Literary Analysis Of James Fenton's 'At The Curb'

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James Fenton appeared humble and soft-spoken, his reserved demeanor indicating that his reading style may be similarly withdrawn. Yet, when he began his first peace, it commanded attention. As the reading progressed, his voice grew louder, his spirit stronger and his passion all the more evident. Though he still maintained an almost melodic tranquility throughout his recitation, the power and potency behind his writing was beautifully brought to life through the strength and vigor of his impassioned delivery. Each poem felt profoundly personal, and as he revealed, many of them did stem from intimate experiences that had shaped his outlook. Yet these poems, despite reflecting his individual experiences, were extraordinary in their universality …show more content…

In doing so, he risks falling into cliché, trite typicality almost impossible to transcend even for the most gifted writers. Yet somehow, he manages to infuse genuine truth and feeling into this poem. Rather than write a poem blatantly about the unfairness of premature death and the tragic irony of his friend’s illness, he crafted a piece that inherently encompassed those ideas through the extended metaphor of abductors in a car and through the specific images of grief as it manifests itself in reality. He addressed the intangible through concepts accessible to the reader’s understanding, and subsequently, the pain and sorrow of the situation felt all the more immediate. Fenton used the deeply personal memory of his friend’s death at the hands of Lou Gehrig’s disease as the source of emotional truth, but through atypical (in the best way) constructs was able to address extend the scope of the poem far beyond the …show more content…

In this poem, death is addressed much more directly, but Fenton isn’t making an attempt to explain it. Rather, he uses our humanity (something we all can comprehend and have experienced) to delineate death’s enigma. In juxtaposing the living with the dead, but making sure to demonstrate that all dead were once living and all living will soon be dead, he achieved something I have never witnessed in any writing: the sense that we understand death. Death was made intimate to me, accessible, even though we truly cannot know its effect as living people. Using our most basic and universal human needs—desire for validation, fear of being forgotten etc., Fenton creates an image of personhood so singular that it not only defies gender or race or creed, but defies the barrier of death itself. Death becomes another aspect of our life, a difference between living and dead that while significant, doesn’t change our fundamental

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