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Wild Geese

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Submitted By sdwllace
Words 494
Pages 2
Shelby Wallace
April
English 2201
March 24, 2013
Inside “Wild Geese” “You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves,” Mary Oliver states in her poem “Wild Geese”. This poem is about the beauty of nature and its comparison to the wrongs and rights of our world. What does Oliver mean behind her words of comparison? After examining this poem, this is what I found. There are not necessarily key words to notice, but perhaps the way Oliver tells the reader to do something. She uses commands like “You do not have to”, “Tell me”, and “You only have to” to show that there is really no other way to describe your differences in your world. Some comparisons are seen in between the lines of Oliver trying to help an unknown character know that no matter what is going on in their life, the world around them is still moving on and changing. An example is stated in lines six and seven, “Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine. Meanwhile the world goes on”. Mary Oliver also incorporates how the world moves on, no matter what is going on with people in its civilization. In lines twelve and thirteen, she quotes, “Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air, are heading home again”. What is meant behind these lines is that just because your world may be not be going for the best or worst, others around you are still living their lives and the unknown character, or reader, should too. Oliver puts sympathy within her poem by letting the reader read lines fourteen and fifteen that say, “Whoever you are, no matter how lonely, the world offers itself to your imagination”. She uses the word “imagination” for the reader to have a better feel of it being about them and for them to use it in their own way. Imagination has no limit; therefore the unknown character is not limited. Oliver ends her poem with a gentle and loving

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