Margot Supple 4/19/15
Poetry Project 811
Response to my Heart Poem
I chose “Another Sonnet for Stephan” by Alvin Lester Sitmor to
be my heart poem because of the chronological order of events that show the
development of the main character. I believe it is the growth of the main
character, Stephen, that makes this poem special.
In the first 12 lines of “Another Sonnet for Stephen”, the
narrator tells the story of Stephen’s life. In the first four lines Stephen is
portrayed as a young cheerful boy who spreads happiness to the narrator. “Who
made me feel it’s great to be alive” (line 3). It is by now that the reader is
introduced to Stephen. In lines 5-8 the speaker is describing Stephen when he
is in college. He describes him as “enthusiastic, kind, who scores a ten” (line
7). The reader now realizes that the author is referring to the young boy from
lines 1-4. In lines 9-12, Stephen is a successful grown man who is “fighting
back attackers of his health” (line 12). Every four lines represent a different
stage in his life, which differentiates it from other poems that focus on a
single moment.
The last two
lines of a sonnet are usually the most important or famous lines because they
are excluded from the rest of the poem by having their own rhyme scheme. In
“Another Sonnet for Stephen” the last two lines of the poem are a concluding
note that shows more perspective of the narrator. “The boy, the youth, the man
are each now gone, except that in my heart they linger on.” This shows that
Stephen has died due to his illness mentioned in line 12. However, the last
line states that Stephen will be remembered by the narrator because of all his
accomplishments and personality. These last two lines are a great way to end
the poem because they summarize the 12 lines before about Stephen growing up,
and they show how the narrator feels about Stephen being gone.
In this poem Stephen reminds me of my
grandfather. When my grandfather was a young boy he went to Duke and majored in
economics. Shortly after he went to Penn for graduate school and majored in
business. He grew up to be the president of the Head tennis company. When he
was 43 he died of brain cancer, which was shortly after having my father.
Although he has died, my family will always remember him.
“Another Sonnet for Stephen” by Alvin Lester Sitmor is a great poem
because it shows the development of one character, and is a poem I can relate
to.
Feel it's
Poem #1: Free Verse
The Mountain of Light
She starts with the
light
As a young child
She climbs the mountain
She climbs the mountain
Now she is older
And she is
surrounded by darkness
She climbs the
mountain
She reaches the top
Covered by a shadow
There is no more
mountain to climb
But there is still
light
I
wrote this poem based off of a picture below of a dark mountain with light in
the distance. I thought that the picture represented growth, because it got
darker the higher the mountain got, but when the summit was reached, there was
light beyond.
Poem #2: Haikus
Nature
Haikus
A
blank road ahead
A
sky of orange and blue
Trees
of every color
A
glass painting of
A
weakened tree
On
the wall
Dim
lights lead the way
To
an unfound destiny
My
heart is racing
The city
never sleeps
Everyday
it repeats
Not
knowing how to stop
A
bright springs day
In
the middle of March
Becomes
a chilled frost
I
wrote these Haikus based on the pictures shown below and my surroundings. I
believe that haikus are the most fascinating poems, not only because of their
history but also because of their rhythm and comedic, wise, and dramatic
interpretations.
Poem #3: Sonnet
The
sound of gunshots cradles me asleep
And
greets me at the start of a new day
My
youth and pride are very hard to keep
When
brutal wars have taken them away
Another
battle twenty years ago
Stains
the earth with dark red drops of blood
Before
when no one thought it could be so
That
war would take our country like a flood
Surrounded
by the painful sounds of death
I
fight and wait until it is my turn
For
me to stop and take my final breath
And
watch the world around me start to burn
I
will escape the man I used to be
And
from the war I’ll finally be free
I chose to
write my sonnet about war because I was recently studying World War One in
Social Studies and the horrible conditions solders had to live with. I decided
to write this sonnet about World War Two and make the narrator a boy who was
drafted into the army and wants to escape the war because it is making him a
monster.