Much like poetry, “Music expresses that which cannot be put into words and that which cannot remain silent.” Music and poetry are two platforms in which artists from the beginning of time have chosen to circulate their ideas, feelings, and opinions. Although different in popularity, these mediums are alike in various ways. Nonetheless, not every song you hear on the radio can be properly analyzed using procedures that you would follow to evaluate poetry. A song has to contain certain literary elements essential to poetry, such as the song “From Eden” by Hozier, in order for it to be analyzed. Hozier is recognized for his sentimental lyrics and use of poetic elements to add musicality and rhythm to his music. Through symbolism, repetition, and…
Fire! (lines 4-5) This shows how bad the fire was and how scared the people were. They exaggerate the happenings to get more emotion and reactions to get the reader more attached to the poem.…
By the effect of enlightening the young girl and the creatures, the brothers are highly more portrayed as destructive and harmful and so the death of the creatures seem to be more cruel. Thus Judith Beveridge uses this poem to express light and darkness of humanity by using stereotypical gender roles.…
Beginning in media res, the poem starts out recounting the situation where a man brings light to his city. After he sees fear among the people, who claim that the shadows in the dark are “dangerous”, thereby “crouching” to hide themselves from the darkness, the man goes to help them overcome their terror. Later, he realizes that their fear of darkness ultimately leads to their yearning for something different: light. He, who can be seen as an altruistic, but spontaneous man, sees their desire for light,…
Ted Kooser, the thirteenth Poet Laureate of the United States and Pulitzer Prize winner, is known for his honest and accessible writing. Kooser’s poem “A Spiral Notebook” was published in 2004, in the book Good Poems for Hard Times, depicting a spiral notebook as something that represents more than its appearance. Through the use of imagery, diction, and structure, Ted Kooser reveals the reality of a spiral notebook to be a canvas of possibilities and goes deeper to portray the increasing complexities in life as we age.…
The book Dark Secrets by Elizabeth Chandler is a book with two stories: Legacy of Lies and Don’t Tell. Both of these stories are graphic, haunting, and based in the town of Wisteria. They share many similarities and reoccurring themes such as death and paranormal activity, but they are also very different.…
Take a minute to imagine “Men looking like they had been/attacked repeatedly by a succession /of wild animals,” “never/ ending blasted field of corpses,” and “throats half gone, /eyes bleeding, raw meat heaped/ in piles.” These are the vividly, grotesque images Edward Mayes describes to readers in his poem, “University of Iowa Hospital, 1976.” Before even reading the poem, the title gave me a preconceived idea of what the poem might be about. “University of Iowa Hospital, 1976” describes what an extreme version of what I expected the poem to be about. The images I described above are just some of the horrifying scenes described by Mayes. This poem spoke to me about the pain and suffering patients endure while staying in a hospital (whether it be a mental hospital or a medical hospital) and the horrific images the staff see daily. Mayes uses several types of imagery and literary tropes in his poem to give readers an intense visual sensation as they read his poem. The visuals Mayes placed in my own mind while I read this poem were intensely real and stuck with me long after I studied the poem.…
Truth can be pictured in one's mind in many different ways. Based in each of the readings that we have read truth was viewed slightly different. Therefore truth can be showed in many ways. In both novels and Poe poems truth was involved by make a character see what and or how their life and what is around them make them the person they were. Truth is defined as to admit if it is real or reality. In fact I think that truth was showen in Death of a Salesman as well as The Great Gatsby and the Poe poems and short stories that I have read in class.…
2. Why might the National Temperance Council have met in 1920 (after the passage of the 18th Amendment) What do you predict they will say?…
The male persona discovers the child’ death at the beginning of the poem which symbolises catalyses the ‘death’ of a couples marriage. This is supported by, “no, from the time when one is sick to death, … and things they understand”. The cynical tone of this phrase exemplifies the conflict of understanding as their method of expressing grief is different to one another. This is strengthened by the truncated sentences and silted dialogue, “‘Just that I see.’ ‘You don’t.’ she challenged” where the responder realises that the man only discovers the physical purpose of Amy’s misery. The confronting nature of discovery allows the female persona to challenge the male personas perspective. It is significant to note the physical structure of the poem with truncates sentences which emphasise the distance between the husband and wife whereby the husband has accepted the death of his child as he says, “little graveyard where my people are”. The negative connotation and allows the responder to realise that the male persona has discovered through a renewed perception. This also accentuates the conflict in their relationship as the male persona physically discovers instead of emotionally like Amy. Ultimately, the natural imagery of “fresh earth” suggests that nature is not always pleasant as it is the source of life and…
“Slaveship,” by Lucille Clifton, is a free verse poem from the perspective of slaves that the white men capture and trade in the slave trade, forcing them to travel on the Middle Passage. Ironically, the ships bear the names of religious symbols and figures such as Jesus, Angel of God, and Grace of God (lines 14-15) even though the act of slavery is one of the most sinful systems in the eyes of these slaves and in the eyes of all decent human beings.…
The message this poem is trying to convey is about the cruelty of humans, with the lynching mobs and the Ku Klux Klan. It tells us about human intolerance towards different people, of our prejudices, as if slavery hadn´t ended and we stil thought of black people as good only for work and serving people, like animals. It tells us about the way humans treat things they fear or don´t understand, controlling them and keeping them chained. It also makes us think about how we behave towards other people, and gives us hope because things have changed.…
The theme of truth has been revolving around all our first quarter readings. In the poem Eldorado by Edgar Allan Poe, a knight is on a journey to find this joyful land, called Eldorado. The knight continues to search for Eldorado, but he knows he has failed. But he keeps searching, and even though, in his mind, he knows that Eldorado is a fictional place, in his heart he still believes it’s real. The knight in Eldorado recognizes a fairly disappointing truth, that Eldorado is a nonexistent place. “But he grew old-this knight so bold-and o 'er his heart a shadow fell as he found no spot of ground that looked like Eldorado” (Poe 305). This quote illustrates how the knight realizes there is no Eldorado. Another example of the recognition of truth is in…
Is truth simply a matter of personal choice and opinion? Is one’s perspective of ethics just as valid and correct as another individual? The eyes of the beholder contains the truth, it is one of the greatest and most valuable representation of human virtues. Truth is perceived differently for each person, with our own consideration of ethics and moral evaluation of what should be right or wrong. This idea is displayed in the poem “Truth” said a traveller, as the author use alternative metaphor to show the perception of truth from different individuals. This also ties in with our current society, as individuals struggle to find the absolute truth in life.…
In the poem, Tell all the truth but ell it slant by Emily Dickinson makes the reader ponder on the meaning of the so-called “truth” that she is suggesting and refers to how the “truth” will be blinding any man if told in its purest form. Additionally, symbolic definition of her utilization of “circumference” is vital because Dickinson does not utilize the word in its conventional meaning; however, rather uses the words to paint a picture poetically to manifest a metaphysical principle. Correspondingly, in tell all truth but tell it slant, Dickinson consequential utilization use of “circle” alluding to the readers that there are a beginning and an end, which seamlessly connected throughout the “circumference” lining of the brain. In addition,…