Acquainted With the Night
What is the point of view in the poem, Acquainted With the Night?
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Asked by
Jill W
Last updated by
Jill W
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Acquainted with the Night is written in first-person point of view using the pronoun “I.” In fact, seven out of the fourteen total lines, including the first five which open the poem, begin with this word (this is an example of anaphora). This keeps the poem’s focus on the speaker’s experience, rather than the external world. Although the poem uses a vibrant cityscape as its backdrop, its key message is about the internality of the speaker: their loneliness and isolation, their struggle with their own inner darkness. Each of the stanzas references the first-person speaker in some way, connecting each sensory detail to the way it affects and is affected by their personal lens.
Acquainted with the Night, BookRags