Read and Analyze the Following Poem and Answer the Multiple Choice Questions Below

Name Period

Tuesday, 4/7

Read and analyze the following poem and answer the multiple choice questions below.

Habit

The shoes put on each time

left first, then right.

The morning potion’s teaspoon

of sweetness stirred always

5 for seven circlings—no fewer, no more—

into the cracked blue cup.

Touching the pocket for wallet,

for keys,

before closing the door.

10 How did we come

to believe these small rituals’ promise,

that we are today the selves we yesterday knew,

tomorrow will be?

How intimate and unthinking,

15 the way the toothbrush is shaken dry after use,

the part we wash first in the bath.

Which habits we learned from others

and which are ours alone we may never know.

Unbearable to acknowledge

20 how much they are themselves our fated life.

Open the traveling suitcase—

There the beloved red sweater,

bright tangle of necklace, earrings of amber.

Each confirming: I chose these, I.

25 But habit is different: it chooses.

And we, its good horse,

opening our mouths at even the sight of the bit.

—Jane Hirshfield

from Slate, March 15, 2000

“Habit” Questions

1. Lines 1 through 9 include a series of

(1) common fears

(2) everyday actions

(3) important lessons

(4) cherished memories

2. According to the poem, people view “small

rituals” (line 11) as a way to preserve their

(1) wealth

(2) intelligence

(3) potential

(4) identity

3. The contents of the traveling suitcase (lines 21

through 24) most likely symbolize

(1) self-awareness

(2) careful organization

(3) a love of fashion

(4) a desire to escape

What do you think the theme—the primary message—of this poem is?

Identify one literary element used by the author in above poem. Describe how the author uses the element—the impact/effect it has. Consider tone, imagery, rhyme scheme, diction (word choice) and figurative language. Feel free to use Writer’s Inc. to review poetry terminology.

Read and analyze the following poem and answer the multiple choice questions below.

So I Said I Am Ezra

So I said I am Ezra

and the wind whipped my throat

gaming1 for the sounds of my voice

I listened to the wind

5 go over my head and up into the night

Turning to the sea I said

I am Ezra

but there were no echoes from the waves

The words were swallowed up

10 in the voice of the surf

or leaping over the swells

lost themselves oceanward

Over the bleached and broken fields

I moved my feet and turning from the wind

15 that ripped sheets of sand

from the beach and threw them

like seamists2 across the dunes

swayed as if the wind were taking me away

and said

20 I am Ezra

As a word too much repeated

falls out of being

so I Ezra went out into the night

like a drift of sand

25 and splashed among the windy oats

that clutch the dunes

of unremembered seas

— A. R. Ammons

from Ommateum, 1955

Dorrance & Company

1.  gaming — gambling

2.  seamists — sea mists

So I Said I Am Ezra Questions

1. The poet repeats the phrase “I am Ezra” to

emphasize the speaker’s desire

(1) to rebel

(2) to play

(3) for knowledge

(4) for recognition

2. The sea’s response to the poet’s words (lines 9

through 12) is presented through the use of

(1) personification

(2) irony

(3) onomatopoeia

(4) allusion

3. Although the speaker is ignored by the wind, the

sea, and the fields, he still retains his

(1) individuality

(2) naturalness

(3) foolishness (4) reluctance

What do you think the theme—the primary message—of this poem is?

Identify one literary element used by the author in above poem. Describe how the author uses the element—the impact/effect it has. Consider tone, imagery, rhyme scheme, diction (word choice) and figurative language. Feel free to use Writer’s Inc. to review poetry terminology.

Read and analyze the following poem and answer the multiple choice questions below.

Night Light

Only your plastic night light dusts its pink

on the backs and undersides of things; your mother,

head resting on the nightside of one arm,

floats a hand above your cradle

5 to feel the humid tendril1 of your breathing.

Outside, the night rocks, murmurs … Crouched

in this eggshell light, I feel my heart

slowing, opened to your tiny flame

as if your blue irises mirrored me

10 as if your smile breathed and warmed

and curled in your face which is only asleep.

There is space between me, I know,

and you. I hang above you like a planet—

you’re a planet, too. One planet loves the other.

—Anne Winters

from The Key to the City, 1986 The University of Chicago Press

______

1tendril — something resembling a long, slender, coiling extension on a plant stem

Night Light Questions

1. The mother’s action in lines 4 and 5 demonstrates her

(1) need for sleep

(2) desire for understanding

(3) concern for the child

(4) wish for the dawn

2. The poet’s use of the pronoun “I” reveals that the

(1) child has awakened

(2) mother is the narrator

(3) poet is the observer

(4) father has arrived

3. The phrase “blue irises” (line 9) refers to the

(1) eyes of the child

(2) photos near the cradle

(3) flowers below the window

(4) sky above the house

4. Lines 13 and 14 convey the concept that the parent and child are

(1) uninterested

(2) unhappy

(3) lonely

(4) connected

What do you think the theme—the primary message—of this poem is?

Identify one literary element used by the author in above poem. Describe how the author uses the element—the impact/effect it has. Consider tone, imagery, rhyme scheme, diction (word choice) and figurative language.