This Is Just To Say

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"This Is Just To Say" might be seen as an appreciation of life's simple pleasures.

To
illustrate this, the poem shows a speaker eating frozen plums that were being
conserved by someone else, maybe the speaker's partner. The poetry's themes include
desire, regret, and satisfaction. In the lines "I have eaten the plums that were in the
icebox" and “Forgive me they were delicious so sweet and so cold”, we may assume
that the speaker has recognized his fault and apologized to the opposing party.
This short, uncomplicated poem reveals the author's mistakes and regrets all at once.
You'll notice that the poem's focus isn't on the speaker's apologies, but rather on the
pleasure the speaker derives from eating the plums. The title "This Is Just To Say"
underlines that the poem isn't trying to make any grand claims or draw any deeper
meaning. Rather, the poem explores the joys that may be found in everyday life,
ultimately urging readers to appreciate tiny pleasures like teasingly savoring the
wonderful flavor of stolen plums.

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