How is love presented in different ways by poets?
The love is defined hardly as it is perceived differently from person to person, but in a literal definition: “love is a strong feeling of affection.” . Many poets have written about love, some trying to figure out what real love is and some shared their (or imagined) experiences, offering many different views on love and some negative effects of it as well as the positive.
A Sonnet is a poem, expression of a single, complete thought, idea, or sentiment. It is always contains 14 lines and is usually in iambic pentameter, with rhymes arranged according to one of certain definite schemes. William Shakespeare’s ‘Sonnet 116’ is a poem about love in its most ideal form. In addition, he is devoted
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Destructive love had always produced an immersive emotion of sadness among the writers. In the ballad ‘La Belle Dame Sans Merci’ (“The Lovely Lady Without Mercy”) the writer tales about a knight who is “haggard and woe-begone”, devoured by the feeling of sadness. The ballad is divided into three sections: the first three stanzas, where the knight is questioned by the unidentified observer, the second one with six stanzas in which the knight describes his experiences with the “magical” lady, and the final three stanzas describe the lady’s true side and the reason for the knight’s despair. The structure is created in “ballad stanzas”, which are in alternating iambic tetrameters and in the trimeter lines. The ballad has a deliberate and slow movement, suggesting something terrible had happened and is about to be told. The writer describes a lily as a traditional symbol of death and the rose as the traditional symbol of love in a same stanza to directly oppose and link each other. The ballad is full of repetitions which symbolise writer's opinion about women and love. The pathetic fallacy is used to “attribute human qualities and emotions to inanimate objects of nature” and in this case display what destructive love is capable
In this chapter, foster discusses a type of form called a Sonnet; which is simply 14 lines long and written almost always in iambic pentameter. Sonnets often take the shape of a square (since the height is the same length as the width). The shape makes them easier to recognize as sonnets since sonnets has few qualities that characterize them. Sonnets can be broken down into two types, a Petrarchan sonnet and a Shakespearean sonnet. Petrarchan sonnets uses a rhyme scheme that ties the first eight(abbaabba or abbacddc and sometimes abababab) , then is followed by a different rhyme scheme that unifies the last six(xyzxyz or xyxyxy).
Relationships begin based on a mutual attraction and often end due to betrayal and loss of love. Because of the end of relationship, it’s common for people to feel deceived and lament the loss of their lover. In “For That He Looked Not Upon Her,” Gascoigne utilizes a sonnet form, metaphors of the mouse and fly, and grievous diction to address the sadness and frustration of betrayal experienced in the speaker’s broken relationship. Gascoigne’s structure remains typical for the time period, but adds an opinion different from many sonnet writers of the time, addressing the negatives following an ended relationship. Through the use of a traditional sonnet, Gascoigne keeps the structure of the poem predictable and constant.
Although the authors have different methods, to express feelings, they both have a relation to beauty and their love’s philosophy. Cyrano, a Gascon from the 1800’s, isn’t the most robust, due to his long nose, or wealthy, but he has great potential with his intelligence and his cunning way of talking. Cyrano in public acts in a very aggressive manner, but when he his alone or with his friends he is very kind and lovable. His romantic use of poetry establishes a mood of romanticism, and explains his deep thoughts. “ That blossom in my heart, I’ll fling to you--- Armfuls of loose bloom!
In “Sonnet”, Billy Collins writes without meter or form, making it incredibly difficult to classify his sonnet into any one subtype. It is easily argued that this was his point, as he set out to write a satire of famous sonnets. There are a few lines that rhyme, typically these are right after each other to help the flow of the sonnet stay consistent. The varied line length and rhyme patterns draws attention to the poem and its lack of structure, leading the poem to feel like a conversation.
Love as a theme of the poems actually took a very important place in the collection. These love poems often contain different emotions. There are poems expressing the author fall in love with someone or poems expressing painful feelings about missing someone else. One interesting thing I noticed is that the
Love is one of the most basic human instincts. It begins at birth and sometimes remains after death. Although love is a universal term, there is a great deal of connotation when it comes to its true meaning. For example, the love one has towards his or her mother is drastically different from the love felt towards a significant other. However, all variations of love have one common virtue; everyone is seeking it in some manner or another.
The word “Love” has multiple meanings to it. According to Dictionary.com the true meaning of love means a profundly tender, affection towards someone. In Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare this is what their love meant and they died because of it. Romeo and Juliet is a Love story based off young love and family feuds. In Romeo and Juliet they both feel like the only thing they need is each other and they won’t let anything break them apart.
What is love? According to “Oxford Languages,” love is defined as an intense feeling of deep affection. However in “Love’s Vocabulary,” by Diane Ackerman love can't be put into one definition, it means a lot of things and it varies from person to person, love is intangible. By looking at the literary works, Ethan Frome, The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, and “Sonnet 71” we, similarly, can see how they all further support Ackerman’s point of view on love in the essay “Love’s Vocabulary,” by defining love as tragic, despairing, depressing, and arduous.
Through the words reflecting melancholy and sorrow, we can sense the narrator's self destruction due to the death of the woman he loved. As one examines the figurative language of the poem, one finds that its form and
Additionally, embodiment of women in the Romantic genre is established in Cyrano de Bergerac through the use of character and language devices. “She is a mortal danger to all men. She is beautiful without knowing it, and possesses charms that she 's not even aware
Poems are short meaningful pieces of literature that can be interpreted in multiple ways depending upon the reader at hand. That is what makes a poem unique compared to other literature pieces because in a poem the author tends to use figurative language to fulfill meaning behind their work. One poem “Love is a Sickness Full of Woes” by Samuel Daniel describes the pains of being lovesick. Love can either benefit us if nurtured and cared for, but if not tended to then let loose can ultimately hurt us. As to another poem “American Solitude” by Grace Schulman describes a life of solitude being most warming to the soul to ward off loneliness.
Throughout the text, the speaker uses a diverse array of literary techniques to demonstrate the multidimensional nature of their love towards a lover. First, passionate love is conveyed in the spatial metaphor of loving with “the depth and breadth and height my soul can reach.” Here, love is a substance that fills up and infatuates the speaker, creating a powerful drive that forces her to express it. This spatial love is overwhelming and grand, which establishes the passionate and fervent tone of the poem.
Donne 's poem showcased a more refined explanation of love, while Shakespeare simply defined what it should be. What stood out most from Donne’s poem was the ability to make it personal. Every line makes the reader feel something; it draws the reader into the text and allows them to make connections. Shakespeare just doesn’t do that; he sticks to the definition love and gives no opportunity to add personal meaning to his writing. When talking about love, a poem must make a connection.
Throughout William Shakespeare’s “Sonnet 130,” the reader is constantly tricked into thinking he will compare his mistress to something beautiful and romantic, but instead the speaker lists beautiful things and declares that she is not like them. His language is unpredictable and humor is used for a majority of the poem. This captivating sonnet uses elements such as tone, parody, images, senses, form, and rhyme scheme to illustrate the contradicting comparisons of his mistress and the overarching theme of true love. Shakespeare uses parody language to mock the idea of a romantic poem by joking about romance, but ultimately writes a poem about it.
Love can exist as affection, infatuation, obsession, pleasure and in many other ways, as love is abstract. Hence, there is no one single interpretation of love. Love is a theme that has been embedded into language and literature over the centuries, yet due to the ever changing perception of love people continue to search for a universal definition of love. Poems are able to showcase the inner feelings and desires of a poet as well as their own unique views on love. Nevertheless, through poems “La Belle Dame sans Merci” by John Keats, “My Last Duchess” by Robert Browning, “Mother in a Refugee Camp” by Chinua Achebe, “The day is gone, and all its sweets are gone!”