Sunset Song, by Lewis Grassic Gibbon, is the story of a young Scottish peasant girl, Chris Guthrie, and her development from childhood to adulthood in the small farming village of Kinraddie.…
Praise Song for My Mother is a poem about the love between mother and daughter, using multiple metaphors to distinguish the relationship.…
The poem Harmonium is about Simon Armitage and how he feels towards his father and his past, which all tend to be negative comments. Grace Nichols poem Praise Song for My Mother also focuses on her past but describes her mother in a much more positive way.…
In the poem, “Momma”, Chrystal Meeker describes the essence of motherhood. The poem is about how much a mother will sacrifice for her children.…
One of the most beautiful things we can find in the world is nature. Nature is something that is naturally beautiful. When a writer is able to use nature as metaphor various times throughout a book, it really creates a pleasant understanding of what the writer is trying to say. In Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, there are many metaphors about nature to the protagonist’s life. The leading protagonist in this book is Janie Crawford. The book covers most of Janie’s adulthood and perfectly describes it using nature as a metaphor.…
‘Mother’ is written from the ‘child’s’ perspective although we know it’s not actually a child because the poem is about moving into a home of their own. We know that the child is speaking to the Mother rather than about her because he directly addressed her at the start of the poem. We get an image of the two of them working together, and although he refers to her helping to take measurements around the new house, there is deeper meaning to this, in that it shows the support she has always given and the fact that they are working together shows the depth of the relationship between them. It also has a semantic field of measuring by the mention of span, measure, acres, prairies, spool of tape, length and centimetres.…
In the poem “Momma” by Chrystal Meeker, the narrator shows the reader what the true meaning of being a mother is. It shows that it is not about what a mom can give to their child or what they buy for them, but what they will give up for their children. In this poem, a mother looks back on her own childhood and realizes what her mother was willing to sacrifice for her children. The poem expresses a mother struggling to raise her children amongst difficulties and the true meaning of motherhood.…
‘Mother Who gave me Life’ shows how Harwood expresses her love and compassion towards her mother, and the influences she had in her life, showing its relevance in today’s world. In some interpretations Harwood focus’s on Romanticism referring to nature in ‘thresholds of ice, rock, fire’ as she describes humankind’s evolution. However in my opinion the psychoanalytical interpretation dominates this poem because she explains the love and duties of a mother’s sequence, ‘The Sister’ referring to all women are sisters, shown as a sequence of life through memories and thoughts. Harwood shows respect towards her mother in the metaphor ‘It is not for my children I walk… It is for you’ emphasising the centuries of women through time. The literary, critic Patricia Makeham believes this poem reflects on ‘understanding of herself through descendants whilst acquiring skills of life’ through ‘wild daughters becoming woman’ and the noun ‘wisdom’, this I comply with. Harwood appreciates her mother’s qualities of life in recognising an unbroken chain of woman’ as a symbol of family, this relationship of daughter to mother is still strongly bonded in today’s society and…
One recurring motif I noticed in this novel was the role nature played on the plot line of the story. When I think of nature in this book, I think of the changing seasons that occurred throughout the story.…
Ending the second verse, Cohan struck the heart of an overwhelmingly Protestant nation at the time with the lyrics, “Make your mother proud of you.” Symbolic of the Virgin Mary (the “Mother”), it fit perfectly into Western ideology. Recapitulating the diminished VII of VII passing chord, the chromaticism demonstrates the face of war: a grieving mother. This concept of lamenting is parallel in the first verse of the song, “Tell your sweetheart not to pine.” On May 26th, Nora Bayes, an old friend of Cohan, performed the work unannounced at the 39th Street Theater.…
The description of nature is repeatedly used during significant or emotional moments in Victor’s life. “It was a most beautiful season; never did the fields bestow a more plentiful harvest, or the vines yield a more luxuriant vintage: but my eyes…
The overall purpose of the poem was to convey the narrator’s hatred towards her mother’s decision to have a “planned” birth. In the first stanza the narrator explains how her mother “had taken a cardboard… and made a chart of the month and put her temperature on it, rising and falling to know the day that they would make [her],” this exemplifies how her mother carefully recorded her ovulation cycle in order to know which days she would have the greatest probability of conceiving a child. Differentiating from her mother, in the next line of the stanza the narrator states that she “would have liked to have been conceived in heat, in haste, by mistake, in love, in sex…” possibly because she would have wanted her parents to have been completely in love and as a result of their love they would have received the gratifying experience of barring a child. Perhaps the narrator wanted to have been conceived “by mistake” because if she were to ever ask her mother how she was conceived, she would have thought that the story of being conceived by the basis of “the little x on the rising line” of the calendar would have been rather bland compared to a story of lust and romance. However, in the second stanza her view of her mother’s decision is altered when a friend of the narrator reminds her that “ [she] seem[ed] to have been a child who had been wanted…” which then allows narrator to ponder the notion of how greatly her mother wanted her that she endured the physical pain of “pressing [her] out into the world that was not enough for her [mother] without [her] in it…” It is at that moment when the narrator has a feeling of jubilation that is demonstrated when the narrator expressed how “nit the moon, the sun, Orion cart wheeling across the dark, not the earth, the sea— none of it was enough, for her [mother], without [the pregnancy of her child].” I am lead to believe that this poem can…
When she first introduces him, it is unclear of why she is calling him God. However, out of all the people in the club, he chooses her to dance. Not used to this kind of attention, she is shocked. As the poem progresses it becomes apparent that the speaker calls this man God because he essentially performed a miracle. In her eyes, he is her savior, making her aware of how unfilled her current life is. Although her interpretation of this man is substantial, the feeling he gives her is imperative.…
This poem is inspired by Beat Generation authors such like Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac. Instead of creating a poem directly inspired; I added the point of view of a woman. Ginsberg’s poems are masculine, and I wanted a female driven piece of writing. The use of “...golden brown… yellow sun…” (Line 3) is to mimic imagery within the poems of Ginsberg. The use of “...God…” (Line 6) is also inspired by Ginsberg. His poems reference religion like in Howl when he spoke of the Demon Moloch. Kerouac also references “God” frequently due to his upbringing around churches. The poem also includes sexual undertones to demonstrate the rebellion of the era.…
The speakers speaks of nature throughout the entire poem. He uses metaphors and similes to compare Jane to living things as an attempt to give her new life through nature…