Log In
|
My Passes
|
Sign Up
Learning Guides
Teacher Resources
Test Prep
College Readiness
Schools & Districts
All of Shmoop
Literature
Bible
Poetry
Shakespeare
Mythology
Bestsellers
Dr. Seuss
Pre-Algebra
Algebra
Algebra II
Geometry
Biology
US History
Flashcards
DMV
Careers
SAT
ACT
AP Exams
En Español
Essay Lab
Videos
Literary Critics
Shmoop Shtuff
Cite This Page
To Go
Yet Do I Marvel
by
Countee Cullen
Home
Poetry
Yet Do I Marvel
Themes
Intro
The Poem
Summary
Analysis
Themes
Quotes
Study Questions
Quizzes
Best of the Web
How to Read a Poem
Advertisement
Table of Contents
Yet Do I Marvel Quotes
AP English Language
AP English Literature
SAT Test Prep
ACT Exam Prep
ADVERTISEMENT
Yet Do I Marvel Themes
Little Words, Big Ideas
Race
Although race isn't mentioned until the last line of "Yet Do I Marvel," our speaker spends the first 13 lines setting the stage for that last minute turn from a general discussion of God and suffer...
Religion
Although there aren't any churches, sacrifices, or long homilies, religious references play a major role in "Yet Do I Marvel." The speaker opens the poem by declaring that God is good. In fact, the...
Suffering
No doubt about it, there's a little bit of suffering in "Yet Do I Marvel." We've got blindness, death, starvation, and endless physical labor. Okay, so a big bit of suffering. And all of this from...
Weakness
Nobody likes to admit weakness, but for the speaker of "Yet Do I Marvel," weakness is something nobody can escape. For the speaker, weakness is being unable to understand God's ways. It's not a phy...