This poem struck me with its vivid description of the hard life that people during the Depression suffered. This is not just a story of the burial of a child. This is a window into the hardships of a generation of people. The landscape is drawn as a harsh, barren land that chips away at plows. Poverty is blatant from the father having to steal the wood for the grave marker, to the mother sleeping on a corn shuck mat in the shack that they lived in.…
The power of an image is immense. A poem can single out an ordinary object of daily life and give it a history, meaning, and emotional worth, all through the use of an image. In Child’s Grave, Hale County, Alabama, Jim Simmerman uses the simple image of a child’s final resting place in rural Alabama to create a history that illustrates the meaning of loss in a way words alone cannot seem to do. In this essay I hope to summarize and explain in some detail Simmerman’s poem, as well as point out some literary techniques used in creating mood and emotion, focusing on the use of image to provoke a deeper significance and understanding in which the basic meanings of words are incapable to capture.…
The reader is slowly let in on more of an image throughout the poem. The first few sentences are barely descriptive, but it goes beyond adjectives only a few rows down. After they have been zipped up in their plastic tombs;…
This poem follows the formalist approach the best. The poem was memorable to me because it reminded me of my past and a pet that I loved. The Poem didn’t have any real surprise but it was intriguing because it put in the moment when I was laying my cat to rest. It described at least 2 character pushing sand and gravel in the hole and they had to brush each other off when they finished. There was figurative language used to create mood and reveal theme of the persons with the death of their pet. These are all things that describe the formalist approach and match it perfectly.…
Authors states “after standing by her husband throughout his illness and treatment, Kenyon herself was eventually diagnosed with leukemia.” These feelings of sorrow and confusion are portrayed in the touching poem “Sun and Moon” where Kenyon wrote about how she “lay back on the new bed, / and had a vision of souls / stacked up like pelts / under my soul, which was ill- / so heavy with grief / it kept the others from rising” (lines 17-22). Nonetheless, Kenyon’s husband was often away, usually leaving for two days at a time in order to go and read his poetry to others, leaving Kenyon alone without anybody close to share her suffering with (Hall). She turned this despair into new verse, as shown in “Having it Out With Melancholy” when Kenyon explains how “from that day on / everything under the sun and moon / made me sad” distinctly corresponding with how nothing could make her happy after everything she had been through (lines 6-8). However,…
When losing somebody that is fairly close to us it is difficult to deal with life as easily as it once was before they were deceased. Many people have a hard time eliminating their presence and fully accepting what has taken place. In the beginning of this poem the author provides examples of the troublesome ways human beings cope with the loss of somebody. The inside of the home is used as a setting in the first stanza to frame the imagery of death that is both conventional and unconventional. “The sandals that remember where they stepped/ Out of the world must be picked up off the floor” (3-4). It is hard to remove things that belong to somebody we love knowing they will never return. The sandals represent an unconventional image symbolizing all of the places their feet have been around the world. It brings a remembrance to our minds leaving us with pessimistic thoughts of not even wanting to leave the house. In correlation, humans deal with the loss of a loved one in many different ways, some move on keeping their minds busy and some are very negative losing themselves in the world. “Closed…
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…
In the poem Home Burial, we witness the adversity brought upon by a child's death and as a result of this adversity a breakdown in marriage.…
Throughout the poem, the girl seems to have a particular style about the way she describes her father and what he means to her. This style sets the poems pace throughout the story. She seems to be the type of girl who is rebellious or does not open up to her father. Consequently, the relationship between the two grew extremely distant. Later in the poem, the father tries to connect and talk with the daughter, and she acts as though she was surprised they were even attempting to talk. The father wants to talk about when a man is dying—a subject that she never thought they would talk about (Gluck 319). She feels that this is at least a start for them, but she still is not sure why he wanted to talk about death. During the situation with her father, she continues to drift off and give details about the images she sees happening around her. She makes it seem that she is comparing what they are doing to what is going on around them.…
Coping with the difficulty of her challenging illness, Kenyon allows herself to experience “brief moments of release” through nature, which sustains her throughout her life (Covintree). As Kenyon observes the light at the end of the day “shin[ing] through chinks in the barn”(2) she realizes the beauty of insignificant moments (Harris). Listening to the sound of a cricket's voice and a women knitting in the evening, Kenyon acknowledges the importance and role of the “animate and inanimate” in the natural cycle (Milne, 126). When “the fox go[es] back to its sandy den”(10), he awaits “the miracle of restoration that is sleep” (Peseroff 189), which can comfort and offer solace after a busy day (Milne, 118). Frequently opening stanzas with the word “Let”, Kenyon instructs the reader that at the end of an active day “all must let go” (Milne, 115). Through the beauty of seemingly insignificant moments in nature, Kenyon learns not only to acknowledge the elegance around her but also to accept the idea of letting…
starts the poem at a negative context and a feeling of hopelessness. This in the poem…
“The Widow’s Lament in Springtime” by William Carlos Williams is a lovely poem that goes straight to the heart of anyone that has lost a loved one. Death is a physical energy that can drain and change an individual’s entire outlook on life as well as any joy that has been experienced. Some people are so affected that they see no relief in sight and want nothing more than that relief. What is amazingly captured by the author of this poem is the woman’s separation from her husband. She feels devastated and not sure she can go on without him. She lament’s sorrowfully even as her surroundings are coming to life. The poet uses the element of alliteration. This is evident in the words flames, flamed and fire; and later in the poem feel, fall and flowers. Assonance is also very visible as is reflected later in the poem with words like they, today and away. Symbolism and pathos add to the poem making it a very poignant story.…
There is a multitude of poems written with the theme of death, be it in a positive light or negative. Some poets write poems that depict Death as a spine-chilling inevitable end, others hold respect for this natural occurrence. In Emily Dickinson’s poem “Because I could not stop for Death”, diction and personification is utilized to demonstrate the speaker’s cordial friendship with Death.…
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…
Nevertheless, a reader would find the speaker more segregated from the others as the more subtle factors that affect the tone become clearer when the poem is reread. Beginning the poem in a third person perspective, the speaker creates some distance between himself and the dead man,…