‘These speculations sour in the sun’: Self-Reflection, Aging, and Death in Weldon Kees’s ‘For my Daughter’
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.35360/njes.489Keywords:
poetry, mirror, modernism, sonnet, age, twentieth-century literatureAbstract
This article provides the first thorough analysis of Weldon Kees’s canonical sonnet ‘For my Daughter’ (1940). It does so by way of close-reading and placing the poem within several long-standing poetic traditions as well as the author’s oeuvre as a whole. Said traditions include, most prominently, that of mirror literature, which regularly problematizes selfhood, the aging process, and death, but also modernist poetry and the sonnet, both Shakespearean and Romantic. My central interpretative claim is that the speaker’s bewildering inspection of a non-existent daughter in the sonnet results from, and can make sense as, his gloomy projection of her imagined features onto his own mirror image early in the morning.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2019 The Author
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authors of content published in NJES remain the copyright holders.