Aubade

Aubade
Amber Flora Thomas

I know my leaving in the breakfast table mess.
Bowl spills into bowl: milk and bran, bread crust
crumbled. You push me back into bed.

More “honey” and “baby.”
Breath you tell my ear circles inside me,
curls a damp wind and runs the circuit
of my limbs. I interrogate the air,

smell Murphy’s Oil Soap, dog kibble.
No rose. No patchouli swelter. And your mouth—
sesame, olive. The nudge of your tongue
behind my top teeth.

To entirely finish is water entering water.
Which is the cup I take away?

More turning me. Less your arms reaching
around my back. You ask my ear
where I have been and my body answers,
all over kingdom come.

Literary analysis
The poem "Aubade" is a morning song that lovers sing at dawn after spending a night together and are now reluctant to get up. The theme of this poem is the fulfillment of love - a kind of love that makes lovers seem invincible. The title of the poem "Aubade" implies a morning love song about lovers who part at dawn. The scene of this poem takes place at the speaker's home, where the speaker wakes up before sunrise and cannot go back to sleep. She worries the reader with surprise images that are simple and yet not to be overlooked.

She begins the poem with a glimpse of her breakfast table, which she observes before trying to leave for the day: “I know that I am at the breakfast table However, this drain of emotion is interrupted by the lover bringing her back to bed, and she expresses his breath entering her ears and turning into a "damp wind and circulating / circulating my limbs" . The use of the metaphor of blood as a cycle highlights the passion and intensity of love. "I ask for the air," she says and smells her lover's breath. Comparing the smell of their lover's breath to different smells like "Murphy's Oil Soap" and "Dog Nibble" adds to the sensual atmosphere the couple finds themselves in. Their argument that the smell is neither rose nor patchouli oil is very tempting. Once again she uses the images of touch and smell as she explains the smell of his breath and says, “And your mouth - / sesame, olive” and “The thrust of your tongue / behind my upper teeth. “The penultimate stanza marks the climax of this ecstasy when they no longer love each other. The speaker notices the body fluids mixed with reference to "water that goes into water".

In the last verse, the lover turns to her, whispers in her ear and asks where she was and her body reacts. The circle of love that began with hesitation and lovemaking closes with the spiritual satisfaction of "my body's answers".

Strukturanalyse
The poem is a romantic lyric poem consisting of five stanzas. Each stanza has an alternate number of lines. However, the second, third and last stanzas contain four verses each, while the first stanza consists of three verses and the fourth has only two verses.

The poem is written in the form of an alternative trochaic and iambic metric “I know my leave in the mess of the breakfast table / bowl spills into bowl: milk and bran, bread crust. ”

There is no internal rhyme, and the poem is written in free verse, therefore it has no final rhyme, as demonstrated here:

my departure at the breakfast table mess. A
The bowl spills into the bowl: milk and bran, crumbled B
bread crust. You push me back to the bed. C

The language of this poem is indirect and connotative. There is no use of assonance, and only alliteration is used. at the same time with the sound "b" in the second line of the first stanza as "bowl: milk and bran, bread crust". The final line is used several times in the middle or at the end of the stanzas. Enjambment is used in each stanza as, "A damp wind curls and runs through the / circuit of my limbs. I question the air."


Dating Guidance This poem is a morning love song sung by lovers seeking to appreciate the romantic tradition of love. The poet explores the complete action of love and shows his images of smell and touch to show the spontaneous expression of his own feelings. , passion, love and emotions. Likewise, lovers can quote lines to their loved ones by using images of smell and touch as follows:

"Smells Murphy's oil soap, dog kibble.
No roses. No Patchouli -
sesame, olive. The push of your tongue
behind my upper teeth. "

Also, the following lines can be used:

" You ask my ear
where I've been and my body responds,
the whole kingdom come.

Anthem for Doomed Youth Auguries of Innocence