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William Carlos WilliamsA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
In an era in which serious poetry seemed an expression of the intellect and geared toward eliciting robust and animated discussion, Williams’ poem suggests the power not of the intellect but of the imagination—the subtler energy each person has to respond at unexpected moments to the simple beauties all around.
The poem, in its simplicity and its directness, is an invitation to stay alert for those unexpected moments when a random gathering of things becomes miraculous for one moment. The poem resists the notion that things must mean something, teach a lesson, or serve as backdrop for an important human interaction. Things in literature are typically compelled to act, to exert some force, and to add the texture of verisimilitude; things typically carry the weight of symbolism or create immediacy by creating a context. Thus, it is tempting here to assume that the things in Williams’ poem must symbolize something deeper; for example, the wheelbarrow might symbolize a farm; the white might symbolize innocence; the chickens might symbolize life; and the rain water might symbolize baptism—the next step would be to assemble these interpretative bits into a broad thematic argument.
By William Carlos Williams
Approach of Winter
William Carlos Williams
Between Walls
William Carlos Williams
In the American Grain
William Carlos Williams
Landscape with the Fall of Icarus
William Carlos Williams
Paterson
William Carlos Williams
Spring and All
William Carlos Williams
Spring Storm
William Carlos Williams
The Young Housewife
William Carlos Williams
This Is Just to Say
William Carlos Williams
To Elsie
William Carlos Williams
To Waken An Old Lady
William Carlos Williams