Re: Desperate student needs help
Posted by:
Chesil (---.clvdoh.adelphia.)
Date: August 28, 2021 04:13PM
I don't think you are really too far away, you just need to develop your thinking just a little more.
Student05 wrote:
> For English, I am to write a six paragraph,
> comparative essay, based upon my judgment of the better of two
> poems. I am to judge the best from their usage of sound,
> figurative language, tone, and thought.
>
> I maintain A's and B's English overall, and I have
> done well with my other poetry assignment. However, I find this
> particular poetry essay difficult in areas.
>
> I have questions to go by so that I write each
> paragraph in the essay appropriately.
>
> I could really, really use all the help I can get on
> this. I am not asking for answers; maybe just a good "shove" in
> the right directions. Feel free to post here or E-mail me
> (E-mailing is probably best!).
>
> I HAVE to get a passing grade on this. Otherwise, I
> will most likely fail this quarter. It is my last assignment
> before I progress to the next level.
>
> The questions I'm following are VERY detailed, and I
> have had to spend hours going over the poems with a
> fine-toothed comb. I can provide all of the questions I'm
> asked, if that would help better with analysis.
>
> Thank you so much in advance!
>
> "Loneliness"
>
> Why can't the stars that shine in the sky
> Tell me why I always cry
> Whenever the night falls and I'm alone,
> And far away from my home
>
> The darkness of the sky is like a tomb,
> And resembles my heart in the depths of it's gloom
> And the silvery moon answers me from above,
> And tells me to return to those I love.
>
> "Stars"
>
> Alone in the night
> On a dark hill
> With pines around me
> Spicy and still,
> And a heaven full of stars
> Over my head,
> White and topaz
> And misty red;
> Myriads with beating
> Hearts of fire
> That aeons
> Cannot vex or tire
> Up the dome of heaven
> Like a great hill
> I watch them marching
> Stately and still,
> And I know that I
> Am honored to be
> Witness of so much majesty.
>
> Question: Which is better?
> My answer: "Stars," because I feel that it has more color,
> expression, and it is much more detailed.
Only the reader, in this case you, can answer this question. Noting some of the other questions, you might also want to open up to the poetic devices used that sound better, improve the mood. That's assuming that you believe you could say those things about your choice.
> 2.-I.) Question: What are the poems' effects of alliteration
> and assonance?
> My answer: The repetitive "i" sound in "Loneliness" mimics
> crying; the "oo" sound in "Loneliness" is mournful; and in
> "Stars," there is repetitious "s" sounds, but I'm unsure what
> they "do" to the poem...
Also 'a' sounds, can't, stars, that in the first line of Loneliness and the excellent misty red myriads in Stars. White and topaz also. Night, hill, pines.
Do they make the poem sound better, more compelling? Do the sounds match the mood?
> 4.-I.) Question: Which poem uses sound better and why?
> My answer: "Loneliness," because the sounds mimic the sad,
> desperate tone.
Again, that has to be your choice. If that is how it works for you, then so long as you explain it sensibly I don't see how you can be wrong. Excellent critics often disagree about what makes one poem better than another. It is not arithemetic, there is not a single solution. Each reader has their own, and sometimes more than one.
>
> 2.-II.) Question: Do the poems use "metaphors"?
> My answer: Yes; "Dome of Heaven" in "Stars"
Also, I doubt that your heart resembles the night sky. The stars do not beat like hearts as implied in Stars. Stars also do not march up hills.
>
> 4.-II.) Question: What effect do the devices in the poem have?
> My answer: That part I'm sketchy on...
Go back to my response above, how do they lead you, the reader, into the poem, if, in fact, they do. Does the descriptiveness reach something that you can understand from your own experience? Can you empathize with the poet more easily, understand their message better becasue of the various devices?
> 5.-II.) Question: Which poem makes better use of figurative
> language?
> My answer: They're just about equal; both have similes, and at
> least one has one reference to a metaphorical term.
For me, Stars would be the better. I would argue it makes better use of alliteration, assonance and metaphor. You may see it differently, it is your argument that matters, not mine.
> 3.-III.) Question: Which poem more effectively creates tone?
> My answer: "Stars" because of the close observance and
> detailed, colorful images; the speaker is obviously amazed by
> the sight; hence, there is an upbeat tone because he/she is
> clearly delighted.
Good answer.
>
> 1., 2., 3.--IV.) Question: What thought is each author
> conveying? What words/devices are used to create the thought?
> Which poem gets this idea across better?
> My answer: Either loneliness, something to do with nature, or
> observance.
Other than the single reference to being alone on the hill at the beginning of Stars, I don't get the feeling that the poem is discussing loneliness, but the 'majesty' of the stars in the night sky. It describes the mood well and uses good metaphors and word imagery to achieve what I believe to be its goal.
Loneliness seems to me to take a different tack to the night sky. It is gloomy and sadness is provoked when night falls.
My answer, again, is that Stars achieves its result more effectively.
Hope this helps,
Chesil