Amidst World War II, Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower gave a speech delivered to 175,000 soldiers called, “Order of the Day.” In this speech, Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower encouraged his soldiers to defeat the Nazis, though at this time they were very powerful. In the poem, “Sonnet” by James Weldon Johnson, who had a vital role in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP); Johnson uses his poem to convey a strong feeling of courage and perseverance through the face of despair. Both Johnson and Eisenhower used juxtaposition to convey courage and to overcome adversity.…
Specifically, how does knowing more background information and critical discussion impact our understanding of the ideas in the poem and our appreciation of the artistry of Shakespeare’s Sonnet 116?…
Chapter 1: a quester, a place to go, the stated reason to go there, challenges and trials in route, reason to go there. Its all about motivation, and the reason for going on a journey isn't what it was really about. Chapter 2: When you share a meal with others it kind of bonds you, it means yall have something in common and thats why yall are with each other. You learn more about the people you share that meal with and some of the best moments can happen over a meal. The breakfast club came to mind, even though it really wasnt over a meal.…
The poem begins with a restatement of the title, “Do not go gentle into that good night,” (Webb 659-660) as a phrase and also a refrain throughout the poem. This phrase uses the adjective “gentle” (Webb 659-660) to represent giving up easy, and the phrase “good night,” (Webb 659-660) to represent death itself. This phrase is representation of him stating that those near death should not give up easily and should not die without a fight. Another refrain throughout this poem is the phrase, “Rage, rage against the dying of the light,” (Webb 659-660) and this phrase uses the phrase, “dying of the light” (Webb 659-660) to once again represent death and to portray again his attempt to convince those approaching their end to, “Rage (fight), rage (fight) against the dying of the light (death),” basically to fight death for as long as they can.…
Both poems describe, show examples, and compare things to their loves, yet both have different attitudes towards their lovers. Edmund says noble things about his lover, and William says ruthless things about his lover.…
“Night” focuses on how evil is born when darkness rises. In the first stanza the speaker reveals that the day is ending and night is beginning. The moon and the sun are personified when the speaker says “the sun descending in the west” and “sits and smiles on the night.” Throughout the beginning of the poem the speaker’s tone is comforting. For example, he mentions “warm, sleep, and bed”; then towards the end of the poem the tone changes drastically. William Blake is famous for mentioning a guardian angel in his poems, and he does so in the second stanza.…
Upon a "certain hour", or sleep, the speaker beckons his soul to fly free, escape the day, and ponder its own themes. The speaker's soul does not necessarily appreciate the day's happenings and thoughts, so it drifts in dreaming to a place where it can think about "night, sleep, death, and the stars." The daytime mind of the speaker, most likely representing a restricted or bound form, thinks about things it is perhaps not naturally inclined to do. This poem is like a snap-shot of the human soul between consciousness and…
During the 1920’s, the country was still segregated, and black people were denied the right to vote, attend schools where they would be intermixing with white people, and often lived without the same standard of living embraced by white people. They often did not have electricity, their clothes were in poor condition and books were often discarded books from the white schools. Black males were automatically suspects in crimes, and often did not have a fair trial.…
The writer, Dana Gioia, contributes to the overall theme of somberness and darkness by using expressions like “rain blackened the horizon” and “the sky above … dull gray.” But she ends a couple of stanzas with phrases that instill hope in both the reader’s and the father’s mind. For example, she uses “a slender shoot against the sunset” in reference to the sequoia tree standing tall and withstanding the hardships of time. If correctly interpreted, this poem will turn out to have an enchanting…
A sonnet is a form of lyric poetry with fourteen lines and a specific rhyme scheme. (Lyric poetry presents the deep feelings and emotions of the poet as opposed to poetry that tells a story or presents a witty observation.)…
The imagery of darkness and light helps to emphasize the young narrator's feeling of difference from his friends. He feels alienation and solitude, since he is the only one in love. The darkness is used for the narrator as a place to hide in-"If my uncle was seen turning the corner, we hid in the shadow until we had seen him safely housed" (30).…
Sonnet by bill Collins is a great example of modern day sonnets. The sonnet has everything that a sonnet should acquire to be considered a sonnet. In this sonnet Bill Collins seems to criticize the sonnet form of Shakespeare. Also, in the sonnet of Bill Collins he puts many allusions in his sonnets. For example, in the beginning of the sonnet where he mentions in an alliteration form in line 3 where you get the allusion of the story troy; to launch a little ship on love's storm-tossed seas. The next allusion when he mentions A famous sonnet writer named Petrarch in line 12, as well as the final last allusion motioned towards the end of the sonnet in line 13, where he mentions shake spears act called Twelfth night.…
Both poems, "We grow accustomed to the Dark" and "Acquainted with the night" use the elements of Light and Dark as symbols within the speakers' lives. In "Acquainted with the night" the speaker talks of darkness as his past experiences, most of them not good, and perhaps the depression that accompanied them. He says, "I have walked out in the rain and back in the rain," meaning he has been through events, emotion, and sorrows through his life several times, but has managed to come through each one. He talks of how he has seen lugubrious moments when he says, "I have looked down the saddest city lane." However, he is either ashamed or just unwilling to elaborate on his experiences in the line, "I have passed by the watchman on his beat and dropped my eyes, unwilling to explain." The speaker's depression is so deep; he feels he has no hope or way of recovering. This is said in the line, "I have outwalked the furthest city light." When the speaker gives descriptions of "the sound of feet" and "an interrupted cry," it gives the reader a sense of blindness and furthering the speaker's darkness and uncertainty of his life. The light that is shed by the "luminary clock" or the moon shows the prolonging of time that the…
These are two things in nature that are opposite to each other but are interconnected at the same time because without night we would not have day and the other way around. The Sun and Moon symbolize the spiritual realm of God. In the poem, the Sun is a representation on the reprimanding and disciplinary side of God. After the ancient Mariner had shot the Albatross, with the Sun comes consequences for his action as the wind starts to die down and the ship begins to stop moving, which is what all the shipmates dread. “Down dropt the breeze, the sails dropt down, 'Twas sad as sad could be; And we did speak only to break The silence of the sea! All in a hot and copper sky The bloody Sun, at noon,” (Coleridge 107-112). Contrasting the Sun, in the poem, the Moon represents the merciful, compassionate side of God. The Moon seems to bring on the departure of the curse of the Albatross from the ancient Mariner. The moon brings calm, and the Albatross falling from the Mariner’s neck into the sea symbolizes the removal of this curse. This glorious even for the Mariner is demonstrated in the lines, “The moving Moon went up the sky,” (Coleridge 264)… “The selfsame moment I could pray; And from my neck so free The Albatross fell off, and sank Like lead into the sea, ” (Coleridge 289-292). Whether God is acting in a generous or scolding manner, either way, the idea is that God has overall power. It…
The poem Darkness gives a view of the world in a way that it is sort of ending. The imagery throughout the poem gives life to the emotional responses of the speaker at the time. Byron takes advantage of the poem and the end of humanity and creates a vast description of these events. The poem starts out with the speaker stating “I had a dream, which was not at all a dream/the bright sun was quenched…” (1-2). “Darkness” is a poem with different meanings it can be read as a mixture of an symbolic view of the end of times and an opinionated view about the ending of humankind. Here, Byron is mixing reality with the unreal visions of an illusion, like an introduction of what we are going to read, a dream with a real meaning about the corruption and degradation of humanity and its possible end. The main ideas in this poem are the end of the world, the final demolition of everything emphasising the disappearance of light as it is said at the beginning of the poem: “The bright sun was extinguished, and the stars, Did wander darkling in the eternal space,”(2:3) The idea of the men becoming beasts is lightly remarked by this idea of total destruction, everything is fading and disappearing as the humankind is being tainted and ruined until becoming unreasonable beings. The meaning of life in Byron's work is based on how he views his own life, and depicts it as light. The theme of life is shown when he…