The Other Lover In the Shakespearean sonnet, “The Sonnet-Ballad” by Gwendolyn Brooks, the speaker uses such techniques as: repetition, metaphors and personification to show how her relationship is doomed because of war. The poem shows how war can change a man who was once confident and unaffected by pain, into one who accepts death without a struggle. In this sonnet, death is personified and shown as the speaker’s opponent in a struggle for her lover. Death is described as being coquettish and possessive. These attributes are used to describe death because they show how hard it would be to overcome this opponent. The descriptions show that death flirts with the man, in order to make him accept her.
Once death has claimed him, the speaker can never have her lover back; he has been caught in death’s possessive arms. By giving these characteristics to death it is shown that, because of the war, the man is forced to court death instead of his lover. Once her lover has gone to war the speaker says, “Now I cannot guess what I can use an empty-heart-cup for.” This comparison shows how lost the woman is feeling now that she has realized she will probably never see her lover again. It describes how lonely she is, as well as the fact that she does not know how to deal with what she is feeling. Her heart was once full of love for the man, but now that he is gone, it is empty. The poet also compares death to a woman.
The Term Paper on United States War Men History
There's nothing I can say about the parade of still pictures, the faces on the television - except, perhaps, that they all seemed to share a fierce pride in their eyes, photographed for the first time in their Marine Dress Blues. Surely their families are proud of them. I certainly am, and I never got to know any of them. And now, I never will. Names scroll in little yellow letters across the ...
She describes death as being coquettish, meaning that it is like a woman who is flirting with her lover. The speaker also compares death to a woman by saying that death has possessive arms and a sort of beauty which proves to be impossible for a man to say no to. Repetition is used in the poem to emphasize the woman’s dominating thoughts throughout the poem. The first line, “Oh mother, mother, where is happiness?” is illustrating how the woman is trying to figure out if she will ever find happiness. Since her lover has gone off to war and will most likely die there, the woman does not think that this will ever be possible again. The fact that she is calling out to her mother shows how desperate the woman is at this time.
She feels completely alone without her lover and is reaching out for support from her mother. The repetition of this line as the conclusion to the poem shows that she has admitted defeat and cannot find a way to solve her dilemma. She admits that her adversary, death, will win the struggle no matter how hard her lover tries to resist it. In the eighth and ninth lines of the poem the words, “Would have” are repeated three times. Twice these words are used to say that the woman’s lover would have to be untrue to her. It is as though she is trying to convince herself that this situation is not her lover’s fault and that by him saying yes to death, he is not showing himself to be a weak man.
The next time she uses the words, “would have” she is describing how the man must court death. This means that, because of the situation he has been placed in, the lover has no other choice but to be near death. These repetitions show how desperately the woman is trying to make sense of what is happening to her lover and how this is affecting her. Through repetition, metaphors and personification the poet has shown a transition which occurs throughout the sonnet.
The woman stammers when she says that some day the war will end, but she knows that her lover will not come back. This shows that she has not yet accepted that death for her lover is imminent. At the end of the poem, the lover stammers when he is saying yes to death. This last stammer shows that the woman has come to accept that her lover must accept death and that they must be separated.
The Essay on How Ian Mcmillan Conveys His Attitudes Towards the Death of His Mother
McMillan uses harsh words throughout the poem to show his grief and remorse at his mothers death. Words like “shatters” link with how he is feeling, like everything is broken and cannot be repaired. This word makes us imagine something broken into lots of tiny pieces which can’t be put back together again, and it helps us to understand how broken and jumbled up he is feeling. The word “slap” ...