Joshua Huling “Mirror” “Mirror” is a poem by Sylvia Plath. It is spoken in a first person style from the perspective of a mirror‚ and later a lake. A woman has been looking into both the mirror and the lake at her own reflection. She seems to be almost consumed with the reflection and later in life she is upset by what she sees‚ as she is ageing. The poem is rife with figurative language. After analyzing the poem‚ we find that the mirror is truth‚ indifferent to the woman’s ageing or what she
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the poem "Mirror"‚ Sylvia Plath employs many different poetic devices to develop her message that people need the truth although it may be hurtful. Plath uses a mirror and then a lake as a metaphor for the truth. She also makes the mirror come alive with personification‚ simile and metonymy. These other devices are important to the poem and the scene it creates‚ but the mirror being a metaphor for truth is the most important. The poem is basically about a woman looking into a mirror. As she ages
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The poem “Mirror” by Sylvia Plath is told from the point of view of a mirror hanging up on a wall. This mirror has‚ over time‚ been privy to the tears of a woman over who she sees in it‚ desperate grasps at moonlit lies‚ and the endless speculations of a pink with speckles wall. “Mirror” is a poem that probes into the corners of human nature‚ beauty‚ life‚ and death‚ reflecting back their truths to readers as good mirrors do. In this poem‚ readers can see the truth about themselves reflected among
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"Mirror": Reflections of Truth In Sylvia Plath ’s poem "Mirror"‚ the reader takes a look into the messages presented and compares them with the reflections that are cast in a mirror and images in a lake. When reading this poem‚ we discover that the speaker is the actual reflection that gives the interpretation of its views. The first interpretation is shown as a mirror on the wall "I am silver and exact. I have no preconceptions." (1)‚ second as the water in the lake because she states "Now
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Daniela Castro 12 October 2011 Literature: A Mirror of Life Phase 2 Individual Project Professor J. Szymanski Time & Place: Maycomb‚ Alabama during To Kill A Mockingbird is during the Great Depression and is an old town. Everything seemed to be routine as described in the book. People moved slow and took their time doing everything‚ so much that the day seemed longer than 24 hours. Racism occurred Blacks and Whites stuck within their race but Atticus was different
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In Chapter 9 of After the Fact‚ The Mirror with a Memory‚ James West Davidson and Mark Hamilton Lytle‚ attempt to describe the way photography has shaped American history‚ especially through the lens of Jacob Riis‚ who was known for his urban activism during the early 1900’s. The chapter begins with an explanation of Jacob Riis’s work as a journalist who wandered the streets of New York City in search of people and things that he could write about. Then‚ it mentions Alexander Alland‚ a professional
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If the mirror were not personified‚ the entire meaning of the poem would be changed drastically. The personification of the mirror allows the story to be narrated from the mirror’s perspective. There are several places in which personification is used to demonstrate the perspective of the mirror. In line 7‚ the mirror states‚ "... I have looked at it so long..." Mirrors can not look at other objects because looking is a characteristic of a living object. Mirrors can only reflect what can be viewed
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The Distorted Media Mirror Look through any magazine in the front of a store‚ any billboard on the street or any commercial on TV and the image remains the same. It ’s the unrealistic‚ un-average people making the ideals of perfection unreachable for 95% of society (Berg 32). Throughout time‚ women have physically tried to alter their bodies looking for perfection. The saying "it hurts to beautiful" is the reality media encourages in our culture. Body image has been an
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CONVERGING MIRRORS I. Introduction Concave mirrors are used in different optical instruments‚ such as microscope (illuminates the slide or specimen)‚ astronomical telescope (especially in reflecting telescopes) and slide projector (increases the light falling onto the slide). Determine where the images fall and what kind of images are formed by a concave mirror. II. Objectives 1. Determine the focal length of a concave mirror. 2. Describe the images formed by a concave mirror. III. Materials
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young Narcissus of myth‚ the mirror spun a fatal fantasy‚ and the beautiful boy chose to die by the side of a reflecting pond rather than leave his “beloved” behind. For the aging narcissist of Shakespeare’s 62nd sonnet‚ the mirror delivered a much-needed whack to his vanity‚ the sight of a face “beated and chopp’d with tann’d antiquity” underscoring the limits of self-love. Whether made of highly polished metal or of glass with a coating of metal on the back‚ mirrors have fascinated people for
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