In this poem, Kinnell demonstrates a profound metaphoric relationship between the tangible objects of blackberries, and the intangible objects of words. He feels an attraction to blackberries such as with taste, touch, and appearance. That notion is supported throughout the poem. For example, line 7 states the following: "Lifting the stalks to my mouth, the ripest berries," illustrating his love for the taste of delectable fruits.…
Zusak is using the metaphor of the trees to represent that hate and the culture of hate needs to be cultivated. Just like love, the seeds of hate need to be care for and fed with hate to result in the type of garden embraced by the…
I thought Joshua tree was ugly; it looked straggly and freakish “(35) as they are driving to midland, Jeannette spots the Joshua tree that is grown sideway by constant wind blowing in the desert. While, Rosemary tells Jeannette it’s beautiful and mystical, Jeannette thinks it’s just ugly and freakish. The quote is showing how Jeannette is relating the tree to her own life. Because she also sees her scars and environment negatively just like she thinks outside of the Joshua tree is ugly but, they are also firmly standing towards the struggle, has unique beauty that not anyone can see. The wind represents the parents, who are constantly weighing down their children and have greatest influence in shaping them. afterward, Jeannette Walls use rocks to show the change in Jeannette’s thinking “From the outside, geodes looked like boring round rocks, but when you open them, the inside were hollow, like a cave, and the walls were covered with glittering white quartz crystals or sparkling purple amethyst “(60) Jeanette takes out her rock collection and decides to open the market, although there is no one around…
The two poems clarify the value of life. The enclosure where the giraffe lives in "Domesticity of giraffes" is a metaphor for "no life" as her life is very lonely and restricted. On the other hand, her natural habitat is a metaphor for "life", as is identified in "she could be a big slim bird just before flight", meaning freedom. In writing about how the child prayed not to waken another animal from the wheat because it would run the risk of losing its life in "Fox in a tree stump", Beveridge conveys that life is precious. The snapping of the twig, the ringing of the branch and the flying of the galahs propose that all deaths have frightening consequences, indicating that death in itself is like a fiend destroying life.…
The tone of the “Living Tree” shows the reader exactly how the author feels about the subject matter. In the opening you get a sense of his feeling for life and death. He is quite accepting and almost welcoming of the fact. Line 4 starts with; “I like to think that when I’m gone the chemicals and yes the spirit that was me might be searched out by subtle roots and raised with sap through capillaries into an upright, fragrant trunk”, this fragment displays how he almost welcomes the idea of his passing. The poem is quite positive despite the subject matter, no trace of fear can be heard when he speaks of burying the dead. A reason for this could be that he understands that it is a natural and accepted part of life and shouldn 't be viewed as an object of fear. The comfort that he is feeling is…
In the excerpt from the short story “A White Heron”, Jewett turns an ordinary event into an extraordinary adventure by illustrating the grandeur of the tree. In the beginning of the excerpt, Jewett describes the setting of the story, and explains how this one particular pine tree stands at the highest point in the woods. She explains how this pine tree is possibly left by the woodcutters as a boundary mark, and is “the last of its generation” (Excerpt from “A White Heron” (2). As Jewett describes the tree, readers sense that the tree is valuable and different from the rest of the trees in the woods. It evokes curiosity from the readers as to what will happen to this tree, and readers get the sense that this tree is valuable and unique. This tree which is ordinary turns into something extraordinary. Towards the middle of the introduction Jewett describes how the tree towers over all the other trees in the woods. Jewett goes on to explain how the tree makes a “landmark for sea and shore miles and miles away” (Excerpt from “A White Heron” (6). Jewett describes the tree as if it is like a sky scrapper, and gives readers a visual perspective on how the tree looks like. By showing the…
In My Pretty Rose Tree different manifestations of love are shown as individual plants are personified. The repetition of ‘flower’ instead of the word ‘rose’ in the first stanza acts as a symbol to represent love and experiences and because of the use of a general term instead of the specific rose it can be perceived as the flower depicting love that’s being given to another woman. The speaker is presented with a flower ‘as may never bore’ yet returns it in loyalty, to the rose tree, then looks to ‘tend to her by day and by night’ nevertheless the rose ‘turn[s] away with jealousy’ portraying love with the imagery of experience as the expectations of light romance come forth. For his affection he is returned with ‘thorns’ suggesting the speaker may be willing to pay the price for a continued relationship as the thorns represent the protection he may hold over her from other lovers and therefore he is ‘delighted’ and reckons them as a symbol of love. In addition to this the speaker may find he is compelled to be in delight with the rose despite its thorns, as he has rejected the flower and the pain of the thorns may be infinitely preferable to his fear of the unknown, just as Adam and Eve with the fruit of knowledge, the flower takes the place of the fruit which offers experience yet comes with tempting propositions.…
"Outside my door, I could hear him pacing. "Apa, the man, was there pacing back and forth like a lion might do to keep his cub safe from all danger. I so wanted to be like him." (pg. 181) Rey is the main character as well as the narrator of The Jumping Tree by analyzing Rey we become aware that he is desperately seeking to define a manhood style that can make him feel emotionally strong, intelligent, noble, but yet stand up for what he believes. In this motif analysis we can clearly describe how the three following motifs affect the dramatic experiences of our main character Rey and how the emotional atmosphere (tone) in the story is also affected.…
Throughout the poem, Merriam expresses her feeling regarding the willow and the ginkgo. “My eyes feast upon the willow, but my heart goes out to the ginkgo,” stared Merriam. The willow symbolizes the beautiful people who garner attention and are protected and admired. On the other hand, the ginkgo portrays the over-looked, so-called ugly less fortunate who lead lives ridden with hardships. Even though the speaker appreciates the willow’s beauty, she is sympathetic towards the ginkgo and appreciates strong…
Through out the whole entire poem, Griffin uses a metaphor comparing a wild iris to love. Just like a wild iris, love can grow into something so beautiful and flourish so quickly with no limits on stopping. In the start of the poem Griffin says, “”Love should grow up like a wild iris in the fields, unexpected, after a terrible storm, opening a purple mouth to the rain, with not a thought to the future, ignorant of the grass and the graveyard of leaves around, forgetting its own beginning”, meaning that love should grow with no domestication and no boundaries just like a wild iris after a terrible storm (1-5). By using this metaphor the reader can really understand the value that love should flourish beautifully with no worries about its surroundings just as a wild iris does in an open field. This really gives the reader a mental image to help really grasp the emotional significance of how spontaneous and wild love should be.…
I have lived on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation here in Belcourt, ND basically my whole life. I am ashamed to say I do not know a lot about my culture. However, I am not ashamed about my beliefs. I was raised in a Christian home we went to the Assembly of God church every Sunday, Sunday night and Wednesdays. My family was very dedicated to the church, with that being said I was not allowed to participate in the Native American ways. I’ve heard people talk in school about the medicine wheel, dream catchers and other things and I heard stories from my great grandfather about Native rallies. I have never heard of the sacred tree but in reading it reminded me of the movie Avatar. I remember watching Avatar and feeling like they were telling the story of my people. I remember feeling very connected even thou I never grew up that way, this is how the book made me feel again connected.…
The important concept that I picked up on was that though all of these varied views are put onto a tree that the artist’s perspectives and individualistic views are what are important. By the creativity behind how the artists pushed the bounds of how a tree is normally perceived and instead viewed the tree in a way that is more connected to them then how the tree’s appearance actually appeared. By the views in which a person may look at the tree and draw it for the exact appearance in comparison to how a majority of artists may look at the tree and see something else. Personal expression is prevailing in the way that it separates what is and a fresh and innovative look into the expansive amount of imaginative ideas that can inspire new ways in which to perceive objective objects.…
The genus classification, Ginkgo, has a Japanese origin meaning “silver apricot” and the specific epithet, biloba also has a Japanese origin, meaning “two-lobed’. (Triplett and Overstreet, 2004).…
Impermanence and uncertainty is a widely discussed theme in literature works around the world, and is often regarded as the source of grief. However, the interesting part of the Essays in Idleness is that in Yoshida Kenko’s view, perishable beauty is worthier of our admiration. People normally regret when cherry blossoms scatter or when the moon sinks in the sky, but Kenko does not feel this way. He believes it is uncertainty that makes life precious, and it is its brief florescence that gives cherry blossom its beauty. In passage 7, Kenko suggests that “if men were never to fade away like the dews of Adashino, never to vanish like the smoke over Toribeyama, but lingered on forever in the world, how things would lose their power to move us”. In passage 137, he also set his attitude by criticizing the man who would say, “This branch and that branch had lost their blossoms. There is nothing worth seeing now” to be exceptionally insensitive. This is because the beauty of nature should not be appreciated with our eyes only. In fact, looking at scattered cherry blossom or waning moon and imagining a beautiful picture of cherry blossoms in full bloom, or full moon on a cloudless night is much more evocative and moving. Therefore, instead of regretting the perishability of beauty in the nature, Kenko comes to appreciate the feeling of longing for the moon…
Morrison uses the elements of symbolism and metaphor to create a powerful depiction of emotions. The imagery of beautiful trees in Beloved attempts to mask the horrors that took place among them. Ironically ,beautiful Trees are perverted into a symbol of horrible acts. The characters of Beloved were faced in a time period where they have been oppressed to the point of dehumanization and subjected to the idea of companionism of inanimate objects (trees, in this case). Morrison crafts the novel around the idea of trees, how we see them today, and what they meant to people who witnessed the evil in other aspects of their life. It seems as if the characters' interpretation of what trees are gives the reader insight to fully analyzing a character. The characters' responses to trees give the reader insight to how, through horrific experiences , one can still find serenity within nature and trees, usually the only beautiful things when living life as a slave. Toni Morrison does an excellent job of piecing slavery hardened characters together that are ultimately formed by one element. The trees are there as a symbol of not only life, but death, and all the bad in between. The perception of this novel is totally up to the reader and interpretation is key to analyzing the element of trees…