In “To Paint a Water Lily,” by Ted Hughes, the speaker examines the complex aspects of nature by revealing the challenges he faces as an artist in capturing its real meaning. When he looks at the scene, he sees an exciting little world of constant movement and activity, hidden by the peaceful stillness of the water lilies that float at the surface of the pond. Ted knows that to paint the water lily and do it righteousness requires more than a simple description of the plant itself—he must also somehow capture its environment; the busy life that surrounds it. The power with which the speaker describes this incredible task and the appreciation he feels for the outstanding convolution of nature is expressed through the use of tone, language, imagery, diction and figurative language.…
The speaker compares the balls to heaven and describes the juggler’s flawless act of controlling the heavens, saying…
Personification - " Molasses buckets appeared from nowhere, and the ceiling danced with metallic light. "(p19)…
The use of diction in the passage helps the reader get a warm view of the juggler. For example, in line 6 it says “I takes a sky blue juggler with 5 red balls”. The sky blue gives off a light happy feeling because it can be associated with babies/young children as well as a bright sunny day. The 5 red balls stand out from the light blue as if they mesmerize you, and the speaker.…
Larson uses to figurative language to depict how addicting the fair was for the people nation-wide. His metaphor comparing its enticing nature to being cast “under a spell” gives the reader an idea of how captivating the environment was. Being kept under a spell is typically associated with something being inescapable, furthermore explaining Larson’s purpose of why everyone seemed to attend the fair despite the number of people disappearing continuing to increase.…
In Delgado’s poem he is using illustrations of empty bags blowing down the street to show how the environment and a person surroundings is playing a part on how we cope with life to reveal how fragile one really is. O’Brien states in the article, “The things they carried were largely determined by necessity (O’Brien, 1990).” We as people tend to carry a lot of baggage rather it is needed or…
This poem challenges my idea of poetry because I did not think poetry could have so many changes such few lines. With two stanzas the author was able to talk the reader on a roller coaster ride of emotion from happy to surprise in an instant.…
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).…
The poem “Lying in a Hammock at William Duffy’s Farm in Pine Island, Minnesota,” by James Wright, expresses the value of a person’s life. The poem is a free-verse of only thirteen lines and it moves with the sparse intensity of a haiku through a subtle but limited accumulation of imagery. Wright using metaphors to creates a reflection of his life and how he feels about it. The poem expresses only in one day, and it thoroughly represent Wright’s entire life. The transition from morning to night represents his life from beginning to end. He reviews his life through pictures, by lying back and observing his surrounding and lives of other around him. Wright begins his life journey with an image of a bronze butterfly, which represented purity and strength, and end with an image of a chicken hawk.…
In addition, Doyle’s use of creative imagery paints the very picture he wanted his readers to see in his “Joyas Voladores” essay. His words fall off the paper and into the heart of the reader, making them feel accepted, and more importantly, understood. He describes events that make you nostalgic for simpler times, when life could be solved with a game of rock, paper, scissors and every Sunday was spent in the back…
The travelers in Robert Gray’s poems Flame and Dangling Wire, and Arrivals and Departures undergo negative experiences that, although constitute as new knowledge, result in them viewing the world as a more destructive place. Exposure to death and destruction are commonalities in the poems, which in turn disillusion the journeyers. Flames and Dangling Wire creates dark imagery of a desolate, defective future that has been destroyed by the pollution of man. Men are compared to “scavengers/ as in hell the devils/ might pick about through souls” and are presenting people as incomplete figures of humanity. This simile provides insight into the idea that man’s eternal existence is futile because the world, which in the past was civil, has become a place of mockery where “the horse-laughs”. Similarly, the journeyer in Arrivals and Departures is confronted with death, leading him to question what is morally right. The sound of “the engines’ then almost subliminal thump would stop” suggests that the continuous heartbeat of…
like the voice of God booms from the stands’ bring Hyperbole and Juxtaposition into the poem, as it is exaggerating the sport’s importance up the point of being a god and heavenly like thing.…
If a member is on a swing, they are alone; while in the “field”, they are with others.[ Ann Hamilton, Artist Statement to “Event of a Thread” by Ann Hamilton, 2] The weaving occurs when sounds and movement of the pieces of the work, artist made or audience, cross paths to create a tapestry for all the senses to enjoy. Imagine walking into this huge room where the chorus of sounds seem to reach the heavens, and the observer must see, hear, and feel the sounds and textures of the piece as they stand at the mercy of the artist. Hamilton has made her audience part of her piece with the implicit permission of a person entering the…
Imagery and literary devices are used both creatively and ingeniously throughout the piece in order to further impact the reader and truly emphasize Bukowski’s intended meaning for the work. To begin, stark and contrasting imagery is used when discussing the lives of high school jockeys ‘Jack Beau’ and ‘Jimmy Foxx’, along with their former glory. The latter, Jimmy Fox, is described as having “died an alcoholic / in a skidrow hotel”, whereas Beau Jack “ended up shining / shoes, / just where he began”. This creates a depressing, even grim scene in the reader’s mind, one which brings forward emotions of loss and a seeming inability to move forward. This is further compounded by the simile at the end of the first stanza, in which an athlete grown old is an “old man / like other old / men”, bring the reader an even greater sense of…
“The Whirligig of life” by O Henry exhibits many great figures of speech and uses all five common literary devices skillfully and complexly. For this reason, some of O Henry’s ideas may take more reading between the lines to truly…