15 pages 30 minutes read

Jane Kenyon

Otherwise

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1996

A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.

Symbols & Motifs

Uphill

The symbolic use of the world “uphill” (Line 10) is important to Kenyon’s poem. Although this notation literally refers to the uphill trek of the speaker as they walk their dog, it also can stand in for the battle to stay in the present moment, undistracted and fully appreciative of life. Whether the speaker is Kenyon battling her leukemia or an outside speaker struggling with maintaining happiness, the idea is that life itself is an uphill battle. The sweetness of life as it unfolds is often shadowed by the inevitable “otherwise.”

Work

In the poem Kenyon’s speaker notes that “All morning I did / the work I love” (Lines 11-12). From a biographical stance, this line refers to Kenyon’s work as an artist, a writer actively producing poems. In his interview with Cramer, Hall notes Kenyon often worked on poems in the morning. However, in a wider context, work may function as symbol for the speaker’s emotional process of working to appreciate the fullness of life rather than succumbing to the “otherwise” to which the speaker’s mind keeps returning.

Related Titles

By Jane Kenyon

Study Guide

logo

Having It Out with Melancholy

Jane Kenyon

Having It Out with Melancholy

Jane Kenyon

Study Guide

logo

Let Evening Come

Jane Kenyon

Let Evening Come

Jane Kenyon

Study Guide

logo

The Blue Bowl

Jane Kenyon

The Blue Bowl

Jane Kenyon