Studyspark Study Document

Poetry Is Often Used to Express Emotion Term Paper

Pages:3 (1237 words)

Subject:Literature

Topic:Poetry

Document Type:Term Paper

Document:#12390165


Poetry is often used to express emotion at its most romantic and infatuated, but sometimes it is used to describe the pillars of life behind that romance -- the sexuality, insecurity, devotion, and fidelity. Dorianne Laux, Anne Bradstreet, and Barbara Greenberg explore their very different relationships through poetry, examining this causal underpinnings through poetry. Using careful word choice, expressive imagery, and specific audience, each poet expertly wields her tool to limn the life of the relationship inside the life of a partner.

Dorianne Laux treats the elaborate prose of "The Shipfitter's Wife" as a rosetta stone to the relationship she and her lover share as an escape from and culmination to the demands of the hard day's work that characterizes life tied directly to the ocean. Her meter is perpetually changing, but a constant alliteration and consonance carries the reader through the caesura distinguishing the stream of descriptions, one from the next. The words slur together, "from fitting" [3] to "his denim shirt ringed with sweat/and smelling of salt" [4]. She suffuses the stead stream of s-sounds with hard consonance, particularly with c/k sounds; "cracked hands" [8], "stroke his ankles" [10] "copper pipe." [14]

The words themselves slide around in the reader's mouth like a ship in the water, sloshing back and forth on the water's crest and hitting metal like the husband in the poem does. The narrator's introspective reflection on the nature of her sexual passion for her husband is intricately tied to the words she uses to describe his job, and physically remove him, piece by piece, "gray sides, the miles of copper pipe" [14] from his day, making it hers; sharing her body with him and taking part of his day for herself. The relationship is symbiotic, and Laux reinforces this relationship between the husband and wife with a parallel between word and action. The imagery is plentiful, invigorated with the passion of the two lovers' retreat to their own private world.

Bradstreet's "To My Dear and Loving Husband" is a lyrical poem written in shifting meter in an A-A, B-B, C-C, D-D, E-E, F-F sequence. Bradstreet carefully chooses not only the rhythm of the poem to get her meaning across to the reader, or, more specifically, the audience, but also very specific word choice. The sing-song flow of the poem is disrupted by uneven syllabic matching, which she uses to draw attention to the next line and bring the reader back in. "If ever wife was happy in a man/Compare with me, ye women, if you can." [4] The sudden shift to an 8 count draws the reader out of the flow and back to the poem, perhaps to highlight the direction of the poem to an audience of not her lover nor herself, but to a group of other women, all woman on the whole.

Bradstreet writes with a bragging pride about her love of her husband, and decrees it to other women that they could not compare. This is done with such little humility that it is clear it is done to express an inset insecurity; essentially, the narrator is asking for a love she does not have, or fears she does not actually have, by proclaiming it to be true. This insecurity is revealed in the careful word-choice: "Nor ought but love from the ... " [8] Ought is a fascinating word to use, since the Oxford English Dictionary attributes both the meanings "nothing" and "should" to it; reworked, she says: "nothing but love from thee," or "should love from thee," both implying a desire or need for something not actually present. This miniscule separation from proclamation to insecurity is again revealed in " ... I pray." [10] She is…


Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Poetry Why or Not An

Pages: 3 (870 words) Subject: Literature Document: #39332249

3. Effects of sound -- The sound of the poem is evocative of action, words like BEHIND, JUMPED, SPIT, combining humor and active verbs. 4. Images -- The image makes the owl human, but part of nature; and an explanation for the natural world (rain) told in a way that children might think- cause and effect. 5. Emotions/Evocative, Alterative -- Teaches children that owls are wise, that nature is not meant to

Studyspark Study Document

Poetry Drama Aristotle Sophocles' Oedipus

Pages: 6 (2233 words) Sources: 5 Subject: Literature Document: #1689796

Poetry, Drama, Aristotle, Sophocles's Oedipus To Aristotle, Oedipus the King represented the embodiment of the perfect tragedy and the idealistic representation of a hero. He saw the renown figure of a hero battling mythical creatures transposed into the image of a hero battling with his own self, in terms of his existence and behaviour. He drew certain elements concerning tragedy in his work Poetics, where he also revealed the tragic hero

Studyspark Study Document

Poetry Therapy and the Elderly:

Pages: 5 (1645 words) Sources: 10 Subject: Psychology Document: #41221370

A common fear is incompetence, resulting in often-heard comments such as 'I can't draw,' 'I can't sing,' and 'I can't dance.' These fears are, to some extent, rooted in the mistaken belief that skills in the arts are innate and inherited rather than sets of component skills that can be learned and integrated into a whole skill" (p. 147). Notwithstanding the adage concerning old dogs and new tricks, though,

Studyspark Study Document

Poetry and the Unknown Citizen

Pages: 4 (1499 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Literature Document: #85994923

Gallaudet.edu/englishworks/literature/poetry.html). Other components which are very important in understanding poetry's power to express include "tone" (the poet's attitude toward the subject); "theme" (what statement is the poet making regarding the subject being embraced?); and "structure" (the format through which the poem is present). The Unknown Citizen: Wystan Hugh Auden, the author of the poem, was not at all an unknown citizen. He became a very well-known and highly respected poet, in fact.

Studyspark Study Document

John Donne's Poetry

Pages: 7 (2681 words) Sources: 6 Subject: Mythology - Religion Document: #48053393

John Donne's "The Canonization" begins relatively simply, as a familiar lyrical ode to his mistress. Gradually it deepens in meaning while approaching the final verses, where Donne reveals the true complexity of his vision of love. "The Canonization" is undoubtedly still a love poem; it revels in theatrical descriptions of the love he and his beloved share. But there are also many layers of meaning and irony behind the words

Studyspark Study Document

Romantic Poetry the Term Romanticism

Pages: 5 (1759 words) Sources: 3 Subject: Literature Document: #73047034

The work expresses with clear honesty the need to express, reality and pain, in Wordworthian values. The expression of the work is poignant and clear, as the washerwoman goes through the process of noticing nature, as a guide for time rather than as something she is able to explore at leisure. The woman and the poet explored leisure, in only those available times when she was not otherwise needed

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".