Edna St. Vincent's Poetry

Improved Essays
Poetry is a form of literacy that has been used since of beginning of time. It is used by an author, who has a particular style which comes through their pomes that they write for there audience. Each Author has a unique style, rhythm in when a reader reads the author poems, its comes through and it is instantly recognizable as their work. Some of the most popular poems in our history come from two completely different Era’s. The Romantic and Modern Era’s poems, are some of the best pomes known to mankind. The Different Era’s have Different Moods, Themes and Imagery in each one of the poem’s that come from each particular Era. In the poem’s “Thursday” by Edna St. Vincent, uses a very romantic, sexual style to her poem. Where as “The Snowman” …show more content…
The theme of freedom is to free the reader of being held down by society thoughts on love. The poem leaves you to let the reader know that its ok to be a homosexual, heterosexual transexual or Bi- sexual, or Asexual, you are ok to love whoever and whenever you need to. Freedom of love is a human right that you are born with and its ok to love freely. The choices on which the freedom to choose does however has consequences. When you make a choice to love, rather its a good love or a bad love the beauty is that your choose it and you have to keep it. The author lets it be known that with great freedom to choose who you love, you also have to be able to be criticized by others and be able to handle it. The theme of “The Snowman” by Wallace Stevens, lets the reader know that being able to survive in this life means sometimes you have to be un-emotional and detached from others just like winter. Winter is cold and hard and in life you have to be that way to survive and get further in life. Its up to to decide how you want to be in life but, it is your chose on how you and your perception on it. The theme lets the readers know that the perception is different for each individual, because everyone looks at things different. With the themes of each poems they both let their readers know that everyone one is different and you have to respect everyone choices rather its to go through life …show more content…
In most poems that are written has imagery in it to paint that picture and with, “Thursday” by Edna St. Vincent, and “The Snowman” by Wallace Stevens they both have very different version of imagery. In the poem “Thursday” by Edna St. Vincent, Edna uses imagery to describe the day and how she felt on Thursday. She lets the readers know that on Wednesday she is head over heels in love with her lover but on Thursday she feels different. She uses days of the week in comparison to the weather and her feelings. The weather can be fine Sunday and beautiful on a Wednesday, but on the very next day it can be stormy and crappy, just like how she feels about her lovers. She can feel or look one way on one day of the week and a different on another day of they week. She lets her readers know that its ok to change you mind on how you feel about someone, just how the weather changes on days of the week. She paints a picture in her readers mind that’s fills their heads with all kinds of images of different days of the week and there

Related Documents

  • Superior Essays

    The art of poetry is a vast discipline in which the creations of the poets take on a multitude of different forms. Not only are there a large number of poetic structures that an author can choose from, there are also many parts within those structures that can be modified to lead to an even more diverse array of final products. The author has a great many choice when it comes to choosing the structure of their poem, they can vary the number of lines per stanza, the length of each line, and the number of syllables per line. Other variations the poet can make include content changes such as choosing to use rhyming words, repeated sounds like alliteration, and figurative devices such as personification. Even in poetry forms with strict guidelines,…

    • 1475 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the poem “The White Judges” by Marilyn Dumont, the speaker is aware of how she and her Indigenous family are consistently being judged by the primarily white population. The poem juxtaposes the family with the encircling colonialists who wait to demean and assimilate the group. Consequently, the family faces the pressures of being judged for their cultural practices, resulting in a sense of shame and guilt. Dumont’s use of prose and lyrical voice distinctly highlights the theme of being judged by white society. Her integration of figurative language enhances the Indigenous tradition and cultural practices throughout the poem.…

    • 953 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    To humans, the most essential part to living is communicating. We connect to one another through ways of expression such as music or literature. Poetry as a form of writing is a way to express feelings through rhythm and the use of specific words. In every poem, the author conveys a certain topic or emotion to the reader. The use of language, metaphors, and recurring themes is essential to the poet in sending the right message.…

    • 560 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Literature Paper Poetry can be very complex and even though it can vary and use different techniques to get the point across it may come to the same conclusion and meaning, and can also be interpreted differently. Poetry is meant to be understood in the reader's own way. Why I Hate Raisins, Hand-Me-Down Halloween, and My Brother at 3AM are about the struggles of living in the reservation, but use different style, syntax and tone. Why I Hate Raisins is a poem about the struggles of not having enough food or not being able to afford food other than what they received. It is written in subtly and sounds simple, so the true meaning behind the poem is not really understood until the end, and has a deeper meaning.…

    • 1073 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Many poets changed the way that modernist poems were written in the early 20th century. Edna st. Vincent Millay was a famous modernist poet who wrote poetry as a political act. Millay wrote topics on how to deal with many different important issues in society, and Millay often thought on how to change those issues. The poet also wrote her poems based on freeing women from the roles society has set them, and also many of her poems talked about women’s sexuality as a way for it to be celebrated and set free.…

    • 397 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Rosmarie Waldrop is a contemporary poet who seeks to understand the source of art as well as to reform it. She appreciates the paradoxical desires of the writer to break free of long-practiced and redundant structure, yet she understands the human need for order and arrangement. She acknowledges the fact that there is no such thing as an uninfluenced line of poetry; whether the influence is a grammatically and culturally correct form, or an emotional or ideological belief that is shared by poets and authors. According to Waldrop, “Whether we are conscious of it or not, we always write on top of a palimpsest.” (Baker, 75).…

    • 1097 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The poem that is being analyzed is “Poetry” by Marianne Moore. This poem is a powerful piece of literary text which explorers the speaker’s dislike for poetry and acknowledges poetry as a place for the genuine. The title “Poetry” is significant for many reasons but most importantly it represents the speaker’s view of poetry and is the first line that begins the poem. Its significance is show when Moore states “I, too, dislike it” which means she is referring to the previous line and title, “Poetry”.…

    • 603 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Poems happen to be words that mean more than they look. May they express a message, describe someone’s point of view of his/her life or anything, poems are able to do so much with so little. Such is how famous poet of the 19th century Robert Browning managed to do with his writings. Through his writings of My Last Duchess and Porphyria’s Lover, we will look upon the way that he believes men would become alongside women. Replaced for stronger than interesting To start it off, let’s discuss about how Browning’s men view their woman as an object.…

    • 754 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Many poets will express their perspectives or nauture in various ways. In the poems, “Ode to enchanted Light” by Pablo Neruda and “Sleeping in the Forest” by Mary Oliver, the poets utilize similar and contrasting key elements to express their views of the beauties and powers of nature. In “Ode to enchanted Light,” Pablo Neruda touches upon the beauties of light and appreciation for the nature that surrounds us, through the use of figuative language, theme, symbolism, and mood/tone. Mary Oliver also utilizes these elements to express the speakers admiration for the less noticable virtues of nature. In both of these poems, the poets uses related elements, that have their own similarities and differences between the pieces of literature.…

    • 752 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    I. 1. Contrast the characters of Edna and Adele. What are the major differences between them? Then consider the significance of Edna learning to swim.…

    • 1429 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    According to poet Rita Dove, “Poetry is language at its most distilled and most powerful.” This quote helps us understand why poems come in so many different styles, forms, and subjects. If one thinks of poetry as a whole, perhaps the first poem that surfaces the mind would be a poem in lyrical verse. This more general form of poetry is indeed how the vast majority of poems are written. However, the more classic form of poetry, or perhaps the more ancient form of poetry, is found in epic form, which is known as narrative verse.…

    • 780 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Frost intentionally incorporates a peculiar choice in rhyme scheme to catch the reader’s attention. The first three stanzas of the rhyme scheme follow an AABA BBCB CCDC pattern, with words such as “know” (1) and “though” (2) rhyming with “snow” (4). However, the last stanza takes a different form, following a DDDD format, with the words “deep,” “keep,” “sleep,” and “sleep” (13-16). The alike rhyme scheme patterns in the first three stanzas continue the movement of the poem until reaching the climax of the poem in the last stanza. By changing the flow of the rhyming words, it forces the reader to slow down in an attempt to process the newfound pattern.…

    • 1140 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Although having lived a very short life, John Keats is arguably one of the most remarkable poets that the Romantic Era produced. His poetry explores the human condition by asking deep philosophic questions. Written in 1819, the poem ”Ode on Melancholy," captures many complex emotions, and focuses on the intertwined connection between joy and sadness, hope and disappointment. He reasons that in order to fully experience and appreciate one, we must also experience the other. Only if we can truly accept that pain is inevitable, can we hope to find beauty and happiness in the world around us.…

    • 958 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The world when the modern poetry was born was deeply touched by the discoveries of that time, be it Einstein’s theory, or Freud, or the development of a new art – photography. Everything come together and left its mark on modern literature, and implicit, on poetry. On this period, a great influence over the poetry of the world had the American poets. According to Cary Nelson, the modern American poetry is “unexcelled in its richness, inventiveness, and diversity”, and those characteristic are what makes modern poetry succeed. Some of the American poets (Gertrude Stein, Ezra Pound) even come back to Europe and act as mentors for writers from all around the world, other remain home, in America, but their influence was none the less important:…

    • 2112 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Nature’s Morality Embedded In Romanticism Since the beginning of creation man has always strived to learn more about himself and the world around him. One of the most prominent ways that man can connect with their inner self and find peace with the world around them, is to write and read different types of poetry. Starting from the streets of Athens with the philosophical and artistic minds of the Greeks, poetry quickly moved East, hastily engulfing the entire globe because of it’s ability to answer questions and power to put into words what the average man cannot explain.…

    • 1838 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Superior Essays