Easter Wings - IJS
Easter Wings - IJS
Easter Wings - IJS
• But here comes the downer: in the first half of each stanza, Herbert describes the
downward spiral of human life. It all starts with Adam who, in addition to being the first
man, was also the first victim as he spoiled the "wealth and store" God gave him, thus
sinking into poverty.
• In the second stanza, the speaker goes from one sad s-word to the next, getting serious
about how sickness, shame, and sin wore him down to nothing.
However, remember that not only do wings give the poem its physical shape; they also
In the second half of each stanza, Herbert asks to rise with the resurrected Christ and
celebrate Easter's victory over death. Comparing himself to larks and hawks, he
acknowledges his own sinful weakness but cheerfully looks forward to better days. In
describing how he will rise with Christ, Herbert compares himself to birds that use wings
• Popular for his religious feeling in addition to his technical brilliance, Herbert's
often described as pure-hearted and tender, writing on a small scale with
gentle words about super-important things, like death and sin and God.
Each of the two stanzas begins with a tone of sadness and regret due to
the sinful nature of the world. Halfway through each stanza, the tone
shifts at the words "with thee" (meaning with God) to a tone of hope
and a spirit of overcoming.
• What the speaker truly wants is a ticket out of the abyss of despair. How
to get out? Rise up with Christ like a bird from a tree.
• But why has the speaker chosen birds?
For one thing, birds have been admired and written about for so long that they're
really rich in associations. Birds mean freedom and gracefulness and love. They are
linked with death and foretelling and hope. Herbert's birds are meant to evoke a lot
of these feelings, while introducing more explicitly the ideas of singing and healing.
• It is sort of a bumpy ride, getting kicked out of the Garden of Eden, and Herbert uses the
language of material hardship to describe it. Adam is created with "wealth and store" but
once he makes his fatal error, he loses all of it, going from poor to "most poor."
• But the word "decaying"—a surprising choice that doesn't fit in with the other images of
material wealth—signals that this poverty might also be a little less literal. Just take the
Garden of Eden, which is both physically abundant as well as symbolic of God's abundant
love. In the same way, Adam's loss of his material goods = the loss of his spiritual
closeness to God.
To sum
up………………
by which humankind overcomes sin and attains freedom. In the conclusion of the poem,
the speaker wants to feel the victory over sin and difficulty through God. His difficulty
will thereby strengthen his flight, or path, as he leans into the guidance of God. The
poem consists of two ten-line stanzas of varying line lengths, which in their printed form
Even though Adam and Eve are never mentioned by name, what role do they play in the poem?
Can sin and affliction ever be positive? How do you think our speaker would answer that
question?
How does the shape of "Easter Wings" influence and overlap with the poem's meaning?
How does this poem reinforce the traditional theme that the individual's life should be an
"imitation of Christ's life“?
Depending on how it is formatted, why does the poem also look like an hourglass?
References
• https://www.jstor.org/stable/3817021
• https://sci-hub.tw/10.2307/3817021
• https://www.shmoop.com/study-guides/poetry/easter-wings
• https://schoolworkhelper.net/george-herbert%E2%80%99s-easter-wi
ngs-summary-analysis/