The first line of the poem begins the dark theme (By this he knew she wept with waking eyes), showing how the husband has seen his wife's suffering; as well as painting a memorable picture through the use of alteration. The alteration serves another purpose as well. It's smooth deliverance shows just how used to the situation the husband is to his wife's tears. In line 2 we see just how helpless the husband is to help, his hand “quivers” out of nervousness, and in line 3 we see the extent of the wife's sobs (Shook their common bed). The dark selection of diction continues as metaphors are employed in lines 5&6 (And strangled mute, like little gaping snakes, dreadfully venomous to him). The truly telling word in these lines is “Strangled,” this extremely active verb implies force. This describes the situation of any willfully married wife during the time the poem was written. They had little choice in not only their husband, but also in the lifestyle handed to the by that husband, not to mention that divorce during this time period was early unheard of. The next lines hint at the wife's feeling of death, (“Stone-still”) showing her complete hopelessness at the situation imposed on her. Lines 8-12 have the same dark imagery (“Pale drug of silence”, “Sleep's heavy measure”, “move-less”, “Dead black years”), but those same images fit into another, larger image. The author uses them to describe her “Giant heart of memories and tears.” Meredith clearly shows the long lasting nature of the wife's pain,…
“She’d spin into his hands/And lightly he’d lift and turn her” (4-5) combined with the lines “That’s how it was with them/ Until the balance shifted” (6-7) gives the reader the idea that the poem is about two beings who are extremely close. Because people typically keep their personal space, the woman spinning into the man’s hands while he lifted her off the ground shows that there was both a physical and emotional relationship between them. However, when the poem begins to talk about the balance shifting, the reader can feel a sense that something went wrong with the relationship between the two subjects of the…
The Sunne Rising by John Donne, another poem, possesses statements that suggest another type of love, the love of a man for his world. The poem starts of quite light-hearted, "Busy old fool, unruly sun through windows, and through curtains, call on us..." He is talking about the sun, Mother Earth. This is revealed in the line " She's all states and all princes I " But again, in the last few lines of the poem the words resemble death. The death of light over the earth as the sun…
To begin, the structure of this poem is entirely about the narrator attempting to convince themself of the idea that loss has no importance; then coming to the conclusion that losing one’s love is of utmost importance. In the second stanza the narrator of this poem reminds themselves that to “Lose something every day. [One must] Accept the fluster” (line 4). In this quote, they are reminding themselves that losing things is common and inevitable. In the same light, this person is feverously trying to convince themself that loss is not significant. This is shown with the repetition of the line which is found three times throughout the poem. The quote, “none of these things will bring disaster” shows that the loss of cities and rivers is not significant to the narrator compared to the loss of their love (line 9). Then, in the last stanza the narrator realizes that the loss of their love is a “disaster” and forces themselves to “Write it!” (line 19). With this quote the narrator finally gives up on their feeble attempts to believe that loss is insignificant and now knows that the greatest loss is the loss of love. Correspondingly, the last stanza is the longest in the poem, which shows how great the importance is to Bishop, because this is where the narrator realizes that the only disaster of losing things is when one loses their love.…
Donne’s poetry attempt to answer the mere impossible questions of life, death and love in eccentric and unexpected chains of reasoning, his complex figure of speech, elaborate imagery and bizarre metaphors creates a sense of vibrancy for the reader as they become enthralled in the emotions and meanings behind his poems.…
When study this text it is evident to the reader to see the symbolism of the bell, which is a constant representation of death during his time, along with the emotional influence it takes on Donne. It can be confusing to…
In the first poem, “Death, Be Not Proud,” Donne describes death as a lowly figure that deserves no respect at all. That no one is afraid of death, but welcomes it as it brings us a satisfying state of everlasting sleep. It is just one aspect of life and something that everyone must experience. Donne even goes so far as to say that there are things other than death that make us sleep just as well, if not better, as stated in the line “And poppy, or charms can make us sleep as well.” In the end we will actually defeat death itself when we pass over into eternal life and there will be no more death, “And death shall be no more: Death, thou shalt die!” He feels sorry for death because it will be what is ultimately dead and not us. The overall theme of this poem is to embrace death and not be afraid of it.…
As with many poets in the Renaissance area Donne was obsessed death. He was intrigued by the mystery of death and, due to his Catholic upbringing and his own Christian values, was convinced of the existence of an afterlife. What Donne struggles with within these Holy Sonnets is how he can settle on a particular view on the subject. One of the Holy Sonnets, “Death Be Not Proud”, presents Donne’s inner conflict. In this particular poem John Donne states that death is something that should not be feared but conquered, due to the faith he has in the presence of an afterlife. Through the personification of death in the first two lines, “Death be not proud, though some have called thee/Mighty and dreadful”, death is given a personality, an identity. It is due to this literary technique that Donne can put an emphasis on the idea that Christians have victory over death, and the promise of eternal life. That it is in this afterlife that death, no matter how “Mighty” or “dreadful” will have no hold over them. Donne is able to directly address death, and speak his mind in a way in which is normally restricted to person-to-person communication. During the 17th Century mortality was a big issue in society with the average woman giving birth to between 8-10 children.…
The speaker conveys several attitudes towards the subject of “The Apparition” throughout the poem including a late shift of attitude between lines 13-14. “The Apparition” is a poem written by Donne about the relationship between a man and woman and how the woman has mistreated and abused the man and revenge is taken on the woman by the man’s ghost. John Donne, as the speaker, develops several attitudes towards the subject in “The Apparition” throughout the use of imagery, as well as by building up suspense and thereby releasing this pressure at the shift of the poem.…
To me. Donne is trying to tell death that no matter what is thrown at him, Donne will stand tall and fight whatever he has to. This poem might be a way to tell people that they shouldn’t fear it, they should stand together. If we all stand together on this, we as a community would be able to stand up to anything that comes at…
One of the most popular metaphors Donne uses is "No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. If a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were any mans death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee." Here Donne is trying to say that one person cannot stand-alone. Human beings need each other for survival and support. Donne then starts to talk about the death bell. He says whenever the bell tolls it is tolling for more than the one person who has died but it also is tolling for those who have been left behind to grieve over the death.…
The Apparition is a highly melodramatic poem Donne uses to explore the emotions of a jilted lover. The meter of the poem adds interest as it does not remain constant. It begins with a pentameter line followed by a trimeter, pentameter, tetrameter, pentameter, pentameter, pentameter, diameter, tetrameter, pentameter, pentameter, trimeter, pentameter, pentameter, pentameter, and finally ends on a hexameter line. The Rhyme scheme is divided up by lines. The first five lines are A, B, B, A, B. Lines six through ten are C,D,C,D,C. The next section, lines eleven through fourteen are E,F,F,E. Finally the poet ends with a rhyming triplet on lines fifteen through seventeen. Another interesting aspect to the poem is that it is told in future tense instead of the present adding more drama to the words of the speaker as…
Death is an emotion is an that seems one sided, but in reality can be expressed in different ways. Despite viewed as a sad and negative emotion with nothing at all positive to say, it can be viewed in entirely different ways. In the poems “The Cremation of Sam McGee” written by Robert Service, “Full Fathom Five” written by William Shakespeare, and “Annabel Lee” written by Edgar Allan Poe, the topic of death is defined in several different ways. In “The Cremation of Sam McGee” death is a force that puts trust and friendship to the test. In “Full Fathom Five” death can bring beauty. In “Annabel Lee” death can test and even strengthen love. These poems give death a new roll to play instead of always being the “bad guy.”…
I believe the poem can be interpreted in many different ways; the overall impression is the separation of two lovers, throughout the poem there are numerous references suggesting bereavement, loss and infidelity.…
The dominant theme of the poem is imagery. The first part is Love is a torrent; the moon a galleon; Bess's hair is "waves in the moonlight", a "cascade" of perfume; indicating the forces of love and the way in which the Highwayman, like the galleon, is subject to the overwhelming power of passions that ebb, flow, surge and crash within the human heart. Consider the contrasts between the lovers Bess and the Highwayman and the jealous and covetous Tim the Osler. Bess and the Highwayman are associated with life, the corpse-like Tim with death. Bess's eyes are black, whereas Tim's are "hollows of madness"; she is "red-lipped" whereas Tim's face is white; Tim's cheek is peaked whereas the Highwayman’s face burnt like a brand. This imagery helps us paint a picture of what is happening with the two lovers, an a third.…