Modern poems tend to have their meanings appear clearer than older ones, for we can understand the language much easier. However this does not make an easy escape for our minds to see a modern’s poem content easier compared to an older poem. Each writer hides a secret message within their poems, however some making it much clearer than others. The title is a starting point to find the key behind the hidden message within a poem. "Through a Glass Eye, Lightly" by Carolyn Kizer is simply about a girl who lost her eye at a young age.…
Mark Doty’s way of starting a poem is to talk about death and it has clearly caught the audience’s eye. “Tiara” is a poem about an alcoholic gay man who dies of AIDS in hospice. Doty doesn’t use any rhythm or rhyme, but with his use of allusions and symbolism, “Tiara” is an easy to understand poem with a high significance that gets the audience in and the tears flowing. “Tiara” is the type of poem to show the complexity of the AIDS epidemic in a simple and graceful way that affects the reader within a certain amount of line. Though it may be difficult at first to completely understand the subject matter, Doty’s use of ambiguity helps set a tone for the reader; it allows the reader to perceive the poem from a different stance compared to others.…
In this essay I will compare and contrast the two poems by presenting different examples. Titles can say a lot about a poem. Although titles can sometimes be misleading, they often establish the setting or portray the tone of the poem. The titles given to these poems are very similar because they establish the setting, but also serve different purposes. “Last…
The connotation of a word is the meaning that is implied and suggested by the word rather than the literal definition. Many words have emotional, personal and cultural associations to it, which allow us to have our own interpretation to what is being shown. The prefix con- is a Latin word and it means “together, with”, telling us that connotations of words work with the literal definition. In Dorothy Porter’s ‘Not the Same’, the poet’s clever use of connotation and imagery helps shape the reader’s interpretation about the poem and how it is about somebody who went through a rough experience, and came out as a stronger person.…
Mary lost her mother when she was born but did not quite really experienced what a true loss was at that time. Mary’s first pregnancy was a premature birth, she lost her baby twelve days later after her giving birth it must have been an awful experience to lose a child time went by and she would “still think about my little baby – ‘tis hard, indeed, for a mother to lose her child.” After the loss of their baby both started experiencing relationship issues. Mary’s stepsister had feelings for her husband Percy and he thought it was not wrong for them to have something going on he even had the guts to encourage her wife to have an affair with his friend a British writer, Tomas Jefferson Hogg (Authors and Artist for Young Authors 23). They had a second child named William born in January 1816 and a year later she is pregnant once again giving birth to her daughter Clara Everina.…
Mary did not even care when her son got someone pregnant because she realized how much he had screwed his life up. Instead of Mary trying to help her son and fix him, she decides to resent him and stops caring about what he does. A good parent would still love their son, but try to get help; however, Mary does nothing to fix him. Without Mary supporting Wes and being a role model in his life, he was almost destined to go downhill and to end up a…
“My Son, My Executioner” Analysis “My Son, My Executioner” is a poem written by Donald Hall. It has a very distinctive theme of new life and impending death. As the poem unfolds, piece by piece, it becomes obvious how the author adores his newborn son, but also feels as though he is a sign of growing older. The author exhibits a number of different literary elements throughout the poem to help explain his intended message and meaning.…
A similarity between the two pieces is the way they deride the Australian identity, within this poem the line: “I live it like a citizen – you live a life like imprisonment” is one of the many that expresses it. Not only does…
Loneliness Is Inevitable “(and noone stooped to kiss his face)” (Cummings, 26). In Fitzgerald’s novel characters like Jay Gatsby, Nick Carraway, and Myrtle Wilson all have aspects of their personal lives that make it seem as though they are lonely in life as a result of decisions they have made in the past. In Cummings poem there are different ways to interpret the underlying meaning between the words. For his characters, noone and anyone, readers could take them as literally noone and anyone or as certain people going through life.…
Mary is a first generation female Irish immigrant whom has just moved to New York. She is a lower class woman who has received the job as a domestic servant for the upper class Dickerson Family. She has traveled alone having no…
He is the safest place I know, he is the guy in the white hat who saves the day. This is the only way I know how to describe the man I admire most. Cory is an amazing husband and father, he puts his family before everything else, he is not only a protector but a nurturer and teacher Cory French is a man who chooses to live by his morals, he believes in honesty, hard work, leading by example, and doing the right thing. These are all perfectly good reasons to admire this man but I have one great reason.…
In Edwin Arlington Robinsons poem “Richard Cory” the narrator that is telling the story seems to be a person on the street looking at Richard Cory. The narrator is tell us what Cory does and other “people on the pavement” think about him (Robinson 855). Richard Cory is a handsome man, who has money and has great manners. Women want him, and men want to be him. However, he takes his life despite all his fortune.…
“Full Moon,” by Elinor Wylie is a short poem, written in first person, about being repressed by societal pressure and standards of their society. Many believe that because the poem is written in first person, and depicts most of Wylie’s life, that this poem is about her own struggle, but it is not made clear if that is true. Wylie’s use of figurative language, symbolism, and tone describes the internal and external conflicts and thoughts of the speaker due to the expectations of their social status.…
Robert Frost strongly emphasises nature’s power and strength in its original state compared to mankind’s weakness in his 3 main poems: “Acquainted with the Night”, “Birches”, and “Desert Places”. This contrast between nature and humanity is mostly highlighted in “Desert Places”, when the narrator describes a scenic view by saying “And the ground almost covered smooth in snow, but a few weeds and stubble showing last”. Frost demonstrates the existence of mankind in nature, through the presence of “stubble” which suggests man’s interference with the natural world. Frost seems to criticise humanity, as he portrays it as destructive and brutal towards the world, as it leads, quite literally to the death of nature. However, Frost also emphasises…
Diseases and Sicknesses are two negatives people might encounter in their lives and the detrimental effects of these illnesses is the main reason of death. In Thom Gunn’s poem “The Man With Night Sweats” the person is suffering from this disease and he wrote this poem because of the deaths of his friends. Gunn tries to show people how detrimental this disease is as he struggles through life. In “Night Sweat”, written by Robert Lowell, by employing the use of hyperbole and similes, he tries to compare two important and distinct aspects of his personal life, his poetry writing and his disability, whereas in “The Man with Night Sweats” Thom Gunn utilizes visual imagery and the use of hyperbole to create a world where the author suffers from…