Thursday, March 28, 2013

"Acquainted with the Night"-Robert Frost

In "Acquainted with the Night", Robert Frost sets an extremely depressing tone.  The setting of the poem is the nighttime, and the diction makes the imagery all the more discouraging.  There is an overwhelming sense of isolation.  The speaker never interacts in any dialogue and even avoids eye contact with others.  
"I have passed by the watchman on his beat
And dropped my eyes, unwilling to explain." (Frost, 976)

To the speaker, there exists no division between right and wrong.  Or, at the very least, he fails to perceive it.  In his world, humanity as approached a glass ceiling and can progress no further.  Therefore, they fall into a cycle.  Some men do horrible things, while other sit back and watch.  They are the silent observers of destruction.  The speaker claims he has been both.  In this moral -lacking world, the speaker can express only loneliness and despair, because that is all that exists.  Due to the cyclical nature the poem is structured in, the speaker appears to be saying that is how it will always exist as well.    

"Sorting Laundry"-Elisavietta Ritche

When I read this poem, I initially thought it was a plea.  The first stanzas served as reminders of the comfort and enjoyment found in the pairing's relationship.  In lines 39 and 40, when she discusses the "broken necklace of good gold you brought from Kuwait" (Ritche,842)  I saw it as a declarations of how good the man was to her, and she was undeserving of it.  Then, I perceived "the strangely tailored shirt left by a former lover..." (Ritche, 842) as her admission to cheating on him.  The following three stanzas, consequently, served as her begging for him to stay with her.  I assumed when her significant other went to Kuwait she cheated on him with another.  One of the points that supported this ideology is found when the speaker is describing the contents of her laundry.  Many of the articles are ruined or serve no purpose ("uncouple socks"), yet she refuses to rid of them.  Similarly, her relationship was now broken and possibly beyond repair leading her confess how terrible her life would be without her lover.  However, in this analysis, I missed one supremely important word as the speaker describes the shirt.

"left by a former lover..."

Here, the word former served as an allusion to a relationship far in the past.  She is showing how perfectly imperfect her life has been with this man and how she does not know how she would live without him.