I thought that
the way Elizabeth Bishop explained the setting in “Filling Station” was really
interesting. She began the poem by describing all the dirty people and things
inside this gas station, the opening line being “Oh, but it is dirty!” (page
33, line 1). I thought it was particularly interesting to describe this gas
station with an “over-all black translucency” (page 33, lines 4-5) because that
image is so contradictory. These lines allude to what we later learn about the
workers of this gas station; their whole life is a contradiction. The details
of the personal lives and stories behind these workers are unknown, but it is
clear that they are dirty, ‘manly’ mechanics. The station at first glance is
not very inviting, with a cement porch and a grease-covered dog, but upon
further inspection we notice things one would typically find in their grandma’s
living room; a daisy-embroidered doily covering a table set; a large begonia.
This station, like the men, are not as dirty and drab like they are at first
glance.
“Lying in a Hammock at William
Duffy’s Farm in Pine Island, Minnesota” by James Wright describes the subjects
surroundings from his point of view in a hammock (as the title says) in grave
detail. He describes the scene of a typical farm, but from a slightly different
angle. He speaks of “the cowbells follow one another” (page 290, line 5) rather
than describing the actual cows. He focuses on their sounds rather than their
being, because their sounds are affecting him more in this moment. The final
line of the poem, “I have wasted my life,” (page 290, line 13) at first seems
like it comes out of nowhere because everything before seemed lighthearted. But
after rereading the poem as a whole, some of these lighthearted images can be
seen in a much darker light. He notices “The droppings of last year’s horses”
(page 290, line 9), showing that he dwells on the past.
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