Cherries
by Lucien Stryk
Because I sit eating cherries
which I did not pick
a girl goes bad under
the elevator tracks, will
never be whole again.
Because I want the full bag,
grasping, twenty-five children
cry for food. Gorging,
I’ve none to offer. I want
to care, I mean to, but not
yet, a dozen cherries
rattling at the bottom of my bag.
One by one I lift them to
my mouth, slowly break
their skin—twelve nations
bleed. Because I love, because
I need cherries, I
cannot help them. My happiness,
bought cheap,
must last forever.
2. "I" - Look at how
often the speakers uses “I” in this short poem. What does
that mean?
3. "PICK" - Why is it
significant that he didn’t pick the cherries. How many of us
do pick our own cherries?
4. "GOES BAD" - What does it
mean to “go bad” when referring to fruit and when referring
to people?
5. "ELEVATOR
TRACKS" - Stryk lived
in Chicago whose transit system includes an elevated train.
The “elevator tracks” might be referring to the sections of
the train that are elevated.
6. "GRASPING" - Who is
grasping? The narrator? The children? Both? Note the
difference in why each are grasping.
7. "I MEAN TO" - By saying he
wants and means to care, what does that tell us about his
state of enlightenment, of his awareness of what’s going on
in the world? Does this make his actions even more
reprehensible? How is he reflective of the average
experience/existence of people in America?
8. "BUT NOT YET"
- After this
phrase, he mentions the cherries left at the bottom of the
bag. Does that mean he won’t care until he has nothing to
give? Will that provide him with an excuse not to care – “I
would give, but I have nothing myself” kind of thinking?
9. "BLEED" - What happens
when we bite into or cut up cherries? How is this connected
to bleeding?
10. "I NEED
CHERRIES" - He doesn’t
just “love” cherries – he “needs” them. What is the
difference in the two feelings? And what do these cherries
potentially represent in America?
11. "MY
HAPPINESS BOUGHT CHEAP" - Why is it
“bought cheap”?
12. "MUST LAST
FOREVER" - What kind
of life view seeks eternal happiness? How realistic is this?
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