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Kenneth Koch's Parody

Decent Essays

Poet Kenneth Koch cleverly imitates the structure, situations, and thematic form of two well-known poets in order to criticize and sometimes perhaps praise their simplicity and underlying irony. He often focuses on presenting the same situation within the poem in a new and humorous way that diversifies your perspective about Robert Frost’s “Mending Wall” and William Carlos Williams’s “This is Just to Say” affair. There is a strong relationship between the original and the parody that both enhances your view of the original and strangely, simultaneously weakens it.
Robert Frost’s “Mending Wall” and its parody by Kenneth Koch “Mending Sump” have a tightly wound connection of style, situation, and irony. Frost, being a man of simplicity when it comes to the writing of his poetry, narrates about boundaries and how necessary they are in any relationship. He criticizes his neighbor …show more content…

Kenneth Koch does not hold back in relating his parody to the original poem, mostly evidently through the similarity in the name of the parody. He also provides his own version of the ambiguous statement one comes across at the beginning of the Frost’s poem. Instead of deep and philosophical “Something there is that doesn’t love a wall” (1) becomes a hilarious (marginally rude and lightly sexual) “Something there is that doesn’t hump a sump” (5). The meaning of the line is entirely irrelevant to the purpose of the parody itself, which not only pokes fun at the dubious sentiment of the original speaker, but also goes as far as to mimic the “iambic-like” free verse structure of Mending Wall, not to mention all the littered assonance of “hump” and “sump”. Koch satirizes the style and situation of Frost’s poem most likely to critique its attempt to allude a simple act of repair with something more critical, more

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