Paper Example Undergraduate 330 words

Her kind by Anne Sexton

Last reviewed: August 5, 2009 ~2 min read

¶ … Anne Sexton's "Her Kind"

The syntax of this poem, with the constant repetition of "I" at the beginning of each clause, affects the tone of the poem by making it sound almost like a chant, or a call to action. It also has the affect of forcing identification with the elements of the poem; the speaker's repeated use of "I" before listing several objects, events, and actions has the effect of connecting the reader to these elements, as well. The syntax continues to follow a pattern after each use of "I," listing first another identifying noun clause before the verb clause, making the figure of the speaker stronger than the details of the poem.

The diction of the poem is also a highly contributive factor of the tone. In the first stanza, words like "possessed" and "haunting" create a sense of spookiness that also portrays the continuing and eternal aspect of womanhood that Sexton explores in the poem. The second stanza makes a great use of sibilance with repeated "s's in the words "skillets," "Shelves," "silks," and "suppers," again playing with the idea of evil as the repeated "s's form a hiss like that of a serpent. Throughout the poem, the use of past tense active verbs places the poem in a strange sort of disconnected yet impassioned context, reinforcing the idea that the poem is a chant of sorts. This is most apparent, of course, in the repeated "I have been her kind."

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PaperDue. (2009). Her kind by Anne Sexton. PaperDue. https://www.paperdue.com/essay/anne-sexton-her-kind-the-20124

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