Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Born yesterday
- Subject
- In the poem the speaker
offers the child a
welcome into the world
and outlines what he
hopes will become her
attributes.
- The poem briefly presents traditional
good wishes and hopes offered on
such occasions - "the usual stuff" - but
follows with the suggestion of a less
conventional path to "happiness" won
by "An average of talents" rather than
great beauty.
- the poem was written shortly after
Sally's (writter) birth, but "Born
yesterday" is also a phrase used to
describe someone who is clueless
about the world. thus making the poems
title a pun.
- Structure
- two sections, a ten-line stanza and a 14-line stanza. The
lines are short and direct.
- The first stanza concentrates on
the presentation and eventual
deflation of traditional wishes for
a newborn child.
- The second stanza presents the
speaker's unconventional hopes for
the child. The greater length of the
second stanza is an indication of the
belief that this attitude is more
worthwhile.
- Language
- "tightly folded bud" over protective parents.
- natural image associated with a newborn baby, that of
the "Tightly-folded bud". This metaphor reflects the
baby's curled posture.
- The third and fourth lines start with negative words
"None" and "Not", shifting the emphasis from "the usual
stuff/About being beautiful" and leading a life "running off
a spring/Of innocence and love".
- The use of negatives undermines the
presentation of traditional wishes as
well as preparing the reader for the
second stanza in which less
conventional wishes are offered.
- "may you be ordinary" doesn't want her to be different to other women.
- "in fact may you be dull" he may consider being "dull" a good thing.
- The speaker sets himself apart from "the others", brushing aside their sentiments
("They will all wish you that").
- The closing lines are presented as a list, an energetic, optimistic outburst that
contrasts with the previous language of being "average" and "dull".
- The poet wishing the baby happiness in
the future, but is more honest, realistic
and sincere.
- Attitudes, Themes and ideas
- The speaker in Born Yesterday asserts the
opinion that the best way of "Catching" happiness
is to embrace the "ordinary", "dull" life that so
many people experience.
- To wish for more is perhaps to focus on unrealistic
and ultimately damaging ambitions.
- The language of the poem
reflects certain beliefs: "ordinary",
"average", "nothing uncustomary",
"balance", "dull" are all presented
as desirable qualities or
conditions, despite their
customary negative associations.
- The "usual stuff" about wishing a newborn
child a life of "beauty" and "love and
innocence" is dismissed as naïve - perhaps
those who wish such things are "born
yesterday".