Analysis Of Keep This Forever By Mark Halliday

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Mark Halliday was born in 1949 in Michigan. He is an honorable American poet, professor and critic. He is the author of six poetry collections, Poems included in the collection “Keep This Forever” published in 2008 will be analyzed in this essay. He has received various honors some of which are the Junior Prize in 1992, serving as the 1994 poet in residence at The Frost Place, inclusion in several annual editions of The Best American Poetry series and of the Pushcart Prize anthology, winning the 2001 Rome Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, receiving a 2006 Guggenheim Fellowship. Halliday has a very interesting way of writing. His poetry is characterized by observation of every day events, his stanzas are really long, and in addition to his unique sense of humor he prefers to portray himself as a flawed individual and as an everyday man rather than an extraordinary person. This grounding way of writing can be seen in the poem “Walking the Ashes” where while walking around carrying his father’s ashes he says: “well daddy, I’m still on my feet” (line 30) …show more content…

It is obvious since in his collection “Keep This Forever” there are several poems referring to someone’s death. For instance, in the poem “Clearing the Apartment” the speaker goes through the hassle of cleaning up after someone’s death (we apparently he refers to his father’s death). He uses 2nd person, instead of 1st to describe the procedure in order to make the reader feel more involved and emotionally connected as if they were there. The word “You” is everywhere in the poem he never uses “I”, for example “you have to go through his files” (line 4), “you sweep the floor, its swept” (line 44). He forces the reader to live the experience and passes the blame of throwing the person’s belongings away on to them. He deliberately passes the blame on to the reader because he cannot tolerate the separation from his father’s

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