Overall, the poem has an enlightened and realization tone that places necessary perspective on the human traits affected by good and evil. Various rhyme schemes in the poem help convey the topic flow and message while guiding the reader to the central point of the significance of good and evil in life. Particularly, this poem contrasts opposites like “black and white” (2) and “right and wrong” (15) to draw examples of how good and evil lay in opposite spectrums on the world. These parallel opposites show the reader how good and evil “fuel” human aspects like “greed and selfishness” (9) but also teaching how to “live righteous lives” (14). Spencer creates this depiction of how fundamentally critical the nature of good and evil affect conscious decisions like stated in the fourth stanza the “struggle of right and wrong” (15) and “determining who survives” (16). Following the fifth and sixth stanzas, Spencer again underscores the morals and importance of the two adverse qualities and without them “there will be no light” (21). Here his contemplative tone illustrates once more how good and evil in the world develops human ambitions and character. Ultimately, the last stanza contains the focal point by comparing good and evil to “the roots of a tree” (26) that make
Overall, the poem has an enlightened and realization tone that places necessary perspective on the human traits affected by good and evil. Various rhyme schemes in the poem help convey the topic flow and message while guiding the reader to the central point of the significance of good and evil in life. Particularly, this poem contrasts opposites like “black and white” (2) and “right and wrong” (15) to draw examples of how good and evil lay in opposite spectrums on the world. These parallel opposites show the reader how good and evil “fuel” human aspects like “greed and selfishness” (9) but also teaching how to “live righteous lives” (14). Spencer creates this depiction of how fundamentally critical the nature of good and evil affect conscious decisions like stated in the fourth stanza the “struggle of right and wrong” (15) and “determining who survives” (16). Following the fifth and sixth stanzas, Spencer again underscores the morals and importance of the two adverse qualities and without them “there will be no light” (21). Here his contemplative tone illustrates once more how good and evil in the world develops human ambitions and character. Ultimately, the last stanza contains the focal point by comparing good and evil to “the roots of a tree” (26) that make