The work is divided into six sections, which represent the emotion or motivation behind the speaker's obstacles in society. These obstacles may become reminders of the triumphs and failures of a young man's experience, trying to incorporate the wisdom that his older compatriots offer him. The writer's poetic influences lie heavily with the American Modernists. Some poets become characters or subjects within poems. The idea of creating a world within a poem stems from the rejection of tradition posed by the Modernists. Some of these created worlds hold Romantic ideals of grandeur, but most are simple alternatives to an alienating society. A piece like Don't Feed the Sea Lions, suggests that there are negative consequences to creating your ow...