It is true feeling from Galway Kinnell that makes readers feel how his love is more than just eating the berries. His connection throughout the poem is an enjoyment to feel just how he felt. He states “as I stand among them lifting the stalks to my mouth, the ripest berries fall almost unbidden to my tongue, as words sometimes do” With Kinnell mentioning his feelings like this, it is apparent how he connects blackberry eating to words he uses. Berries falling unhindered or effortlessly into his mouth much like words that flow from his mouth. The berry eating will confusing as one would just read through this text by taking each word for face value and not connecting them to the
It is true feeling from Galway Kinnell that makes readers feel how his love is more than just eating the berries. His connection throughout the poem is an enjoyment to feel just how he felt. He states “as I stand among them lifting the stalks to my mouth, the ripest berries fall almost unbidden to my tongue, as words sometimes do” With Kinnell mentioning his feelings like this, it is apparent how he connects blackberry eating to words he uses. Berries falling unhindered or effortlessly into his mouth much like words that flow from his mouth. The berry eating will confusing as one would just read through this text by taking each word for face value and not connecting them to the