the poem starts of with the person introducing the geranium …show more content…
imagery allows the readers to paint a clear picture of the person'a lover - a disheveled, unkept
He uses Imagery to show what a desperate condition his men were in. He creates this image of his crew by using words like “naked” and “starving”. His use of imagery also established the vulnerability and rawness of his crew.…
Imagery is used in multiple points around the text and is possibly the most important poetic element. For instance in the text the speaker uses imagery such as “the boys stamp, the girls shriek, and the drum booms…” by adding this imagery the author is showing how caught up in the action everyone is. This quote reveals the atmosphere…
All throughout this text the author masters the art of imagery to the audience. With every…
In what ways does the distinctively visual influence your understanding of people and events within texts?…
As the two young men drive through the desert, Alexie applies significant imagery to show the isolation and importance of the situation. There is a certain tension in the air when the two old friends reconnect after their falling out. They are alone in the middle of nowhere: “Victor looked around the desert, sniffed the air, felt the emptiness and loneliness” (159). Alexie uses imagery to encapsulate the situation that the two young men are in. To help the reader feel the tension of the isolated experience, imagery is used to describe the spacious and lonely desert. As they trudged through Nevada they “had been amazed at the lack of animal life, at the absence of water, of movement” (149). Alexie’s imagery in this particular scene shows us the fog of tension between Victor and Thomas and gives the readers the feeling of tense isolation. As they travel the sixteen-hour-journey back home, they have hours and hours of desert to think about their shared past. The desert is vast and stripped, which forces them to either be deep in thought or forcibly converse with each other. All of this tension is shown through the description of the desert.…
Throughout The story he implements imagery. For instance, he illustrates, “Fair was this youthful wife, and therewithal As weasel’s was her body slim and small A girdle wore she, barred and striped, of silk. An apron, too, as white as morning milk About her loins, and full of many a gore; White was her smock, embroidered all before…” ( Line 125-130 ). Here he visually describes how Alison looks. Furthermore, he mentions, “ Truly, sweetheart, I Have such love longing That like a turtle-dove’s my true yearning: And I can eat no more than can a maid…” ( Line 597-599 ). In his imagery he show the sin of lust due to the usage of diction to show his vision of how he sees her. He lust her that he continually ask for a kiss from her and tries to woo he without any care of his husband being in his way.…
For instance, imagery is used many times by the author to give a clear, and vivid image to the reader. The details in the lines "His hair bleached pale from the sun, fell unnoticed over his eyes, and in the moonlight, his tanned face was darker than his hair. The top of his lip touched his upper lip as he…
Most figures of speech cast up a picture in your mind. These pictures created or suggested by the writer is called 'imagery'. To fully understand the world of imagery, we must also understand how the writer uses it to convey more than what is actually being said or literally meant. This is represented in a variety of texts that we will take a closer look at such as John Steinbeck’s Of Mice & Men and the two poems Weapons Training and Homecoming by poet Bruce Dawe.…
In “Let Us Now Praise Famous Men” the author James Agee and the photographer Walker Evans used both their abilities to attempt a recreation of the conditions for the reader to attempt to have a better understanding. They did this in such a way that James Agee said the pictures could stand independently from the text (Agee and Evans 87). Doing this causes the reader to refrain from making their own visualizations’ of what is being described in the text. Therefore, helps the reader get a clarified idea of the text; When the text and pictures collaborate with one-another. While the pictures stand on their own, pictures can’t stand independently from the text because they give a brief understanding of what the text is about, it helps clarify descriptions…
“…Tore the elm tops down for spite…” and “…Did its worst to vex the lake:” respectively. These techniques are used to show the main character’s very negative and very depressed emotions at the start of the poem before he sees Porphyria. The effectiveness of this being in a dramatic monologue is we are able to view all of his emotions on a more personal level this in turn makes the character of the lover more memorable to the reader. This idea continues onto line five where the reader says,…
draperies might allude to both the physical act of their love and the woman’s prospect of…
The poem “The Geranium” by Theodore Roethke tells the story of a bachelor, formerly a party animal, now a lonely, aging man, through a sustained metaphor which uses the speaker’s geranium as a symbol for the disregard of his own health. The plant is never well, nor is he, due to the speaker being as inconsiderate to the geranium as he is to himself. With imagery, alliteration, and symbolism, much is learned about the speaker through a simple geranium to which he is intrinsically intertwined.…
Use of intense simile and metaphor throughout “Modern Love” also demonstrates a grim view on the concept of modern love. The muffled cries of the wife are called “little gaping snakes” showing how afraid and vulnerable the husband is to them. The man’s wife has a “Giant heart of Memory and Tears” which shows the heavy, almost useless organ that the wife carries around within her, empty of love, only able to remember the sadness to which she has been subjected to. Then, the husband and wife are said to be “like sculpture effigies” in their “common bed,” lying “stone-still.” Instead of two lovers talking to each other and loving each other in their bed, a place shared between the two of them, they are “moveless” and silent. This makes modern love seem empty of joy, empty of companionship, and devoid of love.…
The couple stimulates different energies contributing to the connection. The man displays knowledge, black and white contrast, and binary information, as his energy towards the woman. The woman supports this by using her femininity, warmth, and decorous flowers as her energy towards the man. Notice how the woman is rooted in the…
Foreshadowing and metaphor is used to preface and summarize the theme that love is fickle yet wonderful while also giving showing how fickle and melodramatic.…