"Variations on the Word Sleep" By Margaret Atwood
Date Submitted: 07/28/2004 15:55:04
Variations on the Word Sleep
By Margaret Atwood
In Variations on the Word Sleep the narrator of the poem immediately addresses his/her conscience need to connect with the other person, and they also recognize the hopelessness of this goal: "I would like to watch you sleeping, which may not happen"(1-2). The opening to the poem, as we see here, could be considered typical of Atwood's writing in the sense that one person longs
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air "I would like to be the air that inhabits you"(27-28). The poem "Variations of the Word Sleep" is an excellent example of Atwood's talent for revealing feelings of separations and also for showing the romance in giving up ones' own identity for the sake of love. This theme is not typical to what the public would consider ruthlessly feminist, but Atwood's writings redefine the realms of what women desire and deserve in love.
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