Wednesday, May 29, 2019
Ezra Pounds In a Station of the Metro :: Ezra Pound Station of the Metro Essays
Ezra Pounds In a Station of the Metro  Before this week, I had never read any  verse line by Ezra Pound. I noticed immediately that many of the  meters  atomic number 18 very short. In a Station of the Metro, for example, is two lines. In the essay Imagism, the second  discover of imagistes is  give tongue to to be to use absolutely no word that did not contribute to the presentation. I think this  precept helps explain why some of Pounds poems are so short. Obeying the second rule of imagistes will be harder the longer the poem is. This rule, however, does not seem to me a rule of imagistes alone, but of most poets from all eras. I dont think many poets could be found who would say that they try to use superfluous words. Just because a poem is longer than a few lines doesnt  think about the poet is being long-winded. I think the vast majority of poets would say that they only use necessary words in their poetry. Of course it could also be said that words that seem superfluous do act   ually contribute to the presentation. I have a hard time with letting Pound claim this rule as one of the imagistes only.   Besides its length, In a Station of the Metro was a poem I read with interest because it is on the syllabus as one of the poems to read carefully. I thought it strange that I was supposed to pay attention to this poem. Truly, it initially struck me as the kind of poem that I tried to write in elementary school. Not that I ever wrote anything interesting, but the shortness of the poem and the pairing of two very different images was  comely much the basis of my poetry as a kid. I thought randomness made poems deep.   The title of this poem is very important as it places the  lector in the metro station. While titles of poems and books are always important, this poem would be quite lost without its title. The title lets us know that the apparition of these faces in the  pack takes place in the metro station, not the stadium or the shopping mall or any other crowd   ed place. By placing the reader with the title, the poem lets the reader know that the first image of the poem, the faces in the crowd, is something that belongs to the location of the speaker.  
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