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  1. [transitive] feed somebody to provide food for a person or group of people. They have a large family to feed. There's enough here to feed an army. Have they been feeding you well? They struggled to feed and clothe the children. Having another mouth (= person) to feed can be a strain.

    • Summary
    • Historical Context
    • Structure and Form
    • Literary Devices
    • Detailed Analysis
    • Similar Poems

    They Feed They Lion’ paints a compelling and visceral image of people rising up. Seated in their car as they drive across the countryside, the speaker envisions a people (“They Lion”) finding both strength and courage in their multitudes. The poem’s first two stanzasallude to the working-class Black Americans who moved in the Great Migration to ci...

    They Feed They Lion’ contains a number of allusions to both Levine’s life in Detroit and historical accounts. In an interview with The Atlantic from 1999, the author went into great detail about where he sourced the idea for the poem. Explaining its inception was borne out of his time working alongside a man named Eugene, sorting universal joints ...

    They Feed They Lion’ is organized into five stanzas, each of which uses between five and eight lines. These stanzas do not use any definite rhyme scheme or meter. The poem does have an incantatory cadence similar to a chant, which is developed by anaphora (“Out of”) and the repetitionof the phrases like “They Lion” and “they feed.” Levine also use...

    They Feed They Lion’ uses both imagery and figurative language to create abstract and surreal scenes. In the first stanza, Levine catalogs a variety of images of the industrial working class, like “burlap sacks” and “black bean and wet slate bread” (1-2). He also slyly combines metaphor with personification— “acids of rage, the candor of tar” (3)....

    Stanza One

    The first stanza of ‘They Feed They Lion’ conjures up a scene of resurgence. A motifthat’s developed throughout the poem and begins here with the anaphora that opens lines 1-4 (“Out of”). Though what exactly is coming forth isn’t addressed until the final line — yet the “burlap sacks” (1), “black bean” (2), and general industrial nature of the images clues the reader in on some possibilities. The most general being working-class men and women, though it will soon become apparent that Levine i...

    Stanza Two

    Stanza two solidifies the speaker’s focus on Black strifewith an image of exodus en masse, which also serves as the first of the many biblical allusions in the poem. Every repetition of “out of” fosters an image of continuous streams of people pouring from “gray hills” (6), “industrial barns” (7), and bus rides. The imagery alludes in part to the so-called Great Migration that took place across the bulk of the 20th century, during which an estimated six million Black Americans migrated from t...

    Stanza Three

    In stanza three, the speaker conjures up a carnal scene of devouring that begins in the first line. The speaker personifies the Earth as “eating” a variety of objects — “trees,” “fence posts,” and “gutted cars” (12-13) in a scene that helps accentuatethe poem’s apocalyptic characteristics. But it’s not all destruction and death as the Earth is also described as acting maternally, “calling in her little ones” (13) — though it’s not immediately clear humans are among them. The most ambiguous im...

    ‘The Powwow at the End of the World’ by Sherman Alexie– is a poem that imagines the world’s end as a restoration of Indigenous lands.
    ‘Animals Are Passing From Our Lives’ by Philip Levine– is an emotional poem that advocates for animals.
    ‘Star-Fix’ by Marilyn Nelson– is a poem that champions a Black navigator aboard an aircraft for his skill and altruism.
    • Male
    • May 13, 1994
    • Poetry Analyst
  2. Stream 'They Feed' and watch online. Discover streaming options, rental services, and purchase links for this movie on Moviefone. Watch at home and immerse yourself in this movie's story...

  3. If you feed a person or animal, you give them food to eat and sometimes actually put it in their mouths. We brought along pieces of old bread and fed the birds. [ VERB noun ]

  4. to supply something to a person or thing, or put something into a machine or system, especially in a regular or continuous way: be fed into The vegetables are fed into the machine at this end. be fed to The images are fed over satellite networks to broadcasters throughout the world.

  5. www.healthline.com › nutrition › 50-super-healthy-foods50 Foods That Are Super Healthy

    Nov 13, 2023 · Many foods are both healthy and tasty. By filling your plate with fruits, vegetables, quality protein sources, and other whole foods, you’ll have meals that are colorful, versatile, and good for...

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  7. feed meaning, definition, what is feed: to give food to a person or animal: Learn more.