So Much Depends
There were too many perplexing questions needing answers in my day and I was overdone. Attempting sleep, I took deep breaths and quieted my mind. As I cleared out space, into the vacuum came William Carlos Williams’ “The Red Wheelbarrow.”
In my sleepy state, it wasn’t words that came; it was a scene. A red wheelbarrow in green grass, dew sparkling, sun streaming. A slight breeze, sounds of grasses humming, birds calling drowsily. And I, drowsy too, drifted off.
The next day I read the poem.
so much depends
upona red wheel
barrowglazed with rain
waterbeside the white
chickens
Ah, so sparse, so unfettered by capitalization and punctuation. Clean. Crisp. Only 16 words. If it weren’t for the first 4 of them, I would have felt satiated by the simplicity. Instead, I was reminded of a perplexing high school English class explication where we worked to answer the question, “What depends upon the wheelbarrow?”
I didn’t have a clue back then, even though words were my jam and explicating was too. The simplicity of the poem stumped me. There were no real clues to help me decode meaning. It was frustrating.
Now, I have some ideas. Maybe man’s work that roots him solidly in the earth which sustains him depends on the red wheelbarrow. Maybe the health and happiness that is generated from harmony with nature depends on the red wheelbarrow. Maybe the serenity of the simple life depends on the red wheelbarrow.
Maybe I depend on the red wheelbarrow too.
**Also, can I recommend this piece that I found during my Williams reading spree? Lovely.
3 Comments
Jen
Love me that WCW and the wheelbarrows! I revisited this myself a few years ago and had a reconciliation with my introduction to it in HS. But I read the Peace poem and feel like I’m back there— what is it about?? Someone tell me.
Brooke
I read it as a sleepy time poem about the constellations parading across the sky, each doing the thing consistent with their character and story. I like that Orion the hunter is listening. He’s my fav.
Brooke
I quite by accident just stumbled upon two books that play on The Red Wheelbarrow–Love That Dog and Hate That Cat by Sharon Creech. De-lightful! If you studied poetry in school and/or you’re a fan of poetry, buy these, read them, and then give them to a child in your life (the ones I bought are going to my nephew for his birthday).