The most beautiful thing that Poetry provides is the opportunity and ability to express oneself. Poetry allows the speaker to write their feeling and or ideas in ways they could never have imagined. Speakers will also be able to tell stories they would have never have thought to be possible. All this is possible in poetry because human languages lack the words to express more complex emotions that humans have, but in poetry a single word can mean anything at any given instance. A prime example of using the tools that poetry provides to its fullest potential is “Her Kind”, by Anne Sexton. In the poem, Anne Sexton uses every tool in her arsenal from “A” to “Z” but none used more than repetition, end rhyme scheme, and her absolute precision of …show more content…
Sexton used the line, “A woman like that is.../ I have been her kind.” (Sexton 6,7,13,14,20,21) She used this phrase to end every one of her stanzas, this gave each stanza a steady flow of consistency and made it feel like she was telling a story of her own past. Her intentions of having this phrase repeat at the end of every stanza made the phrase gain more and more depth with every stanza. It also indirectly made the audience read each and every stanza again to understand the significance of the phrase and why it was placed there. The more the audience reads the poem to understand the significance of the phrase the more the audience begins to realize that the constant repetition wasn’t a mistake and Anne Sexton knew what she was …show more content…
Poems don’t necessarily need to rhyme to be a poem and a person doesn’t need to write a poem to rhyme but rhyming in a poem just sounds right. When a speaker decides to rhyme in their poems, the speaker usually, in most cases, makes the last word in their line to rhyme with another line’s word in the corresponding lines. This is appropriately called, “end rhyme” This rhyme scheme sometimes goes unnoticed while reading the poem for the first time, but when the reader takes a second gander the reader will be taken by surprised in how the end rhyme scheme was put in