By Emily Dickinson
If I can stop one heart from breaking,
I shall not live in vain;
If I can ease one life the aching,
Or cool one pain,
Or help one fainting robin
Unto his nest again,
I shall not live in vain
This poem surprised me.
I read it once, and dismissed it, thinking, “Oh, it’s just another one of her
depressing poems.” When I was looking through the book (Poetry Speaks Who I Am)
and picking out poems to analyze, I found this poem again. I read it, and
immediately scribbled its title down in my outline. How did I MISS this?! I thought. It’s such a simple poem that it’s
easy to skim right past it. It’s seven lines long, which is only a bit
more than a third of the requirement we have for one poem in English class. How
can such a short and simple poem have such deep meaning? It’s because it has
such a lovely theme. Just from the title, it’s beautiful. If I Can Stop One Heart from Breaking. Very poetic, no? Another
thing that I like about the poem is that the rhymes are so natural that I
didn’t even realize it was a rhyming poem until I read it a second time. It’s
not a very popular rhyme scheme (A-B-A-B-C-B-B), but it definitely works. This
lovely poem touches my heart because Emily Dickinson is basically saying that
you find true meaning in life by helping others. So, the meaning of life, the
universe, and everything is selflessness, not 42? That works for me.
Image © Gabriella Camerotti 2007 |
No. Somehow, I WILL find a way to link selflessness with the amazing, awesome number 42. "How many deeds of selflessness must a man perform?" Maybe something like that.
ReplyDeletewell done! :-)
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