Analysis of Breadwinner



Retiring for the day from her job as a sales clerk,
A woman supporting her family as the only one with work.
Her husband lost his job because of the recession,
Leading him and our nation to fall into depression.

Like everyone else, he turned to liquors.
Rum soothed him, but it enhanced his rigors.
The only thing that fed his addiction,
Indulging in his government-issued prescription.

She opened the door,
And saw bottles on the floor.
It was that time of day,
But she’d be okay.

The setting sun shined a new light on a captivating sight.
She chose to focus on its beauty,
Instead of losing to something she was unable to fight.
A familiar storm standing at six-feet-two-inches,
Reminding her of the reason why she flinches.

Against whom she would never win,
The storm raged towards her.
Swirling with insecurity and misplaced anger,
Controlled by a man consumed with chagrin.

Approaching her like a hurricane,
It stumbled closer and closer.
When it finally towered over her,
She was, once again, at the mercy of the distillation of sugarcane.

The honey-colored sea surrounded by a glassy shore.
She stood there frozen,
For she could not run while bound by a ring of golden ore.

The waves crashed in accordance with the rapid and relentless gales.
She tried to block the blows,
But it was an effort that routinely fails.

To–
And fro.
To–
And fro.

She felt the ocean’s spray on her face,
Smelling not of salt but of syrup.
The droplets fell and touched her skin,
Stinging the marks she’d soon erase.

Although she was accustomed to this type of weather,
It was hard to keep her sea-legs while wearing shoes of pointed leather.

Come morning light,
The angry winds slowed and the waves with them.
The breeze kissed the wounds it had left just last night,
Then whispered in her ear:
I’d never hurt you on purpose, darling.
I love you, there’s nothing to fear.

She replied with a smile and a nod,
To avoid another collision.
Keeping her mouth shut, she plead to God:
Please, let them bring back Prohibition.

We look to you, American legislation.
The pattern of alcohol and abuse is not merely a correlation.

Our husbands’ hands to which we fall victim,
Are the physical consequences of this system.
Something that we cannot overcome,
Is an emasculated man on his fifth glass of rum.

May you save us with your New Deal,
And let them provide the money for our next meal.
Return to them their masculinity,
And reduce our risk of early lividity.

Bring us prosperity, President Roosevelt,
For we do not wish to be strangled by our husbands’ belt.
It is to the women that you should be attentive,
And take away the men’s incentive.

Their days previously spent in factories,
Now being wasted, drowning in daiquiris.
Their palms have grown soft,
But make our skin thicker.
Now, American government, it’s your turn to deliver.

Put a stop to the pain,
Even if it sacrifices your economic gain.
While you fuel a fire that helps you thrive,
We’re the ones being burned alive.

Blunt force trauma or strangulation
Will likely bring about our expiration.
In the moment, it’ll be their choice.
Just remember that you ignored our voice.

While they’ll be the ones to rip the breath from our bodies,
You’ll have put the strength in their hands with your commodities.
Although our lives belong to them,
Our deaths will soon belong to you
And your policies from which they’ll stem.

We ask for pity,
And for you to take accountability.
You can’t make a cruel man less violent,
But you can remove the accelerant.

In their eyes, being the sole provider made us sinners.
So it goes, the fate of the female breadwinners.


Scheme aabb ccbb ddee fgfxc hiih jiij dbd kxk LMLM nxhn ii fofxxx pbpb bb qqqq rrgg sstt ucxii jjvv bbww uuolo ggxx cc
Poetic Form
Metre 0101011011011 01001001001010111 0101110110010 101010101101010 110111110 1111101110 0101111010 0100110010010 11001 0110101 111111 1111 01011011101001 111101110 011101101101011 0010110111110 01001010111 01111101 011010 101010000110 0110101101 01001010 11010010 1110010100 11101101010010110 01010101010101 11110 11111111011101 0110010101000101 111101 11111010101 1 01 1 01 110101101 101111110 01010101 10011101 111010111110 11111011110111010 1101 0101100111 01101111111 110001 1101111010 11111011 101101001 101010010 100111111 11111010 11110100010 01011000111100010 10101111110 101001001110 10111010 1101001111111 11111111 0110101011011 011110100 0011011100100 1101001010 111111110110101 1110101111010 010101010 11100010100 110101001 11111 1110110 101001001111010 101101 101110010101 11100101111 00110101 11101010 11010110010 00101111 10101101101 11101110111010 11101011110100 11010111 101110111 011001111 11110 01111010000 11101011100 1110100100 01110010101110 1110110110
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 3,654
Words 743
Sentences 50
Stanzas 23
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 4, 5, 4, 4, 3, 3, 4, 4, 2, 6, 4, 2, 4, 4, 4, 5, 4, 4, 5, 4, 2
Lines Amount 89
Letters per line (avg) 32
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 123
Words per stanza (avg) 28

About this poem

This poem is about alcohol-induced domestic violence during the 1930s.

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Written on February 11, 2022

Submitted on May 01, 2022

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:43 min read
9

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