17 pages 34 minutes read

Gwendolyn Brooks

The Mother

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1945

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The Lovers of the Poor” by Gwendolyn Brooks (1963)

This is another one of Brooks’s most well-known poems, and one of her longest. She employs perfect as well as slant rhyme, as well as iambic pentameter. Brooks’s third-person perspective follows the story most closely to the well-off Ladies of the Ladies’ Betterment League, examining social injustice from the perspective of unsympathetic oppressors.

After Apple Picking” by Robert Frost (1914)

A significant departure in content from Gwendolyn Brooks, she and Robert Frost share the distinction of being influential 20th-century American poets. In “After Apple Picking,” Frost uses and breaks his rhyming rule freely:

I feel the ladder sway as the boughs bend.
 
And I keep hearing from the cellar bin
 
The rumbling sound
 
Of load on load of apples coming in.
 
For I have had too much
 
Of apple-picking: I am overtired
 
Of the great harvest I myself desired (Lines 23-29).

The uneven meter and easy form give the poem a raw, intimate feeling. Moments of vulnerability in this poem are less gave than in “the mother,” though still poignant.

Mothers” by Nikki Giovanni (1972)

This poem explores a mother-child relationship from the perspective of the child. Like Brooks, Giovanni limits her use of capital letters to keep the poem grounded.