The poem is effective in its use of vivid imagery, both visual and auditory, and offers the reader a unique perspective of the neighbourhood, consistent with many other poems included in the anthology. The imagery is used to demonstrate to the reader how to construct an opinion of the white neighbourhood, using negative phrases in conjunction with the city such as the “menacing glow” or haunted by… urban myth”. This in turn acts to justify the invasion of the white suburbs, so that, rather than criminalising…
C.D. Wright uses her incredible skill to create a strong impression through not only the structure of the poem but also her word choice used throughout the poem which clouds the reader in a mysterious atmosphere. The mastery of the…
In the poem named Man on a Fire Escape, written by Edward Hirsch, the author presents a unique eye-opening experience when a devastating tragedy arises. Throughout, the poem Man on a Fire Escape, Edward Hirsch uses third person point of view as if he is addressing his poem to someone. Furthermore, the poem slowly reveals the mass chaos and destruction of a fire outbreak that engulfs everything in its path. On the contrary, towards the end of the poem, after witnessing all the mayhem everything was back to normal as if the fire did not happen. Edward Hirsch uses lexis, literary devices, and his poetry to illustrate to his audience that poetry is never-ending because poetry will always portray “the true voice of feeling.” (QUOTE).…
In the beginning of the story, he was arrogant and didn’t care about what the weather was like, even when the old timer told him that when it’s fifty below, travel with a partner. “The mysterious, far-reaching hairline trail, the absence of sun from the sky, the tremendous cold, and the strangeness and weirdness of it all -- made no impression on the man”(1). During the middle of the story, he found himself getting frustrated. “He had never experienced such cold, walking he rubbed his cheek-bones and nose, and the following instant the end of his nose went numb”(3). Soon he started to realize that he should’ve listened to the old timer. Towards the end, when he finally grasped that he was going to freeze to death, he was first fearful of dying, but then panic started to set in. Which made him run around in a frenzy to keep his warmth. But after a while, he comprehended that, that wasn’t going to help, so he calmed himself. “He was bound to freeze anyway, and he might as well take it decently. With his new found peace if mind came the first of drowsiness. A good idea, he thought, to sleep off to…
Read the poems a few times, noting each one’s theme, mood, form, structure, rhyme scheme, and use of imagery and figurative language. Use the provided table to record your analysis.…
In reading a poem or a novel always the literature has a magnificent impact on the body, mind or imagination. A great literature or introduction of words can stir the reader body, mind and even imagination of the story behind it. In this essay, I will explore how can poems literature stirs the body, mind, and imagination and this will present through two poems ‘ The Weary Blues’ by Langston Hughes and ‘The Tin Wash Dish’ by Les A. Murray. In the Hughes poem the literature stirs the body in slow motion, stirs the mind in that musician have a great night and that have the same effect on the reader. Imagine the musician enjoying the piano music. However, in the Murray poem the literature stirs the body to feel sadness, the mind of the hardship of the poverty and imagination of…
Being exposed to different kinds of poetry from childhood, I grew fond of it though now I prefer fictional prose to poetry. As a profoundly sensuous form of creative writing, poetry both challenges my mind and conquers my aesthetic sense with its subtle wording. But specifically because it is a thought provoking and demanding form of writing I do not read poetry often. Therefore, the variety of topics, styles and forms of poems collected in Alehouse Journal 2011 disoriented me completely. However, the poems were carefully selected and united under the common styles, topics, and forms. Dreams was one of such topics. The complex nature of dreams make them one of the most prolific topics in poems.…
Born in 1945, Robert Gray is an Australian poet renowned for his imagistic style, drawing strength from his fastidious concern for the precision of language and a meticulous contemplation of physical existence. Gray’s works are unconventional in structure, and prevalent throughout his poems are the recurring themes of humanism, consumerism and naturalism, peppered with allusions to personal experiences. Gray’s thematic concerns arise from his personal context, alongside his love of the Australian environment, “My poetry is very physically located” and his Buddhist ideals which influence his literary style. Gray’s thematic concerns and themes are manifest in all of his poems, demonstrating copious readings, including psychoanalysis and deconstruction, especially palpable within “Diptych” and “The Meatworks”. Multiplicities of poetic techniques are used to reinforce Gray’s thematic concerns, including symbolism, anecdotes and imagery.…
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,…
`In Robert Gray’s poems, he uses language to capture human experiences. In two of his poems; old house and late ferry, gray has effectively captured human experiences by his varies poetic languages and through insight and feeling. Throughout both texts late ferry and old house, gray’s main message in the poems, with his critical analysis, is the destruction of nature by mankind.…
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…
Darkness is a recurring image in literature that evokes a universal unknown, yet is often entrenched in many meanings. A master poet, Emily Dickinson employs darkness as a metaphor many times throughout her poetry. In “We grow accustomed to the dark” (#428) she talks of the “newness” that awaits when we “fit our Vision to the Dark.” As enigmatic and shrouded in mystery as the dark she explores, Dickinson's poetry seems our only door to understanding the recluse. As she wrote to her friend T.W. Higginson on April 15, 1862, “the Mind is so near itself – it cannot see, distinctly”(Letters 253). In this musing, she acquiesces to a notion that man remains locked in an internal struggle with himself. This inner conflict is brought to light through a metaphorical darkness that pervades many of her poems. Evidenced by the sheer breadth of her poetry she penned throughout her life, it is clear Dickinson indulged and withdrew often into the inner realm of her own mind. The darkness is an interesting metaphor because it represents a dichotomy between an internal and external. Poem 428 illustrates both as the darkness acts as a barrier against understanding, while at the same time a limitless passage to potential knowledge.…
This is done by showing events through the eyes of the recently awoken soul. By making our eyes the spirit’s eyes, the poet is able to immerse the reader into the spirt world where the reader is not allowed to bring preexisting thoughts on things such as laundry. Furthermore, this poem begins with “The eyes open to the cry of pulleys” which makes the reader want to see what the eyes are seeing. Throughout the poem, the poet is continually playing with the reader’s sight in this spirit world with images such as “the sun acknowledges with a warm look.” These unfamiliar images created in this spirit world create an incubation chamber where complicated thoughts on qualities can be represented through things such as…
“Constantly Risking Absurdity” describes the struggle within to find beauty and value in the process of writing poetry. Lawrence Ferlinghetti describes a poet’s struggle and strength in trying to find balance on a rope he stands on. Not only is he risking absurdity, but he is also risking death. The poem deals with trying to find meaning and his concerns of criticism and failure. Ferlinghetti doesn’t only depict an acrobat’s life but also portrays the life of a poet in the poem. The poet is trying to convey the message that life is meaningless without a purpose, worse than death. In order to put meaning to life we would have to take risks and challenge ourselves even if it means confronting failure. He uses poetic devices like structural meaning and figurative language to help emphasize the message behind the poem.…
As a journalist and a poet Allen Curnow might sometime suffers from lack of interests, inspirations and creations towards his job and project and this struggles are vividly convey in the poem “Continuum”. He might have struggles in finding new ideas and muse for his writing process. The poem “Continuum” might be an allegory for the process of him writing the poem and the continuity of poetic inspiration. The poem might be implying the sinking of his poetic capabilities and his creative struggles that causes him frustration and insomnia.…