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  1. Who is the speaker in Dorothy Parker’s ‘But Not Forgotten?’ The speaker is a person, likely a woman, who has separated from her romantic partner. It’s possible, due to the speaker ’s use of language, that they have passed away and are addressing their partner from the afterlife.

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    • October 9, 1995
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  3. It leaves me to wonder if the "speaker" is talking about herself being gone...as in death...or...as in the relationship having ended. This speaks to me of how once someone has touched our lives and our hearts, they remain with us forever.

  4. An analysis of the But Not Forgotten poem by Dorothy Parker including schema, poetic form, metre, stanzas and plenty more comprehensive statistics.

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  5. But Not Forgotten. In this well-loved Dorothy Parker poem, the poet’s speaker spends the lines discussing how influential their memory and spirit will be on “you.”The poet suggests that the speaker may have passed away and could be speaking the poem’s lines from the afterlife.

  6. May 13, 2011 · Read, review and discuss the But Not Forgotten poem by Dorothy Parker on Poetry.com.

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  7. One of the best poems of Dorothy Parker, “But Not Forgotten” was first published in her second poetry collection, Sunset Gun (1928). It was written in the same year Parker divorced her husband Edwin Pond Parker. As the title says, this poem is about how the lover cannot forget the speaker even after their separation.

  8. Parker uses a variety of images and metaphors to illustrate how time has affected the speaker's love. For example, she writes: And though you chafe, yet, by my troth, You are mine, your name is Death.