18 pages • 36 minutes read
Maya AngelouA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
For many readers, contemporary poetry can seem intimidating. It can demand input and involvement as readers deal with layers of suggestion and irony, recreate objects into symbols, and, in turn, derive themes, necessarily plural and often contradictory. It encourages, really demands, discussion and probing analysis. Along the way, in that interactive process, the reader is expected to come to terms with the poem’s intricate formal architecture and the poet’s subtle manipulations of prosody itself.
That tradition in poetry, however, is barely three centuries old. In affirming that life is worth living, “The Lesson” offers, well, a lesson, singular. It teaches, consoles, and lifts the spirit. As such, it is an example of wisdom literature, a poetry genre nearly 3,000 years old in which poets use the vehicle of poetry to help guide readers to live better, fuller, richer lives.
Organized religions and established cultures have for centuries accumulated a body of such wisdom literature—parables, folk tales, fables, proverbs, fairy tales. In this genre, readers trust the writer to gift them not with themes but with inspirational lessons using accessible language, uncomplicated symbols, and approachable forms.
The most familiar practitioners, sacred and secular—Aesop, Buddha, Christ, Muhammad, Horace, La Fontaine, and more recently Flannery O’Connor and Theodor Geisel (Dr.
By Maya Angelou
A Brave and Startling Truth
Maya Angelou
All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes
Maya Angelou
And Still I Rise
Maya Angelou
A Song Flung Up to Heaven
Maya Angelou
Caged Bird
Maya Angelou
Dust Tracks on a Road
Maya Angelou, Zora Neale Hurston
Gather Together in My Name
Maya Angelou
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Maya Angelou's Autobiography, #1)
Maya Angelou
Letter to My Daughter
Maya Angelou
Mom & Me & Mom
Maya Angelou
Mother: A Cradle to Hold Me
Maya Angelou
Not Without Laughter
Langston Hughes, Maya Angelou
On the Pulse of Morning
Maya Angelou
Phenomenal Woman: Four Poems Celebrating Women
Maya Angelou
The Heart of a Woman
Maya Angelou