Friday, February 19, 2010

#17

My poem this week, "Traveling Charleston and Main" is about the discriminations between different classes, but it was meant to be more than that. The setting of this poem is in a older time (the early 1900's). The young women are meant to be whores or prostitutes. I'm not sure how many people caught that. The word bedclothes seemed to catch some people off guard the intended meaning for this word was for bed sheets. When I did some research on the dialect of the 1900's this was in there and I thought it was cool. So, as far as the title goes I picked Charleston because it is known as the Holy City and I thought that might give the old women more of a reason to scowl and heave. I chose Main because this was the main road lower class women of this time were forced to do. That you all for the comments. I was unsure how everyone would feel about the language and was relieved to find that almost everyone liked it.

Traveling Charleston and Main

From when ce do these churlish people come?
Is it not enough to be a lady,
to curtsey gracefully, polite fully so?
We do wear our dresses and keep our manners.

Is it not enough to be a lady?
We cross our legs and pin our hair,
in fear of the cold night's draft.
But the women in bonnets scowl and heave as if we did something wrong.
We pull the Gents aside privily,

for they too fear the cold night's draft.
So we warm them in our weary bosoms,
but we pull them aside privily
and are steadfast within our tattered bedclothes.

Though we warm the Gents in our weary bosoms,
we still curtsey to all, polite fully so.
We are always steadfast within our bedclothes.
So from whence do these churlish women come?

1 comment:

  1. I liked the language, and at first I thought they might be prostitutes, then I thought maybe they were travelers with dingy sleep wear, keeping people warm by having to huddle together! I still liked the poem, I thought it was clever. I am sure someone else caught it, I can be a little dense.

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