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Intense Personal Memories and Reflections Have Always Been an Inspiration to Poets. Explore This Concept with Regards to the Poems That You Have Studied Referring to Three Poems in Detail and at Least Three Poems from Your Wider Reading.

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Intense personal memories and reflections have always been an inspiration to poets. Explore this concept with regards to the poems that you have studied referring to three poems in detail and at least three poems from your wider reading. The theme of reflections is something frequently explored in literature. It is truly a powerful force. It can bestow courage, feelings of warmth, and even overwhelm you and this is exactly what the below six poets did by manipulating their personal and emotional reflections to generate an emotive impact on us by using a variety of literary devices to present to us a ‘window’ into their pasts. Alice Walker (Poem at Thirty-Nine), U. A. Fanthorpe (Half past Two) and D. H. Lawrence (Piano) have all …show more content…

“Appassionato” added to the fact that to the character’s music didn’t matter anymore and that he’d rather be with his mother. The singer, his mother, was trying “in vain” which and continued where the mother singing was “clamour” so she comprehended that he was beginning to lose attention but her attempts to retrieve his focus we futile. He then used the pejorative term, “childish days” which tended to suggests immaturity but the “glamor” of those days makes him long for it. Also this extract “… my manhood is cast/Down in the flood of remembrance…” shows that he wept like a child for the past therefore by his weeping; the gap between child and man, sentiment and masculinity, and past and present is abridged. Personally, I think anyone can relate to this poem because no matter who you are there’s that one moment in childhood everyone longs to return to and just like Lawrence, everyone sees it as a “glamor.” “Once Upon A Time” by Gabriel Okara is related to “Piano” because within the poem, there was the desire to return to the past but in this poem, it was a conversation between a father and a son where the father was relating how actions of people were executed when he was young compared to the present and now the father (narrator) wished he could return to his original innocent state. Unlike “Piano,” “Once Upon A Time” was a free verse poem. The first three stanzas have the same general pattern where Okara starts by narrating the

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