1. Ann Bradstreet's, a poet and a wife, wrote a poem titled "Upon the Burning of Our House". In the…
Neither her battered boat nor the "venerable" old fish is beautiful in conventional terms. Their beauty lies in having survived, & when the speaker realizes this, "victory filled up / the little rented boat" & she understands that "everything / was rainbow, rainbow, rainbow!" That is when she lets the fish return to his home in the water. The fish helps Bishop to notice true beauty: "The fish is only ugly or grotesque to the untrained or unempathic eye" (McCabe). The notion causes her to see other objects around her differently. Everything is a rainbow when she looks around. This feeling allows her to release the fish. The release, significant in its own sense, acknowledges Bishop's respect for the fish. The poet, struck by the otherworldly beauty w/ which ordinary objects sometimes appear, as if cast in a color not their own, releases her concentrated gaze, & gives up both the poem & the fish. The composite image of the fish's essential beauty--his being alive--is developed further in the description of the 5 fishhooks that the captive, living fish carries in his lip.…
Loss is one of the hardest challenges to walk through. Why? It signifies the knowledge of having had something. It was held and cherished and loved, before it was whisked away unexpectedly, out of reach. Nothing can bring it back, and only memories of it’s presence remain. The inevitability does not lessen the pain and emptiness it leaves in it’s wake. In three short stories, “Gwilan’s Harp” by Ursula K. LeGuin, “The Washwoman” by Isaac Singer, and “The Last Leaf” by O. Henry, the theme of loss is illustrated through the loss of a family member, prized possession, and a friend.…
This poem is about a woman that went on a journey , and found herself in the process . In the first couple of stanzas is where she starts her journey and gets lost but then she finds herself and that she found out where home is, home is where you make it. In the saying of “She has lost her way in the street”, means that she is lost, then this saying “For the first time, She understands the words means that she found herself and home.…
While reading the story “ What the living do” one could equate the poem to something that has taken place in their own life. Through out life everyone has or will have a time when they lose someone near and dear to their heart. People choose to deal with this in different ways. Many chose to express their feelings for this tragedy in writing. As illustrated in “What the living do”, Marie Howe uses tone, irony, and diction to express the loss of her brother and how she chooses to cope with it.…
Is it possible to care for one thing so much that the destruction or loss of a city can have no significance to a person? When a person loses so much on a daily basis, when does the loss start to make a difference? In the poem “One Art”, Elizabeth Bishop utilizes structure, rhyme scheme, and conceptual symbolism to portray that the loss of one’s love negates the loss of everything else.…
her owner expresses a sense of abandonment which illustrates the mourning of one who loses his…
The speaker also uses material objects she lost as symbols or milestones of her life. She starts off with the first things she ever lost, small things that are not so significant, like an hour badly spent. She does this to make the poem seem more casual, and to make herself appear like she is unconcerned about loss. However, the poem escalates and the speaker begins to mention more important objects, like houses, cities, and continents. But even…
Loss will always be part of our lives but how an individual faces it will ultimately build or break them. In comparing Wake by “Anna Hope” and the poem “One Art” by Elizabeth Bishop, all the characters experience loss and both works conclude with some sort of closure. To begin with, “One Art” was the given title to Bishop’s work where she recognizes the word “Art’ as loss which opened up to a broader meaning. In almost every single paragraph, she repeated the sentence “ The art of losing isn't hard to master”, (Bishop 6) which induces that loss is a very common feeling and sometimes it does happen for a reason.…
Claudia Robinson August 19, 2015 PR #1-Term 1 “Before She Died” Karen Chase Many thoughts run through my head when I read “Before She Died” by Karen Chase. The title itself is enthralling because it is about death, and it’s about the death of the loved one. The simple phrase “I look at it for you” (Line 1) sparks my passion about friendship, separation, and later in the poem, the afterlife. The tone Chase delivers is so heartwarming because it is a result how deep the friendship or relationship is.…
In the poem “One Art” by Elizabeth Bishop, it is evident that the speaker has experienced much loss. Through diction, syntax, and verse form, the relation between the speaker’s attitudes toward loss in lines 1-15 and lines 16-19 can be clearly seen as the poem progresses from the different losses of things, places, and lastly “you,” her lover (16). Both attitudes admit that “the art of losing” can be mastered, however, they have different ideas on whether a loss is disastrous or not. In lines 1-15, the speaker portrays a nonchalant attitude when sharing her different losses of things and places, repeating that “the art of losing isn’t hard to master.”…
The speaker mentions examples of small losses such as losing door keys to further convince the reader that losing is not so tragedious as many people think. Even though you would be agitated by the lost of your keys, you would be able to get over it and continue living. In addition to losing the keys, you lost an hour that you will never get back. She advises the readers to “lose something everyday” because as they lose thing things they will get used to losing things, hence the art of losing is not so hard to master. However, in stanza 3 she tells the readers to lose even “places, and names, and where it was you meant to travel” (lines 7-9).…
Everyone experiences some form of loss through their life, be it physical, mental or as a result of loving someone. This theme of loss is evident in an abundance of movies, novels and other written works. Example of these include the film, Life is Beautiful, and novels Night, My Sisters Keeper and Gone Missing.…
The aspect of the human condition and our response to loss is expressed through the tone of the poem. The tone is an example of how of how a person would react and treat the world around when they lose someone. An imperative tone is created through the diction of verbs. In the first stanza, the narrator uses verbs such as ‘stop’, ‘cut’, ‘prevent’ and ‘silence’ which are commands. This tone shows the narrator is trying to control things around them as a sense of reassurance and security as they feel helpless after the death they have experienced. They had no control over when or how the person died, and would feel as though they have lost control over their own life.…
The narrative also moving progressively through the poem from insignificant things that one could lose, to much more difficult things to lose, and then finally ending with a person, one of the hardest things in our lives we have to lose and say goodbye too. The whole poems gives of a form of a claim that you may agree with or disagree with, that we need to be good at losing. It is an art that we must master and in fact is “not too hard to master.” By the end however, we can see Bishop admitting it can be a little hard, but the claim is that the art of losing isn’t hard to master. The art of saying goodbye, the art of healing after a loss, this is something we can master and something we can become good at.…