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James Wright's A Blessing

Decent Essays

In “A Blessing”, James Wright creates the impression that he is fond of animals, such as Indian ponies. Not only that, he also paints himself as a bit of a farm boy or a person who loves the countryside, and puts himself in nature. Peter Stitt, a literature professor at Gettysburg College, comments in a book, The Heart of Life, about James Wright: “He sees himself surrounded by a world so entirely hostile that writing poetry becomes a sort of step sideways into a dimension of beauty, rather than wrestling with ugliness” (113). One easily understands this in the lines, “Twilight bounds softly on the grass/ And the eyes of those two Indian ponies/ Darken with kindness/ They have come gladly out of the willows/ To welcome my friend and me” (Wright 2-6). …show more content…

He compares humans live and that of nature because Wright experiences a good amount of hardships that he could only find a true beauty in nature, a place full of clarities. Wright was born into a poor family where his dad worked for fifteen years in the Hazel-Atlas Glass factory and his mother dropped out school at a really young age to work in a laundry (Poetry Foundation). A dark side behind his family’s poverty was the period of Great Depression (1929-1939) which we can figure out that Wright was still a child (1927-1980). When he mentioned stepping across the barbed wire fence, we can see a picture of a man who tries to detach from the ugliness of poverty and get into the wonderful beauty of

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