How Does Ted Hughes Use Imagination In Poetry

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Have you ever sat within a group of friends reading poems and being astonished by the inferences and connections each one of you makes? Yes! That is the best thing about poetry; it can be interpreted in several ways. None of them is wrong, though. It is just a matter of creativity and imagination. This phenomenon is due to the different life situations every individual face which aids in building their own mindset and the way they perceive beauty in their surroundings, especially in poetry. For instance, exploring the three poems (“The Thought-Fox”, “Two Trees”, and “Digging”), you can see that each of them may look different. However, in some way, they all relate. The poems include various forms of creativity and art; yet, they all contribute …show more content…

He intensely uses alliteration, consonance, and assonance giving the poem a lyrical touch as well as aiding him in delivering the speed of the moment. This mood of darkness, loneliness, and suddenness resembles the way a poem gets written. These techniques assist the poet in grabbing the readers’ attention and getting them involved with the idea he is trying to deliver making the poem effective and interactive rather than pale and expected. Also, the thoughts of the person suddenly attack in the middle of the dark and take over the person’s mind; then, the person gets engaged in those thoughts that they start unconsciously jotting down words on a “blank page” which later gets to be a “printed page” and that is where the poem lies! The poet wrapped up the poem by re-mentioning “the clock” and contrasting how the page is now “printed” after this sudden rush of thoughts. This epiphany views the quick passage of events in a very short duration that was only a few seconds; those few seconds were enough for a train of thought to cross the person’s mind as a moment of sudden realization and lead to the production of an artistic poem in a form of a “printed page”. What a magnificent way to describe the …show more content…

As demonstrated throughout this analysis, it can be as sneaky as a “fox”, as fabulous as the profession of “digging”, or as systematic and divine as “Miguel’s patio”. Moreover, poetry can implicitly reflect the traits and characteristics of the poet himself through the style it follows which can range from being as well organized as “Miguel” to jumbled as “the man who bought the house”. Who knows? Perhaps other readers might have different interpretations to these poems as a result of thinking from diverse angles according to their handful of personal life experiences. Just as every person of us has a unique character, we also have our own unique analysis that can even vary in compliance with our changing moods. For example, an oppressed person can view the “squat pen” in “Digging” as a “gun” in the same manner that the poet’s older family used the “spade” as their weapon; That person can clarify his claim by saying that the poet uses his “pen” to fight and deliver dangerous political messages that can be striking to the public; in contrary, if that person is relaxed, he might also view the same “squat pen” as a tool of art that the poet uses to draw breathtaking images with all his passion just as his ancestors used to “dig for the good turf”. Resultantly, there is not a single poem on Earth that has only one standard meaning, because only

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