James Wright comments on life in an American steel town with his poem "Autumn Begins in Martins Ferry, Ohio." Using free verse, Wright is nonetheless able to imbue the poem with flowing cadence. The poet offers his readers a glimpse into a small segment of Americana, while at the same time delivering universal human truths. Only three stanzas long, "Autumn Begins" is an observation of the crowd and activity at a high school football game. In the first stanza, the narrator muses about the various minority groups in Martins Ferry. The second stanza is devoted to the state of affairs of American family life and the state of mind of the wives at home. Finally, the third stanza depicts the young athletes, who play an aggressive sport that mimics their father's hard work. "Autumn Begins in Martins Ferry, Ohio" combines modern poetic devices and a somber tone to convey life in Middle America. Free verse, used by many modern poets, allows much leeway and freedom for both writer and reader. Wright manages to maintain rhythm within his poem without sacrificing this freedom. With no fixed meter or set number of metric feet per verse, "Autumn Begins" sounds surprisingly rhythmic. The poet also uses no perceptible rhyme scheme in "Autumn Begins," but the diction still flows musically. However, Wright does employ a few internal rhymes, such as "gray faces," and "Wheeling Steel." The poet uses a unique type of sound device by placing similar-sounding...
For example, "ruptured night watchmen" contains subtle but similar sounds, notably the "ch" sound. Other poetic features of "Autumn Begins" include striking diction and imagery. Such evocative phrases include: "nursing long beers," "gray faces of Negroes in the blast furnace," "ruptured night watchmen," "their women cluck like starved pullets," and "gallop terribly against each other's bodies." Moreover, Wright uses clever links between words. For example, the phrase "Dying for love" is soon followed by "suicidally beautiful." The poet also inserts irony into "Autumn Begins," as in the line, "the proud fathers are ashamed to go home."
Poetic Analysis of "Divorces" In contemporary poetry in American literature, conventional themes about the deconstruction of the family institution through the emergence of divorce as a legal marital practice have become prevalent. Legally, divorce as a legal issue is already accepted by the American society, but in the highly rigid and conservative society in America, divorce as a social phenomenon is not widely accepted especially when put into moralistic standards. As
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