Auto Wreck, by Karl Shapiro

738 Words2 Pages

Auto Wreck is an ominous, grim, and disturbing poem written by Karl Shapiro about death, fate, coincidence and the envisioning of reality. In this harsh poem Shapiro describes an awful car accident where many people ends up dead. He flawlessly employes a unique imagery and language that gives the reader a clear and true sensation of the terrible mishap. The author makes us feel as if we had seen and even experienced the car collision ourselves. Although it may see that the main focus in this poem is death, which is one of the most important, the poet also throws in the way he and everyone else saw everything after the accident, how their emotions changed, and how they envisioned reality afterward. Shapiro not only acknowledges and makes vivid the deaths that just occurred and how different people reacted to it, but he also discusses how much of an accident it really was, how someone had to be guilty and if anyone was really innocent at all.

First, Shapiro initiates by describing the efficient and fast-approaching ambulance to the place of the wrack-up. He starts with a “soft” allusion to death and life when he compares the sound of the siren to a heart “beating, beating”, and the lights of the ambulance to blood “pulsing out” of “an artery”. When the ambulance arrives to the place of the incident the doors open and light comes out, which was a way for the author to give a fleeting hope of life in the chaotic scene of the accident, and then takes it away when he describes the condition in which the victims were put inside the ambulance when he says “the mangled lifted.. And stowed into the little hospital”. Shapiro gives the impression of the inevitable presence of death when he says: “Then the bell, .., tools once”, like the ...

... middle of paper ...

...has no logic or rational conclusion when he says that this event “Cancels our physics” and that it “spatters all we knew of denouement”. At the end he states how things happen even if they are not convenient and gives the quality of evil to something that can not really be.

In conclusion, Shapiro leaves the reader in a state of bewilderment that would be the same as if the reader was actually present in the auto wreck. He shows confusion himself never settling for a complete resolution, never finding a cause for the deaths that he, the witness, had just observed. He seems perplexed by the question of why bad things happen to good people. Lastly, questions like: was it really an accident?, was the cause just being in the wrong place at the wrong time?,was it a trick of destiny and fate?, or even, was it an incident having cause and effect?, remained unanswered.

Open Document