¶ … Walt Whitman grew to fame in America for writing poems that were as long and as sprawling as his very strides throughout the wide walks of the country itself. In this respect, his poem "A Sight in Camp in the Daybreak Grey and Dim" is very much different. It is certainly one of the poet's shorter works, and is not as ambitious as others he has written. And although the poem is set in a natural environment in the woods (which is a characteristic of many of the author's poems), its theme is not nearly as triumphant and as supportive of the country which his works were known to champion. An analysis of the language in this poem reveals that Whitman carefully constructs elements of alliteration, anaphora and figurative language to express a dismay in America and in the form of religion that principally represented the country. This particular poem of Whitman's is rife with alliteration. Readers encounter the repetition of syllables and sounds in both stanzas, as well as in crucial places in the work of literature. For instances, the poem begins with...
All of the imagery in the poem is dark and malevolent, the morning is clouded over and the narrator himself has gotten little sleep. It is important to notice the repetition of the "s" sound throughout the duration of the first stanza when the poet is initially describing these events. He describes his walking away from the tent he camped at as "so early sleepless / As slow" (Whitman YOU HAVE THE PAGE NUMBERS, I DON'T). This usage of alliteration contributes to the theme of the poem in two ways. The literal sound of the repetition of four's sounds actually produces a sound of someone or something slowly moving in the woods. This tempo is important because it underscores the dark and dreary nature of the poem, as the narrator himself is not excited and seemingly dulled by the torpor of the events he will soon encounter. More importantly, the's sound is one that the snake makes when encountered. The serpent is highly symbolic of evil in conventional Westernized Christianity that America predominantly embraces. Thus, on both the literal and the figurative level Whitman is alluding to the fact that there is something wrong with the country and the religion that represents it within this work.
fall among the literary forms of history preservation alongside songs and other literary work. They were and still are a means of conveying the emotions and reactions that one has towards a particular situation. For instance, some poems are currently focused on wars, which might or might not have occurred; it all relies on the poet's preference. Other poems are quite simple and have dived deep into the subject
Wilfred Owen's poem "Dulce et Decorum est" describes the horrors of World War One. With rich imagery, the poet refers to the gory and horrid details of the "great war," such as "the blood / Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs, / Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud," and "watch the white eyes writhing in his face, / His hanging face, like a devil's sick of sin." Owen's commentary
gender and how the characteristic is addressed within the precincts of play, poem, or short story. Further, a comparison of literary elements will be made, in the play, poem, or short story. Gender and how it is handled in the confines of short story, play, or poem. Poem -- Thomas Stearns Eliot's The Waste Land A careful reading of T. S. Eliot's poem, The Waste Land depicts the author's profound anticipation of
American Literature: The Black Woman Poem by Georgia Douglas Johnson American Literature The Black Woman poem by Georgia Douglas Johnson What points or themes emerged from the poem? Fight against nature The main theme in the Black Woman is the struggle against a literal and natural desire to give birth. This theme is seen in a line where the woman poet states that she must not give birth. Giving birth for a black woman in
Despair in "Hope" by Ariel Dorfman There is not much to hope for in Ariel Dorfman's "Hope." A citizen of Chile when the Pinochet regime led a coup over President Allende, Dorfman experienced what it was like to have friends captured and tortured by the new government. In this poem, Dorfman explores what it must have been like for the family -- in this case the father and mother --
Frost and Forche: Two Poems In "The Road Not Taken," Robert Frost works the theme of choice into the poem by depicting a traveler -- a walker in the woods -- who is stopped at a fork in the road: one way is the worn path, which indicates that its taker will get where he wants to go; the other way is less worn, greener, and will likely lead the traveler
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