![]() Tone: the tone of this poem is metaphorical and serious. Personification: he personified the road saying Because it was grassy and wanted wear’ as if the road is a person and wants something from him. Imagery: the writer used images like leaves and yellow woods and they help reader to visualize what is being told. These metaphors emphasizes the decisions that we have to make through our lives and their impact. Yellow woods’ is a metaphor for making decisions. Metaphor: The road’ is a metaphor for life, it represents our life and as we live the choices that we come across in our lives. Either he is struggling to choose to do something or not to do it, beause it can effect his life later. It may be about an important decision or a choice that the writer have to make. #Who was ozymandias full#And you are full of hate (maybe it is because of her arrogance) and that if you change my mind about you, beauty may live in my heart. But those people’s love does not mean anything to you. Paraphrase: it tells that shame on you who can not love anyone. It is sonnet 10′ of Shakespeare but if we take the first line as the title, it is going to be about someone that loves no one or hurts the writer’s feeling. ![]() Theme: Beauty will eventually fade away except in the eyes of someone who really loves you. As long as this poem exists, his love and her beauty will remain everlasting. Title: it is actually known as sonnet 18′ but is we consider the title as Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day’, this poem is about a person who passionately loves and admires his lover and his love will be eternal through this poem. Shift: in the 9th line, he goes from telling about the temporary beauty of summer to the timeless beauty of the person. He really admires his lover and tells that his love and her beauty will remain immortal. Throughout the poem, Shakespeare tells that his lover’s beauty is more than a summer’s day. Tone: the tone of this poem is the love and passion for someone. Also he says that his lover will live in this poem, she will remain immortal on the page. He tells that death will never claim his lover and they will never die but live in his heart. Symbolism: Summer’ is a symbol for youth and the eye of heaven’ is a symbol for the sun. Also, but thy eternal summer shall not fade’ is a metaphor and it tells that this person will always be young to him and has a everlasting glow and vitality. Metaphor: in the first line Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?’ is a metaphor that goes through the whole poem. ![]() He admires a woman and says that her beauty will never fade and that she will live on the page of this poem with his love. ![]() ![]() The person is more lovely than a summer day. If we consider a summer day, it is sunny, weather is hot, and the nature is all green. Paraphrase: Writer tells that beloved person is more beautiful than a summer day. It is actually Sonnet 18′ but if we consider as Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?’, we can understand that this poem is going to be about someone that the writer adores and it is possible that he compares that person’s beauty to a summer day. Theme: the theme of the poetry is transient of manpower and greatness, and although we all hope to somehow make a mark on the world, nothing lasts forever, even the great empires. Because time is inevitable and no matter what we do, one day we will be forgotten. The title named as the king Ozymandias, the poem was about a king called Ozymandias who was once great and powerful and said his works would remain after him but now there is nothing left except for his broken and half sank statue. The second one is the traveler vocalizes Ozymandias’ words My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!’. The first one is the poem begins with the writer’s words but then it continues with the traveler’s words until the end of the poem. However, it is just a statue and it half sinks in the sand. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |