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The poem is one stanza constructed in free verse, 35 short lines, each line with two-four accented syllables. Many of these short lines use enjambment (ending a poetic line without punctuation) to disrupt the narrative and its series of clear imagery. For example, when the speaker discusses how the enslaved were forced into chains, she states,
I love you in the rusted iron
Chains someone was made
To drag, until love let them be
Unclasped and left empty
In the center of the ring (Lines 15-19).
This breaking of lines to fit the confines of the poem give powerful emphasis to the word “Chains” (Line 16), an accented syllable separated from its modifiers and beginning a new line. Enjambment creates multiple interpretations as Line 16 reads “Chains someone was made,” suggesting that chains “made” an enslaved person (“someone”), until one reads the next line, which completes the meaning: “someone was made / To drag” (Lines 16-17), showing that someone wasn’t “made” but “made to drag,” forced into a verb and not a noun.
This continues throughout the poem, giving powerful emphasis to words disrupted from the normal flow of the sentence and placed on the next line.
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By Tracy K. Smith
African American Literature
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Common Reads: Freshman Year Reading
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Family
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Mythology
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Nation & Nationalism
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Poetry: Family & Home
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Poetry: Mythology & Folklore
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Poetry: Perseverance
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Political Poems
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Short Poems
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