In this poem, Kinnell demonstrates a profound metaphoric relationship between the tangible objects of blackberries, and the intangible objects of words. He feels an attraction to blackberries such as with taste, touch, and appearance. That notion is supported throughout the poem. For example, line 7 states the following: "Lifting the stalks to my mouth, the ripest berries," illustrating his love for the taste of delectable fruits.…
The blood was cold and sticky, like blood from a corpse. This figure of speech is a Simile.…
In the book Tangerine by Edward Bloor, a legally blind 7th grader named Paul Fisher, moves to Tangerine County, Florida and has to deal with many new situations. Paul had made some decisions that made a huge impact on his life as a middle schooler. Paul made the choice to defend himself against a soccer defender and stand up to his parents, neighbors, and even local officers.…
Galway Kinnell’s poem “Blackberry Eating” (rpt. in Greg Johnson and Thomas R. Arp, Perrine’s Literature: Structure, Sound, and Sense, 12th ed. [Boston: Wadsworth, 2015] 890-891) makes me think of my childhood with blackberries. Blackberries are my favorite berries and love the time of the year for them. As the poem says “I love to go out in late September among fat, overripe, icy, black blackberries…” (890), this is the best time of the year. Blackberries bring many memories with my grandparents: picking the blackberries, eating the blackberries, and making jelly and cobbler out of blackberries.…
In the poem "Blackberry-Picking" by Seamus Heaney, the speaker conveys a literal description of picking or harvesting blackberries by using imagery, metaphors and similes, rhyme, and diction, but the speaker also conveys a deeper meaning of the poem through his description.…
Some poets reflect on the particular and the universals of the world to unveil certain aspects of human experience. Through the use of particular and universal ideas along with intensive visual and kinesthetic imagery, the reader is able to adopt the same feeling of awe at these simplistic spectacles as once felt by the poet. Harwood’s poem; ‘in the park’ uses particular and universal themes and objects to discuss post-natal depression. Similarly, Heaney’s Poem; ‘Blackberry picking’, uses particular and universal themes and objects…
Heaney conveys the feeling of being unable to name the reality of the situation, “Next morning I went up into the room”(16). Although he did not directly said that is where his brother’s lying, he stress the atmosphere of the room, “And candles soothed the bedside, I saw him”(17). He also emphasizes how he did not see him for 6 weeks, unable to cohere the reality of his brother’s death; he uses “Paler” to convey his feelings, “For the first time in six weeks. Paler now,”(18).…
Passage: “Ah, I thought so. For it were strange indeed, and not very creditable to us white-skins, if a little of our blood mixed with the African's, should, far from improving the latter's quality, have the sad effect of pouring vitriolic acid into black broth; improving the hue, perhaps, but not the wholesomeness.”…
‘Blackberry Picking’ by Heaney, is a chronological and descriptive poem in which the poet uses a nostalgic tone to recall his childhood world of ‘Blackberry Picking’. The poet begins with a pathetic fallacy “Late August” which directly reflects the attitude portrayed in the poem by creating a happy atmosphere even though it is the end of summer as blackberries ripen in late summers in which children gather and collect enough blackberries to fill a whole bath but cannot eat them all. The action of Blackberry picking illustrates the loss of innocence as one enters the stage of puberty and discovers new feelings which can be portrayed through the quote “Blackberries would ripen” in which the maturity of a youth which its pleasures are experienced by the tasting of the blackberries is highlighted. A semantic field of religion also adds to the concept of loss of innocence, with lexical choices such as “thickened wine” and “summer’s blood” which is a clear reference to Jesus Christ’s flesh and blood in which he sacrificed his life for us as well as the children’s sacrifice on giving up their childhood to a…
To begin with, blood comes up a lot in "Barn Burning" though usually in terms of the blood shared by relatives. At the beginning of the story Sarty smells something besides food in the store. He smells "the old fierce pull of blood". Its obvious Sarty is talking about the blood bond he feels exists between him and his father. At this point Sarty seems to think this family bond is important. But, something changes when his father tells him: "You've got to learn to stick to your own blood or you aren’t going to have any blood to stick to you".…
Caught in the middle of innocence and guilt, a young boy is ambivalent between hope and reality after merely picking berries. The poem "Blackberries" by Yusef Komunyakaa, published in 1992, illustrates the author's childhood experience in a candid yet heartbreaking image. Komunyakaa frankly describes his struggle growing up; additionally during a specific day picking blackberries to raise money in hopes of a better future Komunyakaa is painfully reminded of his less fortunate beginnings. Through a series of allusions and metaphors, Komunyakaa's "Blackberries" displays an unsettling theme that humanity's impact on the future is halted proportionately to our unchangeable history.…
In ‘Mr Bleaney’ Larkin presents setting as an extremely reclusive place which has an everlasting and overpowering effect on the persona, making him very agoraphobic. The repetitive and constant ‘ABAB’ rhyme scheme throughout this poem hints at the continual and dull life the persona leads, being forced to live a constant, boring life sculpted by Mr Bleaney’s previous existence. The lexis ‘stayed’ also reiterates the lack of ambition the persona feels towards being any different to Mr Bleaney. The previous occupant Mr Bleaney relied on his house ‘the whole time’, and the persona is starting to behave similarly. The end of the poem ‘I don’t know.’, ending with a caesura displaying irony, is a powerful ending which is the personas way of justifying superiority or difference, and the irony that he is actually like Mr Bleaney, a reclusive and restrictive man. The metaphorical use of pathetic fallacy ‘frigid wind’ is hinting at the outside world trying to torpon the previous occupant to come outside more frequently, but due to his contentment with confinement, he chose never to. ‘That how we live measures our own…
By early 1952, Bubbie’s health and energy was declining and the Rosenbergs asked Emanuel Bloch to find a new home for the boys. In July 1952 the boys were temporarily placed with Ben and Sonia Bach, friends of the Rosenbergs. The Bachs had two children; Maxine, a teen-ager attending college, and Leo, who was Robbie’s age. During this period, Robbie developed a simple set of survival rules: don’t attract attention, put yourself in other’s shoes and be nice to people and make them laugh.…
The most efficient way for a poem to speak to the reader is by using metaphors, indirectly representing an image or an even. In both poems the authors use metaphors as a way to grasp the reader into the text and make them think beyond the obvious. In Billy Collins’ poem it compares a man embracing himself to a man in a strait jacket. When first reading the poem without the reference to the strait jacket one might think he would be joking and would not look into the desperation the character might really be in. Once Collins’ introduces the idea of a man being tailored for a strait jacket it really leads the reader to think about the tragic reality of this man’s loneliness. The description of the man’s “screwy grin” just reassures the reader of this man’s insanity caused by his lonesomeness.…
At first the magical faery world is described as a calm, natural setting with the lake and ‘flapping herons’. This sets a calm tone for the beginning of the poem, almost making you trust the surroundings. This continues into the second stanza with the island being covered in ‘moonlight glosses’ and being compared to the real world which is ‘full of troubles’. The poem also creates a blanket of security over the island saying it is a safe place to hide the ‘stolen cherries’. This, however, also makes us suspicious as things would only need to be hidden if there was a risk of them being stolen. The fact that the cherries are described as being stolen in the first place also makes you think that there is something more happening on the island.…