ENG 110 University of Pretoria How to Quote Poetry Paper

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Mark Harrison English 110 Poetry Essay Assignment The assignment in a nutshell: Write an essay that performs a close reading of one poem or compares and contrasts two poems. Support your explication using logical reasoning and relevant quotations from the poem you have chosen. For ideas on approaches to analyzing the poem you chose, feel free to draw from discussions in class, those listed below, or in Reading and Writing About Literature, especially Chapter 6 “Writing About Poems.” Please choose one of the following poems, one from the course website, or one poem from your anthology, 250 Poems: “Introduction to Poetry,” by Billy Collins “Photograph of My Father in His Twenty-Second Year” by Raymond Carver “My Papa’s Waltz” by Theodore Roethke “What Work Is” by Philip Levine “I heard a Fly buzz — when I died —” by Emily Dickinson “Taking Off Emily Dickinson’s Clothes” by Billy Collins “What Do Women Want?” by Kim Addonizio “The Mower” by Philip Larkin “Counting Sheep” by Russell Edson “The Red Wheelbarrow” by William Carlos Williams Some suggestions for the focus of possible essays: “Introduction to Poetry” by Billy Collins The poem is composed of a series of metaphors. Explain how Collins uses these metaphors to illustrate the difference between how the instructor in the poem would like students to approach reading a poem compared to how they actually treat the poem. “Photograph of My Father in His Twenty-Second Year” by Raymond Carver The poem concerns a photograph of the speaker’s father. The speaker uses precise diction to focus on specific details in the photograph. The speaker describes the photograph in three different ways. Make a claim about how the changes in description of the father in the photograph reveal the speaker’s relationship with and attitude toward his father. “My Papa’s Waltz” by Theodore Roethke The poem is often misinterpreted as a father physically abusing his son. Explain how a reader might make this mistake, be sure also to explain the actually relationship between the father and son in the poem. “What Work Is” by Philip Levine The poem discusses at least three types of “work.” Explain the similarities and differences between these types of work and make a claim as to how the meanings of the word “work” are central to the theme of the poem. “I heard a Fly buzz — when I died —” by Emily Dickinson Explain how the fly in the poem might work as a metaphor. How might a fly connote death? “Taking Off Emily Dickinson’s Clothes” by Billy Collins Explain how Collins employs a combination of references to Emily Dickinson’s poetry, personality, and nineteenth century events to pay homage to Dickinson. “What Do Women Want?” by Kim Addonizio The speaker of the poem claims she wants a red dress. Make your own claim about what the red dress might symbolize. What if the dress was white or black? Would the poem make sense? How would the poem change? “The Mower” by Philip Larkin Explain how the hedgehog in the poem might work as a metaphor. “Counting Sheep” by Russell Edson Discuss what the poem may have to say about the relationship between humanity and science, nature and curiosity. “The Red Wheelbarrow” by William Carlos Williams The poems begins with the lines “so much depends / upon.” Make a claim about what broadly and exactly depends upon the items and the scene in the poem. Requirements: 1. Do NOT use outside sources for this essay. Your analysis should be entirely in your own words based on your interpretation of the poem and class discussion. 2. Your essay MUST conform to MLA format: a. Poetry quotations MUST follow MLA short or long quotation format as appropriate. 2 of 2 b. Include an MLA-formatted Works Cited page listing the poem(s) you analyze in your essay. 3. Include a copy of the poem on a new page following the Works Cited page (i.e. the last page of your essay. 4. Essay length: 4-5 pages (1000-1250 words, double spaced, 1” inch margins, 12 pt. Times New Roman font) 3 of 3 How to Quote Poetry Length Matters Short Quotation (1-3 lines) When quoting up to three lines of poetry, join your text with the quotation to create a grammatically correct sentence. • Insert slash marks to indicate original line breaks • Cite line numbers • Place close quote marks at end of quoted passage and before line numbers citation. • Place punctuation after line numbers citation Example: When the speaker finds the red dress, she swears she’ll “wear it like bones, like skin, / it'll be the goddamned / dress they bury me in” (25-7). Long Quotations (4 lines or more) When quoting four lines or more of poetry, create a block quote. • Introduce the quotation with a colon • Indent the quotation one inch (two tabs) • Keep the original line breaks • Do not use quotation marks • Place punctuation at the end of the quotation, before the parentheses citing the range of line numbers • Cite the range of line numbers Example: In Kim Addonizio’s poem “What Do Women Want?,” the speaker answers the question in the title of the poem by claiming she wants a particularly sexy and revealing dress: I want a red dress. I want it flimsy and cheap, I want it too tight, I want to wear it until someone tears it off me. I want it sleeveless and backless, this dress, so no one has to guess what's underneath. (1-7) The speaker is well-aware wearing this dress will likely cause people to judge her as a "slut," possibly even a prostitute. She doesn't care. She is a rebel, a mutineer. She is challenging the tyranny of social expectations. She rejects the "good girl" role all women are expected to play. Interpret Quotations Never let a quotation of any length stand on its own. Always analyze and interpret the quotation to explain how the quotation applies to your argument. ELEMENTS oF PoETRY 97 The Listener CHAPTER 6 Writing about Poems poetry may be divided into several major subgenres and types. A nalTative poem, for instance, tells a story. An epic, a subgenre of narralive, is pera long poem that narrates heroic events. A lyric poem expresses the And many poet speaker. or particular of a feelings and sonal-ihoughts other types of poems have venerable histories. As wiih stories, you should be aware of certain elements as you prepare to write abouipoetry. Sometimes these elements are the same as for hction. A narrative poem, for instance, will have a plot, setting, and characters, and all po"*. speak from a particular point of view. To the extent that any of the elements of fiction help you understand a poem, by all means use them in your analysis. Poetry howeve[, does present a special sbt of concerns for a readeL and elements of poetry frequently provide rich ground for analYsis. ELEMENTS OF POETRY The Speaker First, consider the speaker of the poem. Imagine that someone is saying the words of this poem aloud. Who is speaking, where is this speaker, and what is his oiher state of mind? Sometimes the voice is that of the poet, but frequently a poem speaks from a different perspective, just as a .ho.t ,tory might be fto* u point of view very different from the author,s. It,s not always apparent when this is the case, but some poets will signal who the speakei ii in a title, such as "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" and "ihe Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock'" Be alert to signals that will help you recognize the speakel and remember that some poems have more than one sPeaker. Be attentive also to any other persons in the poem, particularly an implied listener. Is there a "you" to whom the poem is addressed? If the poem is being spoken aloud, who is supposed to hear it? When, early in his poem "Dover Beach," Matthew Arnold writes, "Come to the window, sweet is the night-air!" he gives us an important clue as to how to read the poem. We should imagine both the speaker and the implied listener together in a room, with a window open to the night. As we read on, we can look for further clues as to who these two people are and why they are together on this night. Many poems create a relationship between the "I" of the speaker and the "you" of the listener; howeveq that is not always the case, Sometimes the speaker does not address a "you" and instead provides a more philosophical meditation that isnt explicitly addressed to a listener. Consider the effect: Do they feel more abstract? More detached from the material conditions of time and place? Do they provide certainty, or resolution? The questions about the speaker and the listener are crucial to your analysis of poetry. Imagery Just as you should be open to the idea that there are frequently symbols in stories, you should pay special attention to the images in poems. Although poems are often about such grand themes as love or death, they rarely dwell long in these abstractions. Rathec the best poetry seeks to make the abstraction concrete by creating vivid images appealing directly to the senses. A well-written poem will provide the mind of an attentive reader with sights, sounds, tastes, scents, and sensations. Since poems tend to be short and densely packed with meaning, every word and image is there for a reason. Isolate these images and give some thought to what they make you think and how they make you feel. Are they typical or unexpected? Consider these lines from John Donne's "The Good Morrow": in thine eye, thine in mine appears, And true plain hearts do in the faces res! My face Where can we find two better hemispheres, Without sharp north, without dectining west? (tines 15-18) Here, Donne celebrates the love between the speaker and his object of desire, comparing the faces of the lovers to two "hemispheres" on globes. Elsewhere in the poem, Donne uses imagery that is borrowed from the world of navigation and mapping; here, he suggests that the lovers' faces t 98 ELEMENTS oF WRITING ABOUT POEMS are an improvement upon whatever instruments explorers and learned men use to understand the world. By examining the images in a poem, their placement, juxtaposition, and effect, you will have gone a long way toward understanding the poem as a whole. Sound and Sense Of all the genres, poetry is the one that most self-consciously highlights language, so it is necessary to pay special attention to the sounds of a poem. In fact, it is always a good idea to read a poem aloud several times, giving yourself the opportunity to experience the role that sound plays in the poem's meaning. Rhy*, Much of the poetry written in English before the twentieth century was written in some form of rhyme, and contemporary poets continue to experiment with its effects. Rhymes may seem stilted or old-fashioned to our twenty-first-century ears, but keep in mind that rhymes have powerful social meanings in the cultural context in which they're written. And even today rhyme remains a viable and significant convention in popular songs, which are, after all, a form of poetry. As you read poems, ask yourself how rhymes work. Do they create juxtapositions? Alignments of meaning? And what is the effect of that relationship as the poem progresses? As sonance and Consonance While it is important to look at the end of a line td see how the poet uses sounds, it is also important to look inside the line. Poets use assonance, or repeated vowel sounds, to create an aural effect. Consider these opening lines from Gerard Manley Hopkins's "Pied Beauty": G[0ry be to God for dappted things- For skies of couple-colour as a brinded cow; For rose-moles a[[ in stipple upon trout that swim; Fresh-fi recoaI chestnut-fa[ts; fi nches' wi n gs; Landscape ptotted and pieced-fotd, fa[tow, and ptough; And att trades, their gear and taclite and trim. (tines 1-6) Throughout these lines, Hopkins pays special attention to "uh" and "ow" sounds. Notice "couple-colour" and "cow" in line 2,"upon" and "trout" in line 3, "fallow" and "plough" in line 5. As you read through each line, ask poETRy 99 yourself: Why does the poet align these sounds? Do these sounds speed up the tempo of the line, or slow it down? What do these sounds-and words-reveal about the poet's praise of "dappled things"? Poets also use consonance, repeated consonant sounds, to create alignments and juxtapositions among consonants. Consider these first lines from Christopher Marlowe's "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love": Come live with me and be my [ove. And we witt atl the pleasures prove (tines 1-2) In line 1, Marlowe aligns "live" with "love" to suggest that there is an equation between cohabitation and romance. In line 2, he aligns the "p" sound in "pleasures prove"; in addition, though, the slant rhyme of "love" and "prove" also creates meaning between the lines. What "proof" is there in love? Is love what will make the speaker feel most alive? Meter Poetry written in English is both accentual and syllabic. That is, poets count the number of accents as well as the number of syllables as they create each line of poetry. Patterns of syllable and accent have names like "iambic pentametey'' and "dactylic tetramete4" and each meter has its own unique properties and effects. Your literature instructor may help you learn about the specifics of metel or you can find several sites online that explain the art-called scansion*of determining the meter of a poem. Whether or not you have a clear understanding of the many meters of poetry in English, when you read a poem, listen to each Iine to find out how many accents and syllables it contains. If you can determine what that meter is, consider how the poet uses and subverts that formula as part of a strategy for the poem. Fotttt Poets writing in English use dozens of traditional forms from a variety of traditions. Some of the most common of these forms are the sonnet, the villanelle, and the ballad, but there are too many to name here. As you read a poem in a traditional form, think of the form as a kind of template in which poets arrange and explore challenging emolional and intellectual material. A sonnet, for example, has a concise fourteen-line structure that allows the poet to address a religious, romantic, or philosophical argument in a very compressed space. As you read a sonnet, you might ask yourself: What does its form accomplish that is different from -I 100 ,I'WO wRITING ABout PotrMs form likc a ballacl? Thc two sample poems later good opportunitv to compare a short, highly provide a in this chapter conventional form with a longeq more loosely structured one. Note, too, that many contemporary poets write in free verse, which means that they don't necessarily use a strict traditional form or meter for their poems. That doesn't mean that the free verse poet is writing without rules; it just means that the poet is creating his or her own system for the unique needs of each poem. a loose4 more extended WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE Let me not to the marriage of true minds Admit impediments. Love is not love Which alters when it alteration finds, Or bends with the remover to remove. Lineation a crucial etry" online tutorial at http://bcs.bedfordstmartins.com/virtualit/poetry/ rhyme_def.html. TWO POEMS FOR ANALYSIS Take a few minutes to read William Shakespeare's Sonnet 116 and T. S. Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" and consider the student annotations and the questions that follow the poems. Both of these poems are complex, though in very different ways. What elements of poetry do you notice in these poems? What insights do you have in addition to those suggested by the annotations and questions? 11564_16161 Conaonance: marriage/minds. Repetition:love/love,alters/alteration, remover/remove. O, no, it is an ever-fixtsd mark s That looks on tempests and is never shaken; Abstractideasbecomespecific i m a g e5: te m pe6te, s hi p6. It is the star to every wandering bark,' Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken.' Love's not time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks/ Rosylipsandcheeks:clas' siclovepoemimal"u' Within his bending sickle'siompurr-.o*"; -to Love alters not with his brief hours and weeki\- -. .. But bears it out even to the edge of doom.i ?;ir:1:X:l::lhimase'unusuat If this be error and upon me proved, I never writ, nor no man ever loved. Finatrhymeiaslantrhyme. A stanza is any grouping of lines of poetry into a unit. The term stanza comes from the Italian word for "room." As you read poetry, imagine each stanza as a room with its own correspondences and relationships, and consider how that stanza creates a singular effect. Sometimes a stanza can be one line long; sometimes the poet creates a block of lines with no stanza breaks. All of these choices create distinct effects for readers of poetry. component of poetry. Sometimes poets use punctuation at the end of every line, but more often they mix end-stopped lines with enjambed lines. Enjambment occurs when the line is not end-stopped with a comma, dash, or period. Its meaning spills over onto the next line, creating the effect of acceleration and intensity. Poets also use caesuras in the middle of lines to create variety in the pattern of the line. A caesura is a deep pause created by a comma, colon, semicolon, dash, period, or white space. Poetry written in English can have many kinds of rhyme schemes, forms, and meters. For more information, see the "Elements of Po- 101 Sonnet 116 Stanzas Lineation-or how a poet uses the line breaks in the poem-is POEMS FOR ANALYSIS Il6oe] bark: ship taken: is measured 12. doom: Judgment Day 7. 8. The student who annotated noticed both structural features of the poem (such as the move from abstract to concrete language) and small-scale language features, such as consonance and repetitions of individual words. This provides a good beginning to understanding the poem; answering the questions that follow will deepen that understanding, making it easier to wdte a paper about the poem. q lO2 wRrrrNG ABour PoEMS TWO POEMS FOR Let us go, through certain l"ralf-deserted streets, The muttering retreats Of restless nights in one-night cheap hotels QUESTIONS ON THE POEM tr And sawdust restaurants with oyster-shells: Streets that follow like a tedious argument Of insidious intent To lead you to an overwhelming question . . Oh, do not ask, "What is it?" Let us go and make our visit. In the room the women come and go Talking of Michelangelo. What images are most striking in this poem? Do they seem I tr n conventional? Surprising? Experimental? Why? A sonnet often reveals its own logic in order to argue for a point of view What is the argument of this poem? Do you find it persuasive? If so, why? If not, why not? What is the rhyme stnrcture of this sonnet? What words are aligned as a result of this scheme? How does Shakespeare use enjambment and caesura to manage the tempo of the poem? What effects does this create? T. S. ELIOT ANALYSIS 103 10 . Who are they visiting? Why? New oettin1, in a room. Visiting "the women"? 1s Licked its tongue into the corners of the evening, Fog like an animar, armost Lingered upon the pools that stand in drains, a characten Let fall upon its back the soot that falls from chimneys, Slipped by the terrace, made a sudden leap, And seeing that it was a soft October night, Curled once about the house, and fell asleep. The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock A persona che mai tornasse al mondo, Questa fiamma staria senza piu scosse. Ma perciocche giammai di questo fondo Non tomo vivo alcun, s'i'odo il vero, Senza tema d'infamia ti rispondo. Settinggrubbyandaeedy.Depresaing. The yellow fog that rrrbs its back upon the window-panes, The yellow smoke that rubs its muzzle on the window-panes [1888-le6s] S'io credesse che mia risposta fosse 5 Footnote 5ay6 this ie from Dante'slnlerno. The apeaker is in hell, Why start a "love song" with hell? Whoisthio"you"?WherearetheygoingT Let us go then, you and I, When the evening is spread out against the sky Like a patient etherised upon a table; Epigraph: "If I thought that my answer were being made to someone who would ever return to earth, this flame would remain without further movement; but since no one has ever returned alive from this depth, if what I hear is true, I answer you without fear of infamy" (Dante, Infemo 27.61'66). Dante encounters Guido de Montefeltro in the eighth circle of hell, where souls are trapped within flames (tongues of fire) as punishment for giving evil counsel. Guido tells Dante details about his evil life only because he assumes that Dante is on his way to an even deeper circle in hell and will never return to earth and be able to repeat what he has heard. And indeed there will be time For the yellow smoke that slides along the street, Rubbing its back upon the window-panes; There will be time, there will be time To prepare a face to meet the faces that you meet; There will be time to murder and create, And time for all the works and days of hands That lift and drop a question on your plate; Time for you and time for me, And time yet for a hundred indecisions, And for a hundred visions and revisions, Before the taking of a toast and tea. In the rOOm the women COme and gO Talking of Michelangelo. 20 Usesrhymeinirregularpatfiern. 25 Lota of repetition here, as if hebfinted on these ideas and can't letgo, 30 He seems obsessed with and how much time ofitthere is. Anotherrepetition.gamewomen? gameroom? And indeed there will be time I dare?" and, "Do I dare?" Time to turn back and descend the stai4, With a bald spot in the middle of my hair40 (They will say: "How his hair is growing thin!") Phys ica I d eoc ri pt i on : a gi n g, My morning coat, my collar mounting firmly to the chin, thin,welldreased. My necktie rich and modest, but asserted by a simple pinTo wonde4 "Do ,*Z:i:;: rl 104 ,tWO wRITING ABou't PotiMS (They will say: "But how his arms ancl lcgs are thin!") Do I dare How could he Uieturb Disturb the universe? universe"? is time there In a minute For decisions and revisions which a minute will reverse. For I have known them all already, known them Have known the evenings, mornings, afternoons, I have measured out my life with coffee spoons; I know the voices dying with a dying fall Beneath the music from a farther room. So how should I presume? all:- 45 the life. with his Maybe depressed? 50 And I have known the arms already, known them allArms that are braceleted and white and bare (But in the lamplight, downed with light brown hair!) Is it perfume from a dress That makes me so digress? Arms that lie along a table, or wrap about a shawl. He aaka many questiono in this aeation. Maybe And should I then presume? unsule of self, Women seem to make him insecure. And how should I begin? aaa I should have been a pair of ragged claws Scuttling across the floors of silent seas. platter, matter; 80 Lots of disconnected body parts: eyes,arms,clawa,head. I have seen the moment of my greatness flicker, And I have seen the eter-nal Footman hold my coat, and And in short' I was afoaid' snicke4 8s Eternar Footman = Death? 5s And I have known the eyes already, known them allThe eyes that fix you in a formulated phrase, And when I am formulated, sprawling on a pin, Likeabug.MoreinsecurityT when I am pinned and wriggling on the wall, I begin should Then how 60 To spit out all the butt-ends of my days and ways? And how should I presume? Shall I say, I have gone at dusk through nalTow streets And watched the smoke that rises from the pipes Of lonely men in shirt-sleeves, leaning out of windows? . . . 105 Have the strength to force the moment to its crisis? But though I have wept and fasted, wept and prayed, Though I have seen my head (grown slightly bald) brought in upon a I am no prophet-and here's no great He seems bored POEMS FOR ANALYSIS 70 Eartierhewaslikeabug,nowlikea And would it have been worth it, after all, Again,hethinkssomeoneistaughing athim. After the cups, the marmalade, the tea, Among the porcelain, among some talk of you and me, Would it have been worth while, eo To have bitten off the matter with a smile, To have squeezed the universe into a ball To roll it toward some overwhelming question, To say: "l arn Lazarus, come from the dead, More about death. Who is dead here?Prufrockhimeelf? Come back to tell you all, I shall tell you all"9s If one, settling a pillow by her head, Should say: "That is not what wrl.L Ir r,Edrrl meant at all. ^t ""' That is not it, at uu."""" ,u1i11,"1,"#!*:";:;i;il;; all, And would it have been worth it, after ::l:,tr{;:i'::il::;:-y, Would it have been worth while, too / After the sunsets and the dooryards and the sfrinkl"d streets, After the novels, after the teacups, after the skirts that trail along the floor- And this, and so much more?It is impossible to say just what I meanl But as if a magic lantern threw the nerves in patterns on a screen: 105 Would it have been worth while If one, settling a pillow or throwing off a shawl, And turning toward the window, should say: whoisrepeatingthis?,,Thatienot "That is not it at all, whattm)ant"=miaunderounding. That is not what I meant, at all." 110 crab' And the afternoon, the evening, sleeps so peacefully! Smoothed by long fingers, Asleep . . . tired. . . or it malingers, Stretched on the flooL here beside you and me. Should I, after tea and cakes and ices, No! I am not Prince ,.-a,, ,; *r;-".nt Am an attendant ]ord, one that will do To swell a progress, start a scene or two, Advise the prince; no doubt, an easy tool, Deferential, glad to be of use, Politic, cautious, and meticulous; to be; llhy compare aelfto Hamlet? Heb not a pinaeT Not famous? rl 106 SAMPLE PAPER wRITING ABour PollMS Full of high sentence, but a bit btttsc; At times, indeed, almost ridiculousAlmost, attimes, the Fool. I grow old. ..I grow QUESTIONS ON THE POEM ' old:1-worryaboutaging.Howotdiohe? 120 I shll wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled' peach? Apeach?Howis Shall I pafi my hair behind? Do I dare to eat a the beach. thatdarins? upon walk and t.o"rers, r shall wear white ttu.r.r"i I have heard the mermaids singing, each to each' 12s I do not think that they will sing to me' I have seen them 107 getling changes again: riding seaward on the waves now a beach. Combing the white hair of the waves blown back Wh".t th"" wind blows the water white and black' underwater(likebheilab we have lingered in the chambers of the sea earlier)' 130 ny r"u-gi.ft wieathed with seaweed red and brown wakeua?tsthisalladream?A drown' we and fiU fruria" voices wake us, " niahtmare? [19lsl complexities of this On a first reading, the student was baffIed by the annotating it on a After head' her over was p."." ."Jf"ft certiin that it she had gotten far more that realized she however, i""ona."ua-through, begun to develop out of it than she originally believed and that she had When her class setting' the .o*" int"."rting ideai about the speaker and to the discusadd to comments the plem, she had inslghttul ;;;;;; insights' these deepen and on build questions sion. The following n tr n tr n What images are most striking in this poem? What makes them striking or memorable? How do the stanza breaks work in this poem? Why do you suppose Eliot chose these particular places for breaks? The rhyme and meter of the poem are highly irregula4, but it,s not quite free verse. Why use rhyme and meter at all? Why not make the rhyme and meter more regular? What are the various settings of the poem? How does each contribute to your understanding of the poem? What specific words would you use to sum up the character of Prufrock? SAMPLE PAPER: AN EXPLICATION Patrick McCorkle, the author of the paper that follows, was given the assignment to perform a close-reading of one of the poems his class had studied. He needed first to pick a poem and then to choose specific features of its language to isolate and analyze. He chose Shakespeare,s Sonnet 116 because it seemed to him to offer an interesting and balanced definition of love. After rereading the poem, he became interested in several unexpectedly negative, even unsettling images that seemed out of place in a poem about the positive emotion of love. This was a good start, and it allowed him to write a draft of the paper. When he was finished, howeveE, the essay was a little shorter and less complex than he had hoped it would be. During a peer workshop in class, he discussed the sonnet and his draft with two classmates, and together they noticed how many positive words and images appeared in the poem as well. That was the insight Patrick needed to fill out his essay and feel satisfied with the results. 108 wRITING ABour PoEMS SAMPLE McCorkte 1 pApER 109 McCork[e 2 in one of the sad poems about the loss of [ove. But these tempests Patrick McCorkte and sickles are more realistic than the hearts and flowers of so many lesser [ove poems. In fact, they show that the poet recog_ nizes the bad times that occur in a[[ relationships, even those Professor Bobrick Engiish 102 10 January 2008 strong enough to inspire [ove sonnets. And the negative images are tempered because of the contexts in which they occur. The ShakesPeare Defi nes Love the earliest written rhymes to the latest radio hit, love is among the eternal themes for poetry. Most love poetry seems to praises of faLL into one of two categories. Either the poet sings the From "wandering bark," for instance, might represent trouble and [oss, but love itsetf is seen as the star that witt Lead the boat safeLy back to catm waters. MeanwhiLe, the betoved,s,,rosy [ips and the beLoved and the unending joys of love in overly exaggerated terms, or the poet laments the [oss of [ove with such bitterness and distress that it seems tike the end of [ife. Anyone who has been in [ove, though, can tetl you that both of these views are joyous Limited and incomplete and that rea[ love is neither entirety nor entirety sad. In Sonnet 116, "Let me not to the marriage of true minds," Shakespeare creates a more reatistic image of [ove' By balancing negative with positive images and language, this sonnet cheeks" may fade, but rea[ love out[ives even the stroke of death,s sickte, lasting "to the edge of doom." Just as positive and negative images are juxtaposed, so are positive and negative language. The first four [ines of Sonnet j.j.6 are made up of two sentences, both negatives, beginning with the Patick identifies his topic and states his thesis. grates direct not time's foo[." From here, the poem goes on to dwe[[ in abstract close-reading. job than thousands of songs and poems before love in atl its comptexities and contradictions' defining and since, ideas such as "a[teration," "impediments Like many poems, Sonnet 116 ret'ies on a series of visua[ images to paint vivid pictures for the reader, but not a[[ of these is what readers of [ove poems have been led to expect in their previous reading, and we might even wonder if the poet finds this does a far better images are what we might expect pteasures of lasting [ove. A reader can easily picture "an ever-fixdd mark," a "tempest," a"star," a "wandering bark" (a boat [ost at sea), "rosy l.ips and cheeks." and a "bending sickte"'Some of these, [ike stars and rosy [ips, are just the sort of sunny, positive images we typicatty find in love Likewise, a boat tossed in a raging tempest is not exactty the typicaL poet'ic depiction of happy [ove' Such pictures woutd hardl'y seem to provide an upbeat image of what love is atl about, and in fact they might be more at home and,,error,,, None of this scriptions of [ove? Where are the summer skies, the smiles and laughter? Clearty, Shakespeare doesn't mean to sweep his readers poems of the joyous variety' 0thers, though, are more unexpected. Ftowers and images of springtime, for instance. are standard issue in happy love poetry, but a sickte is assocjated with autumn and the death of the year, and metaphorical.Ly with death itsetf in the form of the grim reaper' ," love thing worth the trouble. This strange and unexpected language continues on through the [ast tine of the poem, which contains no fewer than three negative words: "never," ,,nor,,, and,,no.,, Where, a reader might ask, are the expected positive de- in a poem celebrating the Patick introduces the poemb contradictory imagery. up in rosy images of a lover's btiss. Ultimatety, though, even with the preponderance of negative images and words. the poem strikes a hopeful tone. The hedging about what love isn,t and what it can't do are balanced with positive words and phrases, saying clearty what love is: "it is an ever-fixdd mark,, and ,,it is the star.,. Love, Patick explains the effect of this imagery. Patrick inte- words "Let me not" and "Love is not." The negatives of the first few [ines continue in phrases Like "Whose worth,s unknown,, and ,,Love,s it woutd seem, does not make our lives perfect, but us the strength, stabitity, and direction it gives to survive the bad times. Though more than four hundred years have passed since quotations front the poem into his 110 WRTTING ABOUT POEMS McCorkle 3 Shakespeare wrote his sonnets, some things never change, and among these is the nature of comptex human emotions. In a mere fourteen [ines, Shakespeare succeeds where many others have faited through the years, providing a much more satisfuing definition of love than one normatty sees in one-dimensionat, strictty happy or sad poetry. The love he describes is the sort that a "marriage of true not everyone is tucky enough to find compticated, unsettting, and very reat. mi nds" - Inhb conclttsion, Patick suggests that thepoem is succesdul b*ause of the iuatopositions fuhas discusseL
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Explanation & Answer

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Introduction
Take a bit of writing that was written in a regularly dense type of a language and clarify it; that is
the task when composing a paper about the verse. Composing such an article can assist you with
understanding complex types of writing and make assessments of them referring to models from
the content. Composing an article on verse can at last assist you with valuing the wonderful
structure more by understanding the art that is included. The prologue to an article gives the
establishment to the whole paper, and it is basic to compose an all-around organized
presentation.
Poetry is a decreased dialect that imparts complex feelings. To understand the various
ramifications of a poem, peruses must examine its words and communicate from the perspectives
of the beat, sound, pictures, clear significance, and proposed meaning. Peruses at that point need
to sift through responses to the refrain into a reliable, point-by-point explanation. The verse uses
structures and conventions to propose a different interpretation of words or to gather emotive
responses. Contraptions, for instance, sound comparability, comparable sounding word use, the
resemblance in sound and rhythm are on occasion used to achieve melodic or incantatory
impacts (Butcher, Samuel Henry, and John Gassner. 1951).

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When composing a paper about a poem, it should begin from a general thought or idea and work
toward something explicit. The initial segment of the presentation is designated "the snare." The
snare is intended to attract the peruser of the article. Contingent upon the point you decided for
your paper, you may need to give foundation data on the way of life or recorded occasions
important to the sonnet. Quickly see these central matters after the snare. Giving your peruser a
thought of what you will talk about capacities as a guide to your paper, demonstrating your
peruser how you will find a workable pace point. The last sentence of your presentation should
then end with your proposition explanation.
Poem explication essay
This stated poem sensationalizes the contention among reality and appearance, especially as this
contention identifies with what appears to speaker to state and what he truly says (Sidney, Philip,
and Robert Maslen, 2002). From Westminster Bridge, the speaker takes a gander at London at
dawn, and he clarifies that all individuals ought to be struck by such a lovely scene. The speaker
takes note of that the city is quiet, and he focuses to a few explicit items, naming them just when
all is said in done terms: "Boats, towers, arches, theatres, and sanctuaries" (6). Subsequent to
portraying the "sparkling" part of these articles, he declares that these city places are similarly as
delightful toward the beginning of the day as nation places like rock, valley or slope" (8,10). At
last, subsequent to depicting his profound sentiment of smoothness, the speaker noticed how the
"houses appear to be sleeping" and that "all that po...


Anonymous
I was struggling with this subject, and this helped me a ton!

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