Both "Still I Rise" and "Sympathy" have different tones, but are expressed in the same way. Each of these tones are expressed in a form of imagery. In "Sympathy", Dunbar writes... " Till its blood is red on the cruel bars..." (Line 9). The reader can get a sense that the tone is sympathetic because the author gives an example of sympathetic imagery, which conveys the author's tone. "And a pain still throbs in the old, old scars and they pulse again with a keener sting..." (Lines 12 and 13). This quote displays imagery, which also gives the reader a sense of the author's sympathetic tone. Although expressed in the same way, both tones of each poem are very different. "Sympathy" has a sympathetic tone, while Still I Rise has a very defiant tone. Angelou displays this by giving such phrases as
Both "Still I Rise" and "Sympathy" have different tones, but are expressed in the same way. Each of these tones are expressed in a form of imagery. In "Sympathy", Dunbar writes... " Till its blood is red on the cruel bars..." (Line 9). The reader can get a sense that the tone is sympathetic because the author gives an example of sympathetic imagery, which conveys the author's tone. "And a pain still throbs in the old, old scars and they pulse again with a keener sting..." (Lines 12 and 13). This quote displays imagery, which also gives the reader a sense of the author's sympathetic tone. Although expressed in the same way, both tones of each poem are very different. "Sympathy" has a sympathetic tone, while Still I Rise has a very defiant tone. Angelou displays this by giving such phrases as