i am offering this poem
“I Am Offering This Poem” Speaker
Love, the speaker believes, is the most valuable gift one person can give another. By “offer[ing]” up this poem, the speaker gives the beloved something precious: a lasting reminder of the comfort, reassurance, and emotional protection that love provides.
How does I Am Offering this Poem represent love?
In I Am Offering This Poem, by Jimmy Santiago Baca, the poet is giving the idea that love is providing you with all that you need, for example guidance and comfort. When in love, humans tend to feel safe and as if they belong, knowing there is someone that’s always there that cares for them.
What does the poem represent to the speaker I Am Offering this Poem?
Freedom and Confinement. The speaker of “I Am Offering this Poem” not only offers his beloved a poem, he offers her freedom. The poem, in other words, represents freedom.
What is the structure of I am offering you this poem?
Structure. ‘I Am Offering this Poem’ is a thirty-line poem that is loosely separated into four stanzas. These stanzas contain different numbers of lines, ranging from five to nine with each separated by the three-word phrase “I love you”.
What is the meaning of and all anyone needs to live?
So, in saying that the poem is all he has to “give,/ and all anyone needs to live,” he’s also referring to love. What’s that famous Beatles song? “All You Need is Love.” The speaker would agree with that statement. Love is poetry and poetry is love—without them we can’t survive.
What type of figurative language is used in I am offering this poem?
By comparing his poem to a coat and a pair of socks, the speaker uses the poetic device of simile. That simile suggests that the poem is something that is protective: it’s warm and snuggly, like a written snuggie. That’s good news for us (well, for the addressed lover, anyway).
What type of figurative language is used in this line I am offering this poem?
He says his poem is “a pot full of yellow corn/ to warm your belly in winter.” The speaker is using a metaphor, because he isn’t saying his poem is like a pot full of corn, he is saying it is a pot full of corn.
How does the repetition of the line I love you contribute to the overall meaning of the poem I am offering this poem?
How does the repetition of the line “I love you” contribute to the overall meaning of the poem? It reminds the reader that love is the cheapest and easiest gift to give away, decreasing its value. It shows how offering this poem represents the speaker offering love, creating a sincere tone.
What are some of the benefits that the speaker hopes the poem will have for the reader?
I Am Offering This Poem- What are some of the benefits that the speaker hopes the poem will have for the reader? The speaker hopes that the poem will guide and shield them from the cold.
Why does the Speaker offer the poem to the reader rather than some other gift?
(“I am Offering this Poem for You” )Why does the speaker offer the poem to the reader rather than some other gift? Because the speaker may not be wealthy, or believes that a poem is more valuable than anything of monetary value, and can thus bring more sentiment.
What does the starling’s struggle most clearly symbolize in the writer?
The starling’s struggle adds intensity and emphasizes that independence needs to be found on one’s own. The sound of the typewriter reinforces the idea that self-expression is necessary to survival. The father’s decision not to help the starling reinforces the idea that survival is a matter of luck.
What phrase does the speaker repeat at the end of every stanza Why?
The speaker has “nothing else to give.” What phrase does the speaker repeat at the end of every stanza in “I Am Offering This Poem?” The speaker repeats the first line. The speaker repeats the title.
What is the meaning in the lines keep it treasure this as you would if you were lost needing direction in the wilderness life becomes when mature?
if you were lost, needing direction, in the wilderness life becomes when mature; The speaker tells his listener to “treasure” his poem, to use it as a guide that provides direction when she’s lost in the “wilderness” of life.