18 pages • 36 minutes read
Derek WalcottA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
At first read, “The Almond Trees” appears to be anything but formally structured. The stanzas are obviously irregular, alternating between 4 and 5 lines apparently at random. The lines themselves are irregular in length, some lines are sentences, some fragments, some only two words. Some lines (even stanzas) move directly into the next (enjambment), while others close in end-punctuation. There is no reassuringly anticipated rhythm and certainly no evident rhyme scheme. The poem itself moves from image to image restlessly—the cold morning ocean to the old fisherman with his dog to the sea-almond trees to the brutal sun to the sunbathers. Yet much as the poem thematically argues the necessary and vital ties among those images, how they find their way to an organic whole by being so disparate, the form reveals a carefully balanced irregularity, intricately created to appear chaotic.
Thus, Walcott crafts poetry, his art, using the formal device of irregularity. The poem is both carefully designed and spontaneous. The poem draws on two distinctly different formal structures and yet resists any disruptive haphazard feeling. The outcome is a sense of fusion, which thematically relates to the Caribbean culture itself as it fuses the customs and traditions of its European roots and the lively animation of its indigenous identity.
By Derek Walcott
A Careful Passion
Derek Walcott
Adam's Song
Derek Walcott
A Far Cry from Africa
Derek Walcott
Dream on Monkey Mountain
Derek Walcott
Love After Love
Derek Walcott
Midsummer XXVII
Derek Walcott
Omeros
Derek Walcott
Pantomime
Derek Walcott
Ruins of a Great House
Derek Walcott
Sabbaths, WI
Derek Walcott
The Flock
Derek Walcott
The Schooner Flight
Derek Walcott
To Return To The Trees
Derek Walcott