Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Just Plummy




This Is Just To Say (by William Carlos Williams)

I have eaten
the plums
that were in
the icebox

and which
you were probably
saving
for breakfast

Forgive me
they were delicious
so sweet
and so cold
________________________
 
This poem is one that makes people laugh and shake their heads - something so simple is included
in just about every American literature textbook? But there is more to it than initially meets the eye.
 
It's an imagist poem written without rhyme, punctuation, or virtually any meter. The stanzas are roughly 
alexandrine, which means they each have 12 syllables.
 
But what does it mean? For your response, I'd like you to read between the lines. Who is the speaker? 
To whom is he/she speaking? What is their relationship like? From the very few details in the poem, 
describe their personalities. Is there any significance to the plums? What about the adjectives used to 
describe them: "delicious/so sweet/and so cold"?
 
Please write this response before you read any outside commentary. After you write, you can add 
outside analysis if you want.
 
This poems is widely parodied--apparently it was a meme on Twitter.  Try your hand at a William Carlos Williams 
parody at the end of your paragraph; try to keep it to roughly 12 syllables/verse to match the feel of the 
original. Here's mine:

I deleted 
the soccer game 
you DVR'd 
 
and that you were 
planning to watch
on the weekend 
 
forgive me
soccer's boring
and we're 
Americans 

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