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Rated: E · Essay · Inspirational · #2115394
A quick analysis of William Carlos Williams' "The Red Wheelbarrow"
so much depends
upon

a red wheel
barrow

glazed with rain
water

beside the white
chickens

- William Carlos Williams

As a part-time English professor of English, I teach this poem every semester. Keep in mind many of my students have not been in a classroom for a number of years. The wide-eyed looks of bafflement never cease to put a big smile on my face. Never mind that every time I teach this poem it's around 7 pm on a weeknight. I am fried, and so are they. Still, this poem tends to spark a much welcomed blaze of conversation.

I have to make it clear in the beginning of the lesson that this is, in fact, the ENTIRE poem. Much of William's work is obscure but widely read and taught. "The Red Wheelbarrow" is one of his signature pieces. The poem is a lightbulb-over-the-head inducing spell once the students learn that Williams was a practicing physician who became inspired to write this weird little poem while gazing out the window in a house of a dying child.

Suddenly, we are transported into ponderous discussions dealing with dependency, spirituality, need, grief, healing, uselessness, and hope - diverse facets of life that must coincide in order to make us human. Not bad for a 16 word poem. Poet Wallace Stevens referred to Williams' poems as "rubbings of reality", and Williams indeed gives you little snippets of landscape and bits and pieces of the human experience. He leaves it to you to put the puzzle together- if you choose to take the time.

I think what makes this poem go from baffling to enlightening is the blending of the human condition. In a short amount of time and space, you are reminded about simple necessities needed yet easily forgotten and rarely appreciated. There was this man, William Carlos Williams, who on a daily basis was slapped in the face by mortality. Whether he knew it or not, he wrote this poem to call our attention to the balance we need to obtain between our passions and obligations - two things that are rarely synonymous.

We have all felt like the red wheelbarrow - settling into the Earth, taking in whatever falls down on us, and not always feeling appreciated or purposeful. We often fail to dry ourselves after the storm of the everyday and take the time to pursue our passions. Everyone has a passion, talent, or purpose that reaches beyond work and family. The problem is many of us think we have all the time in the world to look, and we don't.

Sooner rather than later, those "white chickens", which can easily be seen as something angelic or divine, are going to come take us away. "So much depends/upon" the acknowledgment and acceptance of every fragment of consciousness that makes us whole. That's when we find balance, and that is when we are able to stay on that purposeful wagon for longer periods of time. A poem such as this rewards us with a productive struggle to find balance.

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