This section contains 3,857 words (approx. 13 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Brown, Lloyd W. “Caribbean Castaway New World Odyssey: Derek Walcott's Poetry.” Journal of Commonwealth Literature 11, no. 2 (1976): 149-59.
In the following essay, Brown offers an overview of Walcott's poetry, tracing the theme of “the New World” that appears throughout his work.
In the poem ‘Elegy’ Derek Walcott offers a bleak image of the American Dream as New World nightmare:
Our hammock swung between Americas we miss you, Liberty. Che's bullet-riddled body falls, and those who cried the Republic must first die to be reborn are dead.(1)
This elegy on the democratic ideal in the New World as a whole is interwoven with an exposé of the essential falsities that have always been inherent in the rhetoric of idealism within the United States:
Still, every body wants to go to bed with Miss America. And, if there's no bread, let them eat cherry pie … Some splintered arrowhead lodged in...
This section contains 3,857 words (approx. 13 pages at 300 words per page) |