<span>I think this poem illustrates that process of meaning making as an individual action of inquiry that is also open to the reader. The poem begins so directly with that question coming from the child. Whitman tells us, I don’t know what it is any more than he does, but then proceeds to spend the rest of the poem telling us what it is. So having announced his position of ignorance, he is now open to the generation of possibilities. And that ‘I guess,' ‘I guess,' ‘or,' ‘or,' provides a wonderful way of allowing one figure to be posited and another one to enter without canceling out the preceding one, allowing more layers and more possibilities, something that Elizabeth Bishop does interestingly too.</span>
Edwin Arlington Rovinson, in his poem "Aunt Imogen" uses a soft and rhythmic language, full of tenderness and romanticism to transport us to the scene in which while Aunt Imogen holds the small child in his arms, cross her mind the conflicts between the loneliness in which she is installed and the hours of joy and affection that she is obliged to give to her sister's children in the few hours she will share with them.
Aunt Imogen is in a situation of conflict, but she is silent and leaves behind the bad moment with a teaching for herself, with reasonings that places her and helps her to continue, without harming anyone, without putting her needs before those of others.
"The pang that wrenched her face and filled her eyes with anguish and intolerable mist" is a very strong verse that tries to draw all the pain that seizes Aunt Imogen and that her eyes are unable to hide.
"She was not born to be so much that, for she was born to be Aunt Imogen" are two very shocking verses of this woman's will power to overcome her momentary weakness, overcome her sadness and understand the role she should play. to fulfill in the life of children and their sister, no matter what else.
As a sinour prefect of your school write a letter to the district chief executive telling him about three problem that worry your community.
Explanation: