Death plays a paramount role in the second portion of the poem as Elliot speaks for all of us in that we want not to be "nearer" to "death's dream kingdom" (Elliot 2629). The personification of death in this section further overwhelms the senses of the reader and imparts a gloomy outlook for our future.…
Compare the ways in which Larkin and Abse discuss the subject of death in their poems…
In the poem, death is portrayed as a gentlemanly suitor, who collects the speaker for a carriage ride, and sets her down in "Eternity" (24). For the enjoyment of Death's Company, the speaker sacrifices her interests and activities. On the ride they pass schoolchildren at play, fields of crops, and then the "Setting Sun," before stopping at a house, which seems like a "swelling of the ground" (12,18). Since pausing at the house, she notes that despite the passing of "Centuries," she still remembers the day, as if it were today, that she encountered Death.…
The poem has rhyming quatrains bringing a celebratory mood to the concept of death. It accentuates the temperate, collected nature of death which is then changed in the 4th stanza when the mood changes to a more supernatural, ghostly feel. In the last stanza, when the persona has moved into death, the imagery becomes abstract, revealing the veiled and mysterious nature of death.…
I think that they put the poem in there because it means that you should life your life right now like it will be gone tomorrow. Basically this is your chance to be young once you grow up your life isn't as interesting. When you are young those are the best possible years you will have. He starts talking about nature because just like a flower we are all going to die. He chose this specific poem because has romanticism and transcendentalism in it.…
Throughout this poem, the narrator uses imagery by describing his fear of death and the unexpected of death. In the first stanza, lines 1-2, “I work all day, and get half drunk at night, waking at four to soundless dark,” show what he does on his daily basis. He tell people what he is doing without feeling shame, “ work all day” you can picture him working at factory doing the same thing all over again, meanwhile he come and get “half drunk.” It seem like the narrator can’t sleep and he is depress. His depressing phrases, he begins to describe what is outside of his house when stepping into the society of death. In lines 3-4, “In time the curtain…till then I see… Unresting death,” he goes from light behind his curtain, the brightness he faces in the morning when going to work and the death road along the way. He emphasizes the “unresting death,” explaining that he will soon die and he makes all thoughts impossible.…
I’ve always had a morbid fascination with death. The thought that someone can be here one minute, and taken away the very next is baffling. Where do people go? Do they only decay under ground when we bury them? Are they still with us?…
The poems, “Because I Could Not Stop for Death” by Emily Dickinson and “Is My Team Plowing” by AE Housman have their own perception of the idea of death which they further emphasize with the use of figurative language and style. To begin with, “Because I Could Not Stop for Death” is a poem about a person, most likely based on the views of Dickinson, who is too into her own world that she does not acknowledge her own death. This poem uses style to emphasize the idea of love. For example, on the second stanza, “We slowly drove…” the structure evokes a feeling of excessive speed. This could infer that the narrator is rushing through her life without realizing death is around the corner.…
Accepting Death isn’t easy at all on the other hand it, so hard that many people ignore it until they become very ill. Death can give people the feeling of being not in control of their own life, so they give up since they can’t control death. In the beginning of Dawes poem, he gives up on death because of his death of his dog. He explains there is no point of praying because death always wins and that’s when faith dies. As for Dickson poem, the metaphor of the Funeral gives the speaker an assumption of depression, closure or darkness. Through out her poem she seems to be in a mental sate of depression or some kind of mental issues. For example, in Dickinson poem,” I felt A funeral” she said,” Then a blank in reason, broke, and dropped down…and…
The beginning of his poem tells us not to fret over death and anticipate the horrors that it might possibly hold. He encourages us, that when we do begin to feel this way, to go outside and see how nature is strong, constant, and seemingly infinite, just as the reality of death is constant and unchanging. He convinces us that we are all going to die, no matter what our social or economic status, and that we will all eventually pass on and return to the earth. He then, in his concluding lines, tells us how to approach our encroaching death.…
Death is part of life and the human condition. Many people have thought about the life cycle and have their own ideas about what it means to live or to die. Examples of this would be the three poems “Thanatopsis” by William Cullen Bryant, “Don’t Fear the Reaper” by The Blue Oyster Cult, and “Dust in the Wind” by Kansas. All of these are about death, but they have different points of view. “Thanatopsis” romanticizes death and is optimistic, “Dust in the Wind” portrays life as short and fleeting, and “Don’t Fear the Reaper” glorifies death.…
This poem is one of Dickinson's most popular poems and just like "I heard a Fly buzz — when I died," the speaker tells her story from beyond the grave. For example, in the first stanza the theme of death is already revealed and the speaker presents an apparently positive view of a dark subject," Because I could not stop for Death – / He kindly stopped for me – / The Carriage held but just Ourselves – (lines 1-3)". From those lines it can be determined that Death is a kind gentleman that came in a carriage just to pick her up demonstrating his courtship. However, Death's kind gesture can be interpreted as ironic, because even though Death "kindly stopped" for her, it doesn't change the fact that he is taking the speaker's life. Correspondingly, the second stanza proves the universal truth about life, death will come to all and is inevitable when the speaker says, " And I had put away / My labor and my leisure too, /For…
In my understanding that death in this poem show up out of nowhere, and he show up right in the middle of her busy life when she was unprepared for his coming. This person was too busy for death, so Death personally and kindly take his time to do what she cannot do and stop for her. Death have a lot of time on his hand that he can help many people do what they cannot do and do it for them. When people hear death they always think that they might go to somewhere they don’t like or a frightening place that they will end up…
Death. It's something that is always lurking in the corner of our minds. It comes on its own time, no forewarning, no schedules, no planning. In in some morbidly ironic way it’s the only thing that is completely guaranteed, no additional fees, no extra shipping cost and of course it’s always on time. Humans however seem to have mixed views on it. In the poems Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night by Dylan Thomas and After a Time by Catherine Davis death is examined and thoughts on the ways we should receive and handle it are the main themes of each of these poems. Thomas and Davis do this by using imagery, syntax, and an interesting underlying meaning.…
The poem is fairly short and the language is figurative. The poet uses simile to compare death to a good nigh. There is also foreshadowing is the first verse. The poet opens the poem with "Do not go gentile into that good night" which right away indicates that the poet is referring to not taking death lying down. The reader is given a sense of growing old. In the first stanza of the poem describe old age, "Old age should burn and rave at close of day" As you get old there is a daily struggle against death; you should fight for your life and take it day by day. In the second stanza the poet says "Though wise men at their end know dark is right, because their words had forked no lighting they don not go gentile into that good night" I thin what the poet is trying to say is even though you're getting older and you know the time is coming you haven't shown a sign of death you re still have life so fight against death. Then in third stanza the poet describes someone who lived a good life but doesn't want to let go "Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright their deed might have danced in a green bay, rage rage against the dying of the light." It was as if he was saying had he lived longer things could haven been better. In the fourth stanza " Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight, and learn, too late they grieved it on its way, Don not go gentile into that good night. The poet is saying Sinners who led a bad life learn too late that they could have led a better life so…