13 Ways To Look At A Blackbird Rhetorical Analysis

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I would say I really liked piecing the sonnet together more than anything else. At first I held a negative feeling about having to write a sonnet because I thought it was so dumb and dreaded having to deal with, not sure why I felt this way. Now looking at it I’ve discovered that it is probably one of my best piece of writing out of this whole unit or class in general. I proved myself wrong and somewhat enjoyed finding rhyming words and coming up with sentence and syllables to go along. Haikus are definitely the easiest thing to write while also holding a lot of meaning in them. I wouldn’t say that writing any of these were difficult I personally just am not the biggest fan of poetry, it never seemed to peak my interest although I didn’t mind it. …show more content…

13 Ways to Look at a Blackbird was the most confusing. I could not wrap my head around it for the life of me because just about everything he had put down made as much sense at a black hole, so with an example like that trying to figure out what I was doing with the poem just made me angry and very frustrated. My poem didn’t come out that bad though after I just winged it and went with what felt right. One thing I got out of this unit is word play and complex sentence structures to confuse people and gives me that little enjoyment of leaving them with a bit of

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