifts from how his school life was to how he ended up applying it to his adult life. Which I believe this is also a very important line in the poem. I feel as if the author's purpose was to get the reader to think about his school life and how it applied to their adult lives allowing their minds to drift off into wherever they'd like to go. that was what mine did and how it would apply to my adult life considering my not an adult as of yet.

Pat's Poetry Response to a Chapter 10 Poem

I enjoy the poem "The Flea" by John Donne for various reasons. I encountered this poem before so I have some prior knowledge that helped my understanding.
The first thing that caught my interest was the strange outlook that the speaker (a man that experienced a flea bite during the Black Plague) had on such a serious occurrence. In line 4 the speaker says "And in this flea our two bloods mingled be". The speaker later in the poem (lines 12-13) say "This flea is you and I, and this/Our marriage bed and marriage temple is". The fact that Donne explored such a odd perspective of a topic that would otherwise be deadly was interesting. While others would have viewed getting the Plague as lethal, the speaker is only interested in the fact that he and his love interest are connected through the bite of the flea. The first time I read this poem I recall being uneasy due to the point of the speaker. But, the more I read and understood the background and setting, I admired the fact that during such a deadly period it could be some slight comical relief.



                         Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening
By Robert Frost 
Kendrick Young 

This poem is very interesting. I think it starts out by the spealer looking for a place to stay and goes wondering on the woods and finds a home to hide out and rest and it sounds like the owner doesn't know about it.                
"Whose woods these are I think I know. 
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow "

What I also like it the imagery and how he uses it to express himself and where the speaker is. I feel as if the speaker is someons who is on a mission and and has to stop and rest. The speaker starts talking to the horse and how weird it is to be there in the woods  without a farmhouse nearby and how the lake and the woods make it the darkest evening of the year and it sounds like such a beautiful sight to see

"My little horse must think it queer 
To stop without a farmhouse near 
Between the woods and frozen lake
 The darkest evening of the year. "


He gives his harness bells a shak
To ask if there is some mistake. 
The only other sound's the sweep 
Of easy wind and downy flake. 
In the second stanza he starts to say what the horse does and what he sounds like and it sounds like a dark cold and windy night. At this point I feel like there has been a shift of how the reader is talking about something else. Again he begins to talk about where he stopped and what he was doing and now he is talking about how cold it is and the weeping of the chills. And now it is snowing. 

The woods are lovely, dark and deep. 
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep. 

At this part i get the poem but is also the confusing part of the story because it is now more and more imagery words and now it is another shift. This shift is the meaning shift of the poem. He starts talking about the promises he had and I have no idea because who did he promise to do. But you can also detect that she is motivated and dedicated to do what she has to do because she is continuing what she has to do. The speaker goes on because he has “promises to keep?” But the word “promises” though it may here have a wry ironic undertone of regret, has a favorable connotation: people almost universally agree that promises ought to be kept. If the poet had used a different term, say, “things to do,” or “business to attend to,” or “financial affairs to take care of,” or “money to make,”
the connotations would have been quite different. As it is, the tone of the poet tells us that the poet is sympathetic to the speaker.  The theme of this poem is to never give up and never break a promise and do whatever you gotta do to keep that promise 

“Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening” Response

“Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening” Response
The poem I chose is Robert Frost’s “Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening,” from chapter nine. I think this poem is very relevant and kids from my generation should read it. In lines 15 and 16 the speaker said, “And miles to go before I sleep, / And miles to go before I sleep.” These lines caught my attention because he repeated the same line twice so I figured that there was a deeper meaning. Frost wanted these particular lines to stand out for the reader. The deeper meaning in this poem is that you should take the time to appreciate the little things in life. This is noticeable in lines 3 and 4 which say, “He will not see me stopping here / To watch his woods fill up with snow.
I love the way Frost put such a deep meaning in so few lines. I chose this poem because it is very relatable. The speaker in the story is much like me continuing on his way considering that he had promises to keep. I too would have stopped to watched the snow and would have not rushed home to things that can be done later. Also I can relate because the speaker in this poem is sensitive.

Poetry Response #2

Nicole Perry
Ms.Lacano
AP Lit- 4
27 September 2016

"The last Night that She lived" By Dudley Randall
 
 
In the poem " The last Night that She lived" by Dudley Randall in chapter 1 of sound and sense the speaker talks about the last time a mother seen her daughter alive and who was supposed to be alive tomorrow is the blame for it. the speaker describes the surroundings of the last night the girl was alive and how it felt for her to pass away. the speaker uses a lot of imagery describing how the girl looked when she was at her funeral and how her mother looked when she seen her smiling. he uses a lot of emotion to express the feeling to the reader what it feels like to have an innocent life token away. especially an innocent child, the speaker described how the child death was waited out until she died and the little things they noticed. when the speaker stated that it really touched me because you never know how someone feel about the passing of someone and the things that happen during that time.
 
I liked when the speaker say: " she clawed through bits of glass and brick,/ then lifted out a shoe./ "O here's the shoe my baby wore,/ But, baby, where are you?" (30-33). this line really made me feel the pain the mother feels when she found her daughters shoe but not her. I felt this was the main point of the speaker was to make the reader feel the pain of a mother loosing her child and I felt it. " The last Night She lived" reminded me of the " 16th Street Baptist church bombing", that happen in 1963 and took place in Birmingham. this reminded me of that event because the speaker stated: " for when she heard the explosion,/ her eyes grew wet and wild/ she raced through the streets of Birmingham/calling for her child"(25-28). this brought me back to when I first learned about this event. I enjoyed reading " The last Night that She lived", you can really use this for important reason like black history month it would teach the readers a great lesson and they would have a better understanding of what it means.

Winter Coldness (Poetry Response #2)

Shaylia Smith
Ms. Locano
AP Lit -1
27 September 2016
Winter Coldness

"Winter" by William Shakespeare is a poem that tells about the cruel winter life around a sixteenth-century English country house. The poem expresses how bad the quality of winter was back then in that environment. It tells people has to deal with the harshness of winter, while not enjoying it. Which I like because even though the poem is about negative side of winter it's still beautiful. This poem uses a lot of imagery that makes the poem's audience be able to picture the scene in their head.

Shakespeare uses symbolism in this poem. The poem mentions an owl twice, and the owl is a symbol for wisdom and death. He’s also repeating this line in stanza 2, so he’s using the literary device repetition to express that this line is important. “Then nightly sings the staring owl,”(6 & 15). These lines are used to express the deathly quality  of the winter. This poem speaks about death in the symbolism of owls. Also, there are uses of onomatopoeia with the owls, which is also repeated in stanza 2. “Tu-who; / Tu-whit, tu-who: a merry note,” (7-8 & 16-17). Those lines represent the sounds of the owls. It’s what all the civilians are hearing in the cold winter nights. It all wraps into the poem being a scene in a play or movie, letting us envision the poem. Envisioning the poem is great because every time I read it I picture it in my head. Due to the details every time that I've read the poem the setting of what I envision has stayed the same.

Both stanza i the poem speak about the sickness of winter. This poem is not all happiness and sunshine, "winter" mentions things like red, raw noses and greasy cooks which is anything but good. "When all aloud the wind doth blow, / And coughing drowns the parson's saw, / And birds sit brooding in the snow, / And Marian's nose looks red and raw" (10-13). The lines talk about common colds but has an underlying meaning of tragedy. which I can relate to because even common cold can be a tragedy

"Winter" by William Shakespeare is a poem that embodies the unpleasant qualities of winter. This poem is about experience and the details n the poem help us to imaginatively experience it ourselves. I like this poem because even the most terrible thing can have an embodiment of beauty.

James Moseley Poetry Response #2

James Moseley
Mrs. Locano
A.P. Literature
27 September 2016
My Emotional Feelings about Poetry

            "Apparently with no surprise" is a poem made from Emiley Dickson in the book "Sound and Sense". Although the poem may be short at first glance, it is just enough to fully grasp the meaning of the poem. It allows those with short a retention to be able to grasp the meaning of the poem itself. After reading Dicksons poem a few times I was able to connect to it and find a deeper meaning.
            The part of Dicksons poem that I was able to connect to is when the speaker says, " The Frost beheads it at its play- / In accidental power- / The blond Assassin passes on-" (3-5). Honestly, these lines remind me of one of my favorite games, Assassins Creed. But, I connected with these lines because there are times in which you may kill or destroy something on accident with your own power. If you have a lot of power you want to be delicate with a lot of things. I have had times when I killed bugs or broke something by exerting too much power when I was only trying to save or fix it. Power is something that should not be toyed with.You need to be careful with the power you have before it is too late. Power is more of a burden than a gift.
            Overall, I enjoyed Dicksons poem for several different reasons. The first reason is the dark tone that it gives off. I tend to like things that are a bit dark and foreboding. The second reason I liked this poem is because it is short and I was able to stay focused throughout it and be able to derive a deeper meaning from it. The third and final reason why I enjoyed the poem is that I made a deep connection in line 6 and 7 " The Sun proceeds unmoved / To measure off another day". This line means to me that even if I were to kill or destroy something, the world, even better yet, the Universe, would remain unchanged and not even flinch at the act I committed.    
Dashuna Howard
Locano
AP Lit-4
27 September 2016


In the poem "Mirror" by Sylvia Plath in chapter 2 of "Sound and Sense" the speaker talks about someone's mental health. When Plath writes "I am silver and exact"(1) she meant she had no problems she was exactly how she looked. Plath describes what it's like to be a mirror you see different faces and different emotions. The scene changes when Plath say "Now I am a lake"(10) the poem shifts and the speaker is now looking at him/herself reflection in the lake trying to find their self.The persona in the poem seems to be suffering from depression looking in the lake unable to fully understand who she is. Then Plath goes on to say "Then she turns to those liars the candles or the moon. I see her back, and reflect it faithfully." When she looked away she did not want to accept the truth and was good with believing lies. Although the mirror reveals truth the persona still clings to objects that hide that truth like the moon and candles which could represent people who lie to him/her.  Even outside of the mirror nature plays a role in revealing the truth the lake also was like a mirror she saw her reflection and still wanted to change herself. There are many people who refuse to accept reality, and sometimes causes them to stress. I like the poems deeper meaning like showing your identity and accepting it. In line 2 when Plath says "Whatever I see I swallow immediately/" she was referring to what's around her, she takes everything in and tried to make something of it. Throughout the poem there is a theme of truth and lies. The poem "Mirror" is about a woman whose torn between the true picture of herself and the distorted image that others see.




Monday, September 26, 2016

Poetry Response #2

La’Coriona Walker
Ms. Lacano
AP Lit- 4
26 September 2016

“A Study of Reading Habits” By Philip Larkin


            In the poem “A study of Reading Habits” by Phillip Larkin the speaker goes on to show readers his way of reading and exploring books. He takes reading to a whole new level by applying it to himself as well. He’s so caught up in doing so that it eventually doesn’t work out for him anymore. What I really like about this poem is how someone can take reading into a deeper meaning taking that I do so myself. “A Study of Reading Habits” means a lot to me because I can relate to it in many ways. The speaker goes on to say: “When getting my nose in a book/ cured most things short of school/ it was worth ruining my eyes” (1-3). For one the lines can be related to, a lot of people drown out things by reading I happen to be one of them, reading takes me to a world of my own and I felt as of the speaker was trying to imply that. Not only that but also there began to be a shift in the poem that changes the mood that I’ve noticed after reading it a few more times. The speaker goes from being this person that wanted to be so deeply involved in books to not even wanting to be bothered with them anymore. I feel as of Larkin knew exactly what he was doing when writing this poem, he wanted to start you off with what appears to be someone explaining habits that they’ve picked up to not caring about it anymore. It’s almost like the tone goes from eagerness too nonchalant, the speaker doesn’t have that same feel for reading like they’ve used to. I really do love how Larkin kinds of mislead you with the title alone here you have “A Study of Reading Habits” when in reality it’s someone transitioning with reading. This poem just shows that sometimes making a habit out of something may eventually die down.