Internal rhyme

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    The Brilliant Poem Thomas

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    the sacrosanct, or God. 'The Brilliant' was the name that was given for this impression of associating with a more extensive, more significant otherworldly reality. The rain in 'RAIN', then, is an a portion of nature that permits the mindful and internal mulling over Thomas the poet to join with the more extensive world (pretty much as, fort instance, in Samuel Taylor Coleridge's 'The Eolean Harp', the wind playing on harp strings prompts the artist to think about whether he reacts to nature…

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    Anne Bradstreet’s poem, “Here Follows Some Verses upon the Burning of Our House, July 10th, 1666,” describes the horrific night Anne was awoken to her house on fire and the internal struggles, both emotionally and spiritually, she faced while witnessing it burn to ash. Her Puritan values greatly influenced her writing style and content, which was especially notable in this poem with the constant tug between her spiritual values and earthly valuables. The Puritans were a religious group in the…

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    the other hand, is portrayed by differences with Doctor Martin. The speaker is not given a name. "Her motion is ‘speeds' a word that connects, by means of internal rhyme with ‘queen' in line six and ‘bee' in line seven, to suggest the brittle meaninglessness of her position in the ‘antiseptic tunnel' among the ‘moving dead'. The end rhymes ‘walk', ‘talk', and ‘stalk' contrast Doctor Martin's purposeful action (‘walk') with the lassitude and immobility of the patients (‘talk') and with the…

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    and compares the daffodils to humans by giving them human qualities such as “tossing their head” the metaphorical comparison shows that nature and humans are indivisible. “Inward eye” is also metaphorically used. In this case it is used to mean the internal perception or feeling of solitude that the persona…

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    A theme ever-present in a large majority of poetry is conflict. Conflict can manifest in many different forms in the world and poetry, being a great form of social commentary, discusses the impact these forms of conflict have on the world. A diverse selection of authors discuss the themes of ethical conflict, romantic conflict, conflict in war, and existential conflict in their work. The theme of ethical conflict is highly predominant in the poetry of Langston Hughes, George Watsky, and Seamus…

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    The war poet and war poetry in general were terms used firstly within context of the World War I.. From the beginning of the war times, poetry was written mostly by civilians, not by poets. Such poetry had no established identity. It was later, between 1914 and 1918 when this type of poetry acquired notion of genre, and so-called soldier-poets became a species. Enormous increase in writing poetry related to the war occurred. War poetry became very realistic, describing situation as it was…

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    In this poem the Cullen wrote short phrases that are written in memory of a person who has died, something that can be in scripted on a tombstone. His main focuses are epitaphs written for a fool, one who gaily sowed his oats, for a wanton, and for a preacher. The main points are the epitaphs being relatable to whom they concern. The topics that are covered are death, wisdom, love, and vanity. All in all, the author’s thesis is to show the different roles someone may had in life and what could…

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    techniques used in literature. These devices are considered musical because they use similar sounds to link each other. Learning about these devices will make you a more informed reader of poetry. Rhyme Rhyme is a musical device that uses vowel sounds that rhyme through similar construction. To qualify as a rhyme, the vowel sounds and all of the sounds that come after the vowel sounds must be closely related. For instance, the first part of the word can be any consonance, but once the vowel is…

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    The jolly tone juxtaposes the emotion of regret that is seen from stanza 3. This can be seen when the internal rhyme scheme of “Just so: my foe” is used to show that he is faltering because he feels both guilty and regretful. We as readers could infer that a jolly rhyme scheme is used in order to make fun of the Boer War as Thomas Hardy disagreed with it. Moreover, Lord Tennyson uses no structure in ‘The Charge of the Light Brigade’…

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    The Pylons Poem Analysis

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    threaten to bring destruction upon nature and country. The concrete poem structures the stanzas in a way that, along with the black font, resemble pylons. There is no regular meter but the first and last line of each stanza sometimes end with full rhyme and sometimes pararhyme. The poet uses enjambment and caesuras liberally. The unconventional structure causes the poem to be chaotic and unpredictable, similar to the way the poet characterises technology. The first stanza is an ekphrasis of the…

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