In the story “Ambush” by Tim O’Brien, it is a story about a soldier having a conversation with his daughter. In the conversation, you can see some of the soldier weaknesses, strengths, and how his actions affected the story. Next, the soldier weakness are shown.…
The reason for beginning with Frost’s poem from the literal stance is to establish a foundation in which symbols are used as metaphors. “Mending Wall,” is literally after winter when the speaker and his neighbor repair the wall. A wall which was damaged by unseen nature and hunters. As they repair the wall the speaker questions the reason why the neighbor wants the wall repaired. He infers that their trees are different and produce opposite things. Even though, the speaker internally questions why the neighbor wants to keep this wall amid them, he wonders if he can cause the neighbor to question his own ideas about the wall. He does not act on this thought instead he continues to walk down the wall rebuilding it from his side, as the neighbor does the same.…
War has existed since the dawn of time and, since the beginning, has impacted humanity in various ways. While wars do mold and transform nations, more importantly, wars have had and will have a great impact on soldiers, those willing to sacrifice their lives for their country. The novels A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway and The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien give us a glimpse into how war has impacted soldiers and those close to them. The novel A Farewell to Arms talks of a man who falls in love with a woman he works with, a nurse in the hospital, Catherine Barkley. The narrator, Frederic Henry, meets the nurse while he is working in the army.…
However in ‘An old man’s winter night’ Frost thinks there is a fraught relationship between man and nature because in the poem the old man seems to fear nature, “and scared the outer night...” This is symbolic of the man’s fear of nature.…
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…
Dulce et Decorum est by Wilfred Owen and Homecoming by Bruce Dawe are about the disaster of war, yet they speak of different wars with different mindsets of the soldiers. In the following essay I discuss the history behind the poems, the poetic devices that Owen and Dawe used. Each poem addresses their own truths about war.…
The speaker of this poem is very forsaken. We have no idea why he walks around at night but when he passes the watchman it’s almost like he has tunnel vision not even bothering to acknowledge him. Maybe he is walking home work or a party, it’s hard to tell. All we really can see about this man, by the voice of this poem is that he is very unhappy. This poem was written in first person using “I.” The voice in OO is powerful and Frost used a bunch of personification to grab the reader's attention. One example he used was “as if to prove saws knew what supper meant, leaped out at the boy’s hand.” He made the gave the saw human characteristics as if he actually leaped out at the hand.…
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.…
Grigori Chukhrai’s Ballad of a Soldier portrayed a perspective on healthy sexuality that was considered liberating for the time period. After Alyosha cleverly disguises Shura in his military coat and hat, they both make it onto the train. As the train is moving forward, Alyosha and Shura laugh with one another until smoke fills the screen and initiates a dissolve into an intimate space that belongs to them. At first, there is a melancholic tone to their intimacy perhaps acknowledging the fact that they will not be with one another much longer. However, their infatuation is no match for the circumstances and they both fall in love. The romantic score dominates the soundtrack as the sound of the train is no longer existent. As Alyosha and Shura stare at one another, the director choses to use an extreme close up while fading out with a dissolve into another romanticized close up of Shura. Masked by the intercut shot of the train moving, these close ups and the final two shot of the couple seem to be filmed in a studio to create a suitable romantic dream like atmosphere with the use of specific lighting.…
In line 4, Frost uses personification, “the saddest city lane”. A city lane can’t be sad, but he uses it to add despondency. In line 2, frost writes, “I have walked in rain-and back in rain”. He uses this repetition to express the fact that the character just stands out in the rain because he has nowhere to go.…
In “Soldier's home” written by Ernest Hemingway, the setting is the key part of the plot. The author reflects his experiences and feelings in all of his stories, and this one is not an exception. Krebs, the protagonist, is a war veteran who is going back home and realizes how hard is to go back to normal life. After all the traumatic events that he probably had to go through, he becomes conscious that he is not capable of loving somebody, or praying. He is just interested in reading books that help him understand what he was doing in the war. Although his mother tries to push him to have a normal life, to get a job, get marry, and create his own family, Krebs refuses to the idea of a new becoming. Krebs becomes distant from his family and rejects…
Frost reminds me of Armageddon. Robert Frost is using the elements of fire and ice to represent the two strongest and deepest of human emotions. Fire would represent all the passion, lust, desire, and envy while ice represents the cooler and calmer emotions such as humans hate or ambition. Both are deep enough for humans to cause our own downfall.…
Artists in every field use nature as inspiration for their most memorable works, whether it is a painting, a song, a poem or a sculpture. There is a connection between nature and the artist that every person can easily relate to; many times people go out for a “walk in the park” to reconnect with nature and find peace and tranquility. Mr. Frost, I believe, was one of the people that felt a strong connection to nature and found amazing inspiration which he then translated into poetry. As a reader of some of his poems a person can effortlessly be transported to the experience that Mr. Frost must have had in his mind when he wrote the poem. He was a talented man that knew how to imprint his memories into a poem and be able to let the reader travel into his mind. This is the beauty of poetry, the ability of a poet to let reader into his mind through his written words as well as let the reader expand his/her own mind with their interpretation of the…
Although, I believe there is also a hidden meaning. I believe that the poem symbolizes all the soldiers and people that were forgotten at war. All throughout our lives we are taught that there are good people in this world fighting for us and this country, we are standing here because of them, they are our heroes. As we grow older though we tend to forget and just carry on with our lives. I think the poem mainly refers to one soldier because that again is only one soldier you, me, no one can truly see what goes on during a war and battle unless of course if you are there.That one soldier could have been an actual soldier that Frost decided to write about, but no one actually thinks about that and no one knows all the soldiers names that led to this country’s establishment, but of course his or her family. All lives that were taken were forgotten. Once alive and happy then the next day gone. Mainly though I think this poem symbolises loss because of this one…
We start off the poem with Frost imagining a forest of bent birch trees. He wishes that the trees were bent by children playing on them, a nostalgic, childhood merriment that Frost once engaged in when he was a child, but we’ll get more into that later. Despite his lofty indulgence, he knows what really causes the birches to bend, and that is the “ice-storms”. Using this fact, he goes on to elaborate on the beauty of birch trees; such as comparing the falling ice from the trees as “crystal shells”, or as “the inner dome of heaven had fallen” and even going on to say the trailing leaves were “like girls on hands and knees that throw their hair before them over their heads to dry in the sun”. He tends to lose himself in this embellished fabrication…