Imagery is a portrait that is painted in your mind, a portrait that makes you feel you are there. The Holocaust is full of disturbing and horrible images of death. Pictures of inhumanity that just make you sick looking at them. In many images you see the pale, unemotional faces whose lives were changed for eternity, and yet with these images some believe that the Holocaust did not happen. In the Holocaust there was mass genocide of over six million Jews. Also many ethnic Poles, gypsies, Soviet civilians, Soviet prisoners of war, disabled people, homosexual men, and political and religious opponents were targeted by the Nazis to be exterminated. Hitler’s ultimate goal during the Holocaust was to ensure the creation of an Arian race. Fortunately the Holocaust was ended in 1945 when Germany was defeated. There were many survivors of the Holocaust, one of them being Elie Wiesel. He would later write a novel called Night, which is about his life experiences during the Holocaust. There are many powerful and telling pieces of imagery in the novel Night, such being Elie’s first day at Auschwitz, the hanging of the child at the gallows, and Juliek’s last symphony.…
Whereas in ‘An old man’s winter night’ there is only one stanza. This represents the old man’s separation from the rest of the world and nature. The poem is also a narrative poem which in contrast to ‘Lore’ is told in a third person view. This also adds to the sense of loneliness and separation from the rest of the world.…
"I felt a haunting loneliness sometimes, and felt it in others — young clerks in the dusk, wasting the most poignant moments of night and life." Chapter…
As noted above, Frost uses many techniques to explain the significant of the poem. The most important aspect of the poem is the extended metaphor of the…
Robert Frost's “Acquainted with the Night” describes a life that is filled with depression caused by isolation. Many believe this could have been written from Frost's own personal experiences, since it is well known that he experienced a very sad life with the losses of many of his close relatives. This would have left him feeling alone and detached, therefore giving him the inspiration for this poem. When examining the title's literal meaning, one can see Frost’s illustration of how he is very familiar with these dark and lonely feelings that seem to come with the night. The night, and these feelings, are nothing new to him. He uses an exceptionally descriptive setting, diverse symbols, and a unique style to develop his poem. In this poem Frost uses many symbols like the rain, the watchman, and the moon to illustrate the speaker’s depression, as…
“Acquainted with the Night” is written by Robert Frost. It is about a lonely man walking in the city. He writes in free verse with fourteen lines. Frost uses the devices metaphor, parallel-structure, and personification to convey the theme of the struggle of light v. darkness caused by depression.…
For the reader there should be several different moods that take place. The first of which is loneliness being in the woods by yourself Frost describe this as “and be one traveler, long I stood”. The reader gets the feeling of…
In Dickinson's poem, she capitalizes some words, and by this, she is able to emphasize the most important words of the poem: words such as “Dark”, “Evenings”, and “Midnight”, show ignorance that seems awkward in the poem but also in real life. These words contribute to Dickinson's hesitant tone, which is evident as she calls her readers to pursue knowledge. In the first stanza, the poet refers to herself as “we” rather than “I”, showing that the situation being described is applicable universally, not specific to one indivual. In Frost's poem, the “acquainted” used in the title sums up the relationship between the poem's subject and the night. The word shows that the two acknowledge each other, but also implies that there may be an awkward relationship between the two. The night seems to be really attached to the speaker, who cannot seem to get alone time. Frost uses a negative tone, seen in line 3 where the speaker “outwalks the furthest city lamp.” Here, he contrasts the streetlamp with the desolate darkness, enhancing the difference between the two and creating a feeling of hopelessness.…
The purpose of “Acquainted with the Night” is to show the loneliness one can have going through depression. Almost feeling like everything is sad, even objects or things that don't have feelings. This poem illustrates someone sad and lonely one night walking down the street “unwilling to explain.” The title of this poem holds significance because “acquainted” means to know someone, whereas this piece is about not having anyone and being lonely. On the other hand, “ Out, Out--” was written to portray a story about a young boy cutting wood with his father when his sister calls him in for dinner, he gets excited and jumps up and down and almost cuts his hand off completely with a buzz saw. When the doctor came to help and amputate his hand, the…
Jack London’s short story “To Build a Fire” is an illustration of the mood loneliness. This mood is conveyed throughout the story by the dark and gloomy setting of the Yukon in the extreme cold temperatures. When the man is walking along the Yukon trail he stops at the top of the hill and examines the darkness in the sky, “there seemed to be an indescribable darkness over the face of things. That was because the sun was absent from the sky” (London, 64).…
Frost’s poems could be considered pessimistic or realistic. I think that the poem was expressing reality. It was balancing negative and positive aspects. For example in the poem “Nothing Gold Can Stay”, it shows the beauty as a rarity but also demonstrates that it existed. Another example is the poem “Birches”, which the boy took time away from his life filled with tasks to have fun climbing the birches.…
The poem “Acquainted with the Night” by Robert Frost is about a person who feels isolated and depressed in their life but thinks everything is alright. The author discloses the isolation and depression the speaker is facing through the use of figurative language and tone.…
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…
The poem "Acquainted with the Night" by Robert Frost deals with the ideas of depression, shame and even contemplation of suicide. Everyone can relate to the feelings of isolation as most go through a period of such feelings themselves, to a particular extent. This poem is written in strict iambic pentameter, with the fourteen lines of a traditional sonnet. The following poetic techniques are used: symbolism and repetition…
The theme of this poem by Robert Browning, ”Meeting at Night”, is that to find true love, one will endure tough times before finding the right person. The narrator describes his journey along the beach to arrive at a place where he finds love. The speaker goes through an enchanting adventure and in the end, finds true love like in a Disney movie. Browning’s use of imagery and personification made the poem easy to understand and enjoyable to read. In each stanza, the speaker uses tone and emotion as great poetic devices to express powerful emotion. Robert Browning uses imagery, personification, tone, and emotion in this poem to describe the underlying message in this poem, true love.…