Sunday, December 1, 2019
Keeping Things Whole Essays - Fiction, Narration, Narratology
  Keeping Things Whole    Although it's not a lengthy poem, the few words and their layout in "Keeping    Things Whole" certainly possess great significance. This poem is centered on  the idea that the narrator's life is lacking purpose. In exploring the meaning  of his existence, he determined that his reason for living was to keep moving so  that people's lives were only temporarily interrupted. Strand's technique of  splitting up his sentences helps emphasize certain phrases and ideas. When I  read poetry I naturally pause for a brief second at the end of each line to  allow the words to sink in, therefore taking an extra moment to realize what the  author is saying. With each line in this poem only a few words long, there is a  higher pause-to-word ratio, which allows for more thought for each idea the  first time you read through it. Strand splits up the sentences in places where  he is trying to convey more meaning, with the hope that the reader will pause  and contemplate what was just read. His stanzas are concluded when he wants more  attention placed on his current idea. The narrator's viewpoint towards life in  this poem is quite different from how most people see it. Where he writes, "In  a field / I am the absence / of field." (ll. 1-3) instead of acknowledging his  existence as something, he regards it as a lack of something. This negativity  towards himself is what the entire poem is focused on. He uses the idea that  when his body enters an area the parts of that area are momentarily interrupted  and are forced around him, just waiting to return back to normal once he leaves:    "When I walk / I part the air / and always / the air moves in / to fill the  spaces / where my body's been." (ll. 8-13) The "air" in that line  symbolizes the existence of other people around him, and the narrator sees  himself as a nuisance to those people, always being in the way. He is saying  that whenever he enters into a location with a bunch of people, those people see  him as a bother and simply as something that they must put up with for a little  while. They can't wait for the narrator to leave so that they don't have to  put up with him anymore and can therefore return to what they were doing. The  last stanza explains the narrator's reason for "moving," or in other words  living: "I move / to keep things whole." (ll. 16 & 17) He understands  that he must keep moving and going on with his life even though he is  interrupting the existence and paths of others. When I read those last two lines    I felt a sense of saddened acceptance of life in the narrator's speech. Since  he concluded that his existence was unnecessary and bothersome, the only way he  can continue in his monotonous life is by continually moving around, so that he  disturbs everyone's lives equally and doesn't become too much of a bother in  one place. With that mindset, the narrator believes that his absence is what  keeps things whole.    
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