Tuesday, December 7, 2010
TONE/MOOD
The tone and mood of a written work directly affects the reader's interpretation of an author's work. A narrator's diction influences the tone of a poem, which therefore allows his message to be more easily exposed to the reader. In Ulysses by Tennyson , for example, Odysseus uses words like "idle" and "empty" to illustrate his unemotional and unmotivated feelings. He feels as though he no longer has a purpose in life and unravels his frustration throughout the poem. His depressing and empty words convey the tone to the reader; melancholy and sad. As a result, the tone makes the poem much stronger and much easier for one to relate to.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
DICTION
Diction serves as a direct outlet for the author to describe his emotions and messages to his reader. In Percy Bysshe Shelley's "Ozymandias,"the narrator illustrates the affects of Time by illustrating once beautiful and glorious objects and comparing those things with their now diminished remains; "Nothing besides remains. Round the decay of that colossal wreck..."The narrator clearly juxtaposes his initial feelings of the seemingly beautiful masterpieces with his later feelings of resentment towards Time because it destroys everything in the world, both good and bad. The diction allows the reader to fully understand his frustration; "decay," shattered," and "wrinkled." These words all serve to prove to the reader that everything, even beauty, is meaningless because Time will eventually destroy it all. In addition, the narrator's soft and slow diction allows his meaning to be stated in a very delicate way. He never directly states that Time is horrible and that it destroys everything, but his descriptive diction allows the reader to completely understand and relate to the poem's meaning.
Thursday, December 2, 2010
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE
In Andrew Marvel’s “To His Coy Mistress,” figurative language ultimately reveals the author’s tone and mood. The poem deals with a man trying to sway a woman, who he is very fond of, to make love to him. He begins the poem in a more or less passionate and delicate tone, and later shifts that feeling towards carpe diem; “…While the youthful hue sits on thy skin like a mourning dew…” The narrator is clearly implying that the woman’s beauty is like dew; in that, it is temporary. He claims that she should seize the day and loose her virginity to him right away so that Time will not diminish the “love” that they currently have. Figurative language, therefore, reveals many other messages and tones within a poem.
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
POETIC SOUNDS
In Tennyson's Ulysses, poetic sounds enable the poem to demonstrate a very complex contrast between Odysseus' longing for the past with his unmotivated attitude towards the present. When Odysseus talks about the past, he uses very passionate and active words; "Through scudding drifts the rainy hyades vexed with the dim sea: I am become a name." The use of "vexed" and sucdding" are both very active words which both have harsh sounds to them. This harsh noise that is made serves to reveal the narrator's tone and attitude towards his once adventurous past. In contrast, when Odysseus refers to the present, he uses very dull adjectives to describe his current life; "The long day wanes: the slow moon climbs." This line's assonance causes the reader to slow down and take his/her time to read the phrase. This, therefore, proves to underline Odysseus' resentment towards the progression of Time, and shows his slow approach towards the end of his life. Therefore, poetic sounds allow the reader to understand the narrator's tone, meaning and overall attitude through word choice and their sounds.
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