10 E I Thought About You Analysis

  • Uploaded by: Melinda
  • 0
  • 0
  • May 2020
  • PDF

This document was uploaded by user and they confirmed that they have the permission to share it. If you are author or own the copyright of this book, please report to us by using this DMCA report form. Report DMCA


Overview

Download & View 10 E I Thought About You Analysis as PDF for free.

More details

  • Words: 847
  • Pages: 2
Poem Analysis Peter Stavropoulos talks about finding a memory and remembering a feeling in his poem, “.I thought about you.” Stavropoulos begins his poem with “I though about you And I lost my memory” and says “In time, I could not remember the loss.” This statement is easy to interpret because Stavropoulos states bluntly that he’s lost a memory of someone he loves. But it’s important for the reader to notice that Stavropoulos also writes first of losing a memory but follows by explaining that the memory of losing the previous memory is also loss. This tells the reader that whatever is causing Stavropoulos to lose his memory is obviously affective and progressing to later stages seeing how he can’t remember losing a memory. Peter Stavropoulos also writes “In Time” before he explains that he could not “remember the loss,” this can tell the reader that this memory loss didn’t happen over a quick period of time but rather a few years. It can be interpreted that Stavropoulos didn’t write this poem immediately after his lover or friend left but wrote it in result of the aftermath of their departure. This poem can be thought of as a letter of apology or simply a something that Stavropoulos wished to tell someone dear to his heart. In the stanza, it isn’t clearly stated whether or not Stavropoulos is talking about a lover or a former friend but it is clear that Stavropoulos adds an optimistic statement to the poem. Peter Stavropoulos writes: “And yet In You I have a memory Of A Happier Time.” By saying this Peter Stavropoulos assures the reader that he has revisited the memory of this person but is still unhappy about the fact that they left. The reader can tell that Stavropoulos last line isn’t about a reunion between the poet and whom he writes about but rather an acknowledgement from the poet that the time spend with this person was not wasted and is cherished until the end of time. The audience is able to get this message from Stavropoulos because he says that he finds the memory of a happier time “in you,” as he directs this towards the audience. Stavropoulos also tends to break up his lines into fragments. This helps the reader relate the fact that he is trying hard to remember his past. You know that Stavropoulos uses fragmented lines instead of flowing ones because when someone is trying to remember the past, they usually start remembering the incident in fragments before they can piece them all together. By using sentence fragments to write this poem, Stavropoulos adds more emphasis to certain lines and shows the audience that he’s remembered what happened. Stavropoulos uses frequent stops in each line to add emphasis to certain words. For instance, starting from the third line, the whole sentence could be read as “In time, I could not remember the loss,” however, Stavropoulos chooses to break apart “in time,” and “the loss,” to add emphasis to both of these words. Stopping causes the reader to focus on these words because as they are reading the poem they will read “in time” and “the loss” separately and realize that the loss that Stavropoulos is talking about is important. By using the frequent breaks the poem has a symmetrical appearance in words on each line. Each line and its counterpart from the end of the poem are the opposite of each other. The second line says “And I lost my memory,” and the second to last line says, “I have a memory.” The third line says “In time,” while the third to last line says “in you.” By creating this symmetry between the lines, Stavropoulos shows the progression from himself losing a memory to remembering one. This also shows that the subject of whom Stavropoulos is referring to has such a great impact on him that by thinking about that subject, he can remember himself again.

Art Analysis The picture for this poem shows a man thinking about something on one half and a woman thinking about something on the other half. This is to show that as the author thinks about whoever he’s writing about, he remembers the memory of that person and finds that that person is a part of himself. Sometimes people refer to someone they love as their “other half” and this drawing is trying to show that saying, literally, because half of the man is the woman and half of the woman is the man. The reflection marks are there to show that the man isn’t near the person he’s thinking about physically but is next to her mentally. Since the poem is about thinking about someone instead of seeing someone, the mirror is representing the man thinking about himself and seeing himself but seeing the other person as a part of him.

.I thought about you I thought about you And I lost my memory In time I could not remember The loss And yet In you I have a memory Of A Happier Time By Peter Stavropoulos

Related Documents


More Documents from ""