References: A Piece of My Heart/Pedacito de mi Corazon. June 1994 v22 n6 p80(1)Texas Monthly, 22, n6. p.80(1). Retrieved January 24, 2011, from Fine Arts and Music Collection via Gale:…
“Grief is an artist of powers as various as the instruments upon which he plays his dirges for the dead, evoking from some the sharpest, shrillest notes, from others the low, grave chords that throb recurrent like the slow beating of a distant drum. Some natures it startles; some it stupefies. To one it comes like the stroke of an arrow, stinging…
In the last two stanzas’ it is revealed at last what has happened to her family. The reader can feel the pain and sorrow that the girl goes through and the sad disappointment at not…
Through analyzing Walt Whitman’s “A Song of Myself” and Donald Hall’s “My Son My Executioner” and “Kicking the Leaves”, one can truly develop a sense of appreciation for the two poets. Both poets express the same wonder and awe for the cyclical nature of life, and both poets manage to relate this theme to nature. Whitman and Hall have proved to the world that the cyclical nature of life is a theme worth understanding, and both poets have successfully ignited their fascination with this theme in their…
The poetic song lyrics of “Poison Oak,” written by songwriter Conor Oberst and performed by Bright Eyes, display many powerful uses of figurative language that give the song a deep meaning and produce strong themes. The puissant and mournful metaphors used by Oberst create important themes that allow the reader to get a taste of the emotional experiences he has gone through. Although the sound devices in “Poison Oak” may be viewed as important factors in molding the themes of the song, Conor Oberst mainly uses metaphors to emit the powerful themes of childhood innocence, feelings of meaninglessness, and loneliness.…
To conclude, the author uses diction and metaphors to describe the bird’s song. Through the use of these literary devices, the author shows how the birds’ songs are powerful, and how quickly their songs’ end once the sun has fully…
This poem is very psychological, for it examines the emotional dependence the human psyche has on hope. In almost all situations, those who are oppressed have some form of hope. To the prison inmates, the stories of Hard Rock offer them hope. Also, psychologically, given the…
“Grief is an artist of powers as various as the instruments upon which he plays his dirges for the dead, evoking from some the sharpest, shrillest notes, from others the low, grave chords that throb recurrent like the slow beating of a distant drum.”…
The poem creates the theme of eternal love by using words drawn from fairytales, and multisyllabic words with a religious meaning. Additionally, images evoke loss and sadness. For example, “night” is the time when most of the events occur; the narrator gives the reader sense of a sad world. The repetition and rhyme of “Annabel Lee,” “me,” and “sea” also reinforce the tight link between the narrator, his lost love, and the sea. Finally, the ballad’s peaceful and pleasing rhythm created by anapests and iambs, “It was ma/ny and…
Since I had spent much time with the accordion, a subtle feeling must be generated. It was hard to stick to but also uneasy to quit. I didn’t like the life with the accordion but also not used to live without it. I did lots of things which I wouldn’t do if the accordion never ever “appeared”. Because of it, I participated in the on-stage competition for the first time; I went to the accordion concerts with my parents; I made friends with who shared the same experience with me. I remember the days I memorized the composition while walking school; I listened to the tape while having…
The imagery use throughout the poem has been pivotal to enriching the reader’s attention on the poet’s thematic issues of concern. Additionally, flashbacks have been used in some incidences, for example in the second stanza where the speaker in the poem recalls the memory of his father. The use of flashback is as well effective in realising the theme of memory and loneliness that Lee wanted to address in his poem, “Eating Alone.” Moreover, symbolism has been used in some aspect to denote some things that can be used symbolically to refer to certain familiar things with the speaker and different distinctive things to the readers (Dalvean 12). For example the vanishing carnal symbolises the memory of the speaker’s father that he tries to conjure to no avail. All these literary devices, imagery, flashbacks and symbolism effectively develop the theme of loneliness and memory in the…
song is analyzed, its meaning takes on a whole new understanding and a parable of…
The poem is an illustration of a common human affliction--grief and regret caused by the loss of another human. Through the use of value progression and the interweaving of denotative and connotative meaning, the speaker shows that no matter how much a person tries to prepare for the loss of one he or she loves, grief and regret are inevitable.…
Several noticeable phrases serve as major roles in the poem’s delivery of message. In the first stanza, the poet wrote about fear to be filled in “thin arms”. The use of the word “thin” emphasizes the vulnerability of individuals when put against the immense ocean. Later on, the poet vividly illustrated the horror and fear that one feels by writing down “in your mouth your heart dissolves”. This…
Great minds would not necessary been great if they did not live in a time of significant historical upheavals. Those moments, when the whole world changes, when the poet’s homeland is transformed, reborn and people’s lives are scarified, seem to be kinds of fuel that deepens artist’s pain, refinements his talent and thus makes him great.…