Steven Herrick’s verse novel “By the River” is very successful in conveying the significant ideas about human nature. He uses key themes such as grief, environmental influence and coming of age to explore these ideas. To convey the themes Herrick uses multiple techniques such as imagery, repetition, personification and positive and negative influence throughout his text.…
This poem consists of many factors which give the poem its own unique idea such as the mood or feeling the reader gets while reading, the tone or the author’s attitude towards the poem, and the diction or the choice of words the author chose. Diction plays a major role in every poem or story especially this one. Many of these factors contribute to diction greatly, which affects this poem in general.…
The author has a not so serious tone while writing this passage, he uses a lot of sarcasm when describing or referring to scorpions. I believe this passage was only to entertain…
Another similarity between the two poems is the use of the structure to represent the feelings of the speaker.…
There are many themes that are seen in both the poems. These include Revenge, Anger, Depression and Death. The two key themes in the both poems; Murder and Jealousy are both portrayed in different ways according to each killer’s motives.…
This poem has no set pattern that is constant throughout. It has eleven sections in which are broken down into quatrains. Some verses are very different from others adding a trace of a story. Therefore, the verses do not follow the same rhyming scheme, making the poems emotion serious and mature. The lack of verse form also adds to these emotions.…
Some poets look from the particular to the universal to explore human experience. Discuss poems from at least two poets in relation to this statement, considering also the ways in which they achieve their effects.…
The predatory nature of the bird is conveyed by the metaphor that describes the bird as having ‘target eyes rimmed in blood’ and the simile ‘beak like open secateurs’. It is clear that this bird is dangerous and in fact it ‘threatens’ the persona. The language chosen is highly evocative and emotive and paints an image of a cruel and efficient killing machine. At this point the responder does not feel any sympathy for the crow.…
Warren calls attention to the slow, grim passage of time with simile, suggesting that “history [drips] into darkness like a leaking pipe in the cellar.” Were there “no wind,” he says, we might be able to hear this terrible dripping away of time—this foreboding reminder of our own mortality, and imminent death. To complete this scene in which man is held in awe and fear at forces almost beyond his comprehension, he writes of a “steady” star, which “like Plato” rises great and almost impenetrably complex above the scene. Like the theories of a philosopher to the laymen, the forces behind the inevitable passage of time are incomprehensible to the mortal man. Warren’s use of simile emphasizes the terrible passage of time that becomes apparent during the visit of the evening hawk.…
As we all know in reality, the universe is nonhuman and does not possess the ability to speak. For that reason, this poem utilizes personification to convey a Man vs Nature conflict, which adds to the overall meaning of the poem. Stephen Crane, a naturalist, impressionist, and a firm believer in environmental determinism, also uses cosmic irony to spice up the message is trying to portray. Cosmic irony is the idea that fate and the universe are big forces and control human actions and emotions. The utilization of this literary element helps to show that the main character feels forgotten, unloved, and uncared about. This duo of literary elements adds to the harsh and ultimate message that Stephen Crane is attempting to show all of us: Society, Life, People, the World, and the Universe does not owe us…
The bird represent the joyful life Mrs. Wright wants and use to have, and for Mr. Wright it represents his cruelty and abuse. The bird sings and provides warmth and joy for Mrs. Wright. The bird is a sign of cheerfulness in a bleary home. Mrs Hale states, "He didn't drink, and kept his word as well as most, I guess, and paid his debts. But he was a hard man, Mrs. Peters. Just to pass the time of day with him--." She stopped, shivered a little. "Like a raw wind that gets to the bone." Mr. Wright strangles the bird, once again neglecting his wife, trapping his wife in a bleary place, and being cruel and abusive.…
The two poems “Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night” written by Dylan Thomas and “Dog’s Death” written by John Updike are very good poems to compare and contrast to each other. They are both about losing someone who is important to you. One is about losing a pet and the other about a person. In “Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night” the author is trying to convince his father to not give in to death and fight to stay alive and Dog’s Death is about an unnamed puppy that got hurt or became ill that dies on the way to the veterinarian. This paper will define and point out the content, form and style of each poem as well as the difference and similarities of the form and style in both poems also.…
As one of the very first lines of Macbeth by William Shakespeare makes clear, “Fair is foul and foul is fair”(I, i, 12-13). Contradictions exist throughout the play in numerous motifs and symbols, including birds. What birds represent in literature varies; they can mean a journey, freedom, positive omen, and everything humans quest to understand. In Macbeth they can mean different things depending on the kind of bird, one sees less menacing birds appear around the mention of children, and birds of prey are referred to around the time of bad tidings. Although birds may be interpreted as symbols of freedom and innocence, their roles in Macbeth are often the harbingers of death and destruction, as lady Macbeth sees the raven under her battlements, and an obscure bird shrieks the whole night of Duncan’s murder. Thus they come to embody and symbolize death and destruction.…
These are two things in nature that are opposite to each other but are interconnected at the same time because without night we would not have day and the other way around. The Sun and Moon symbolize the spiritual realm of God. In the poem, the Sun is a representation on the reprimanding and disciplinary side of God. After the ancient Mariner had shot the Albatross, with the Sun comes consequences for his action as the wind starts to die down and the ship begins to stop moving, which is what all the shipmates dread. “Down dropt the breeze, the sails dropt down, 'Twas sad as sad could be; And we did speak only to break The silence of the sea! All in a hot and copper sky The bloody Sun, at noon,” (Coleridge 107-112). Contrasting the Sun, in the poem, the Moon represents the merciful, compassionate side of God. The Moon seems to bring on the departure of the curse of the Albatross from the ancient Mariner. The moon brings calm, and the Albatross falling from the Mariner’s neck into the sea symbolizes the removal of this curse. This glorious even for the Mariner is demonstrated in the lines, “The moving Moon went up the sky,” (Coleridge 264)… “The selfsame moment I could pray; And from my neck so free The Albatross fell off, and sank Like lead into the sea, ” (Coleridge 289-292). Whether God is acting in a generous or scolding manner, either way, the idea is that God has overall power. It…
In “A Poison Tree,” by William Blake is a central metaphor explains a truth of human nature. This poem teaches how anger can be extinguished by goodwill or nurtured to become a deadly poison. It is appropriate that poems with religious connotations should be expressed like this in which a spiritual struggle is expressed in a vivid story. The opening stanza sets up everything for the entire poem, from the ending of anger with the “friend,” to the continuing anger with the “foe.” Blake startles the reader with the clarity of the poem, and with metaphors that can apply to many instances of life such as ‘I told it not, my wrath did grow’. This is a classic example of human psychology as we are always tempted to do the opposite of what we are told.…