Emily Dickinson was a poet that was around in the 1800’s. Dickinson met a man named Charles Wadsworth on a trip to Philadelphia. After Wadsworth’s visit to Dickinson’s home, he made a departure for the West Coast in 1860. This event was believed to be the influence of the depressing tone in some of the poems Emily Dickinson wrote (source: Poets.org). One of the poems Emily Dickinson wrote in her lifetime was “If You Were Coming in the Fall,” which is about a woman waiting for her loved one to return home. While waiting for him to come home, there is a growing pain that stings her everyday as she patiently waits. The poem, however, has a deeper meaning towards it. The theme of “If You Were Coming in the Fall” is that human beings will do everything they can to bring their loved …show more content…
The simile shows a comparison between throwing away something (e.g, your life) like fruit rinds. The meaning of the simile is that the when her life is out, she would throw it away, just like how you would throw away the rinds of a fruit. In addition, there is a symbol that represents the meaning of the entire poem, which is the “goblin bee,” that can be found in stanza 4. The “goblin bee,” is a representation of the pain the speaker is feeling throughout the poem. As a result, the bee would wait for the right moment to strike the speaker. The connotations in the poem are just one of the literary devices that supports the theme. All in all, the paraphrasing of each stanza talks about the feats the speaker would do, just to see her lover once again. An example of one of the tasks she would do is getting rid of the current season. The connotations that are spread throughout the poem shows the usage of figurative language to give the theme and poem in general a deeper meaning. An example would be the “goblin bee” being a symbol representing the speaker’s
The overall theme of the poem is sacrifice, more specifically, for the people that you love. Throughout the poem color and personification are used to paint a picture in the reader's head. “Fog hanging like old Coats between the trees.” (46) This description is used to create a monochromatic, gloomy, and dismal environment where the poem takes
So throughout this paper the symbolism of nature and its effects on the characters will be discussed. Janie mesmerized by the beautiful tree growing in Nanny’s backyard. Climbs the tree to sit in the branches soon realizes what true love means when witnessing of the bees to the blossoms of the pear tree. “She was stretched on her back beneath the pear tree soaking in the alto chant of the visiting bees, the gold of the sun and the panting breath of the breeze when the inaudible voice of it all came to her. She saw a dust-bearing bee sink into the sanctum of a bloom; the thousand sister-calyxes arch to meet the love embrace and the ecstatic shiver of the
Dickinson wrote the poem “XXXII”, which portrays hope as a soft fragile bird who never loses hope even when it has been abashed. Emily Dickinson was an American poet who was born in Amherst, Massachusetts. Emily was not an outgoing or social type of person. The loss and death of her loved ones impacted Dickinson in a huge manor. There was nothing more to help than to write poems expressing thoughts and feelings.
One of American Poetry’s Biggest Influence: Emily Dickinson Emily Dickinson was a poet from Massachusetts who became well known after her death. From a young age, she aspired to one day become a poet.
One example of figurative language is the simile used in the third stanza. In lines 45-50 "On the grass beside their straw mat, a black umbrella, blooming like an ancient flower, betrays their recent arrival. Suspicious of so much sunshine, they keep expecting rain. " This quote relates to the theme because the symbolism the black umbrella has is fear the family has. Therefore, their familiarity with failure and hardship cause their suspicion about everything in their surroundings being a bit too perfect to arise.
A loss of physical innocence is shown here, "I can 't see my own arms and legs or know if this is a trap or blessing" She is telling us that she has become physically detached from her body and she is confused as she doesn 't understand if this moment is a "trap of a blessing. " The loss of innocence clearly links up with post-apocalyptic times in The Road to Winter where Finn lost his innocence when he decided whether to kill Ramage or not and him discussing his emotions. The novel has many dangers moments in it and this is shown in the poem as well, "rises up silently like dark bread. " This simile reflects the dangers of the natural world in post-apocalyptic times.
This line in the poem, is showing us how nature gives us insight into the meaning of life. In this case, the spring season demonstrates to us the mysteries behind the energy and beauty of youth, and how the blossoming of human life begins. This perceived interpretation is completely backed up by the overarching theme of life and death in this poem (Bryant). This theme being brought about by the overwhelming use of the romanticists tool, metaphor and association (Tóth). Life is not the only mystery, according to the poem, that is being unearthed by nature.
In Maxine Kumin’s poem “Woodchucks”, the speaker’s tone is informative, but through anger the speaker makes a drastic change and the tone becomes murderous and obsessed. The speaker’s shift in tone is related to the radical climax the speaker has with the woodchucks in her garden. After she shoots one of the woodchucks, the speaker becomes entranced and captivated by killing. The speaker professes that before this she was a pacifist, but after dropping some of the woodchucks, she turns murderous and hunts endlessly for the last one.
December 10, 1830, the town of Amherst, Massachusetts quietly received the little girl who would grow to give identity to the very essence of the American poet. Emily Dickinson, an enigmatic recluse and unlikely literary genius would become, after her death in 1886, one of the most iconic figures in American literature. Dickinson was notably peculiar; this peculiarity most certainly contributes to the great intrigue surrounding her eerie writing. From 1860 to her death, Dickinson lived virtually in complete isolation, on her childhood homestead. It was during this time that she wrote her most esteemed works.
“If you were coming in the fall” was a poem about love, time, and separation, this is easy to tell due to the massive amount of desperation, anxiety, and pain, that seems to seep from the poem itself. The describes how much the speaker hates waiting for their loved one, and how she wishes she could just throw all that wasted time away. The poem hints at this throughout it’s entirety and then some. One of the ways Emily Dickinson makes the theme known is by the tone/attitude of the speaker.
The poem encourages the reader not to give up but look ahead and be sure that after every dark night there is daylight. The similes are used to illustrate the gloomy weather. The similes also describe the feelings of the speaker in the weather. Through the use of the similes the overall tone is
“Her hardest hue to hold” and “So dawn goes down to day” are examples of alliteration in the poem. I believe that “Her hardest hue to hold”, means that it’s hard to keep nature green. It uses the letter “h” a lot to make this line stand out. Same thing for”,So dawn goes down to day,” which I believe means that a new day has begun. Alliteration is used to show the theme by saying that you can’t hold on to something forever.
She explored and wrote about her feelings. Most of her poems are about pain and tragedy. Emily Dickinson was a very influential poet, because she was one of the first female poets, she aided in women’s movements, and she impacted on American literature. Emily was born and raised in Amherst, Massachusetts on December 10, 1830. She mostly stayed at home and rarely went out to explore the world.
Summer Won’t Last Forever In “Summer of the Ladybirds” by Vivian Smith, the poet uses assonance, figurative language, and alliteration to convey that humans hold on to what is not permanent. First, assonance is used when the poet describes the ladybirds as “creatures from the world of leaf and flower.” The usage of the “ea” sounds emphasizes and draws attention to the ladybirds being from a different world from humans, one of “leaf and flower.” The main point that this phrasing gives prominence to is that leaves and flowers are much more perishable than other products of nature, such as humans.
He implies this sense of darkness as a way of “fun” as he describes acres of land and houses being reduced down to “..only dirt..wet or dry..” (line 24). The meaning is misunderstood as the “...blady carouses” contradict the importance of the land with the final line, “...you can hang or drown at last..” (line 28). The reader comes to the realization after the last line of the stanza is that the writer was trying to warn him of the things that may possibly burden him later.