In the poem, one can experience love and longing in the line, “That when we live no more, we may live
In the poem, one can experience love and longing in the line, “That when we live no more, we may live
Gwen Harwood poetry deeply explores many aspects of the human experience. In ‘The Violets’ her poetry explores the passage of time. That the passing of time is inevitable and brings about loss and change. This poem explores the nature of memories and the role they play in finding solace for this loss. ‘A Valediction’ explores the importance of the balance between physical and spiritual love. Harwood explores the nature of both form of love and how each is needed to develop ultimate love. Harwood suggests that poetry can offer comfort and deepen the human understanding of life and love. In ‘The Sharpness of Death’ Harwood explores the nature of love, life and death, and the relationship between each. Harwood highlights the extreme contrast in ones perception of love, life and death when influenced by either philosophy or poetry.…
In the poem “A Letter to Her Husband, Absent Upon Public Employment,” Anne Bradstreet addresses the importance of her husband’s presence in her life and the emotions she experiences when he is gone at work. Clearly demonstrating education unfamiliar to women in the 1600’s as well as passion not commonly found in her time’s literary works, Bradstreet successfully portrays the connection she feels between her and her husband and the consequences of such a connection. Using earthly, physical and scientific comparisons, Bradstreet shows that her husband is the center of her world, but also attends to the fact that it does not mean he has officially replaced…
In the three stanza poem, the poet commemorates the first anniversary of seeing his beloved. He begins by using imagery from the political world: the royal court of “All Kings”. He juxtaposes this image with the supremacy of the “sun”, the true ruler of all mankind – without which the human race would die; this encompasses the highest concepts of the world. However, the poet then goes on to comment that even the mighty sun and the all-powerful kings have aged “a year” since he and his loved one “first one another saw”. Thus stating that the only thing not susceptible to “decay”; is the narrator and his loved one’s “love”: “our love hath no decay”. Their passion has “no to-morrow hath, nor yesterday” suggesting their mutual love is timeless and beyond the reach of mortality.…
Later in this poem, Bradstreet writes, “My love is such that rivers cannot quench”. Again…
The theme of everlasting and all-consuming love is revealed by the writer's message that no matter what happens in life, extreme love is reachable. In this moment, nothing is more important than his love. His message is introduced as a hopeless question, "So what good would living do me?".…
Bradstreet on the other hand uses metaphors and rhythm scheme to restate her love for her husband and emphasize that love is unconditional and undying. Bradstreet in To My Dear and Loving Husband, uses nature as a primary metaphor in her epistle. The use of rivers as an example that a women as a wife could never have another man take away the love of her husband. Another example is her metaphor of the mines and gold, presenting that she loves him more than material wealth. Bradstreet’s emphasis of metaphors become exaggerated showing the large amount of love Bradstreet has for her husband. Bradstreet also uses rhyme scheme to over exaggerate her love toward her husband. Bradstreet uses couplets to show the unity of her and her husbands relationship…
The poet also uses imagery such as ‘lakes and ‘swans’, to symbolise the peacefulness, and also to symbolise love. You notice words that show the subject is not alone, with ‘we’ and ‘our’. These words and also the motion of the swans, the lake, and the peacefulness are foreshadowing that the poem will take a turning onto love that is more literate. However I don’t think that the poems theme is so much about love in particular, but about a natural love, a natural pull that brings two people together even after hard times.…
The speaker also uses hyperbole in order in exaggerate the amount of love felt toward her husband. The use of the lines, "I prize thy love more than whole Mines of gold, or all the riches that the East doth hold," and, "My love is such that rivers cannot quench," shows that the wife in the poem truly believes there is nothing better in the earth then the love that is shared between her and her husband.…
The Puritan women give us a female perspective on experiences of life in the New World. Anne Bradstreet’s voice gives us a glimpse into the very personal range of emotions she felt for her family and life. Mary Rowlandson gives us more Biblical reference and Divine providence. Anne Bradstreet surprised me because her poetry is not dominated with Bible verses, instead she articulates her thought and feelings.…
The true nature of the poem was cordial and relaxing. The sentiment was also inspiring as the poem gave me the strong feeling of passion by his use of poetic devices and tone. The verse "Loving can heal, loving can mend your soul" paints a beautiful mental image which strengthens the power and passion the poet is trying to portray. In addition, the verse "We keep this love in a photograph" allows for the symbolization of a picture as a memory of love. This provides the poem with the basic foundation that drives the poet's ambition to reconstruct the love he feels toward his significant other. All in all, the poem talks about capturing the key moments he felt closely toward his partner and to use it to keep the inner flame of their relationship…
The poem “To my Dear and Loving Husband” by Anne Bradstreet, is not just an exceedingly felt expression of a wife’s marital love and commitment to her husband, as it is about a puritan women who is supposed to be reserved but she makes it her obligation to enlighten her husband of her devotion. A thorough analysis of the poem’s imagery and repetition reveals how she conveys her message.…
Anne Bradstreet lived in a time when devotion in a wife to her husband was a social law. This poem, “To My Dear and Loving Husband,” is a loving tribute from Bradstreet to her husband. Certainly, in the early American, Puritan colonies, this work would have been seen as a wife’s duty as well as a lovely gesture. Today, however, it might well be seen as the babblings of a dependent wife. This was my reaction to the poem when I first read it. The attitudes of our country have changed drastically since the mid-1600s and devotion of a wife to her husband is now often seen as a sign of weakness.…
In the lover’s song, he/she applies repetition to stress that the love between one another will never cease. The lover uses multiple literary devices in his/her song, one of which includes a hyperbole that indicates that their love will end when a river jumps over a mountain. Along with the hyperbole, the lover personifies the salmon and continues to highlight the eternal love between the lover and his/her beloved in this line, “And the salmon sing in the street,” (line 12) this exhibits scenarios that are unlikely to occur. Additionally, the lover continues to emphasize their everlasting love with his/her diction in the song, “I’ll love you till the ocean is folded and hung up to dry.” (lines 13 &…
This poem comes near the end of my anthology because it discusses where I am after I pass away. Even if I live life to the fullest and continue dreaming, life is inevitably going to end. If I am going to be bitter about death, I will not be able to reap the beautiful opportunity to live eternally. This Frye writes about the beauty of after-death in nature. Her words provide comfort and solace to the ones who mourn over a loved one because she writes with so much meaning that your loved one is not truly gone.…
The poem that I decided to write from Anne Bradstreet is called “To my Dear Loving Husband”. I love the thought of love; I love the meaning of love. Love to me is a feeling that each individual feels. I connected to this poem because after reading a few lines I understood with what the author was trying to portray. The first line grasped my attention, Anne said “If ever two were one, then surely we”.…