Monday, February 21, 2011

"It was a Dream"

"It was a Dream" is a sonnet by Lucille Clifton. Within the poem the author uses words like "me" and "my" but then tells the story in third person because the poem is explaining the dream she has about herself. The dream is more a nightmare of what she has become. "This." is repeated three times at the end of the poem to express the importance of what she has become. My thoughts were that the poem explains someone yelling at himself/herself for who he/she is. The poem has no capitalization except "This" at the end and there aren't very many stresses. There are only two periods used and just enough punctuation to help understand what's happening. There are fourteen lines which would make the poem a sonnet but there is no rhythem so it's a free verse. Lucille Clifton is an African American poet who just died last year due to cancer. She was proud of who she was being a woman of color, and that changes the poem. Maybe it's not a nightmare; it may just be a dream of becoming greater than who are and how dreams can come true. After researching Lucille Clifton it makes sense when she states in the poem "accussing me of my life with her extra finger." The women in Lucille's family where born with a genetic disorder called polydactyly which means they were born with an extra finger. Lucille Clifton and her poem means so much more now.

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