While analyzing the poems of Robert Frost, Langston Hughes, and Rudyard Kipling, I saw many similarities that consisted amongst the three poems. Therefore, the poems had distinctive themes, writing styles, and many rhetorical devices that were shown and identified while reading the poems. As I was reading the first poem "The Road Not Taken", by Robert Frost first thing noticable by reading the poem was that the theme that I saw it to be was about making choices and taking advantage of them when you have them. Taking a look at the writing style that Robert Frost had used was free verse, he doesn't had a specific rhyme scheme that most other writers use but then uses natural speech that is then seen in the poem. Taking a look at what rhetorical
The views expressed by King and Hughes are similar because they both talk about segregation and how everyone should be free and there should be equality. Hughes mentions “Yet I’m the one dreamt our basic dream” in his poem, he is saying that he has dreamt about what america should be and america should have equal rights for all people. And in the Martins speech he mentions “we hold these truths to be self evident that all men are created equal and they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights.” Martin is basically saying the same thing that hughes is because they both are mentioning that all people should have some rights and that they are born with some rights.
Poetry as a literally work in which the expression of ideas and feelings is given strength has had great authors overtime who took different perspectives in this genre of literature. These poets used distinctive rhythm and style to express their styles, poetic themes, outlook on life, and had their share of influence on the American society. This paper uses the basis of these styles, themes, outlook on life and subsequent influence on the American society to compare three prolific poets who ventured into this literature genre: Robert Frost, Mary Oliver, and Maya Angelou. Robert Frost (1874-1963) holds a unique and almost sole position in the career span which mostly encompasses
Love is a feeling of strong or constant affection for a person (Dictionary 1). Love is what is known as the “universal language”. There are so many ways love can be interpreted. The central message that the comfort humans receive, and the shyness they feel for an individual are compartments of love that may not always be touched on in poetry.
Characteristic of Robert Frost, the author’s central theme in “The Road Not Taken” was to stress to the reader how difficult, sometimes unclear, yet drastically important decision
The poetic techniques were symbolism, imagery, and tone. Symbolism is the most powerfully used technique due to the fact a good number of lines located in this poem is used to signify a certain object or idea related to our life or today’s world. Imagery in the sense that you can visualize the path, the yellow wood, the undergrowth, the divergence; it is all made very vivid. Frost did this throughout; you know trying to stimulate the reader’s mood using one’s senses. In this poem, imagery permits the reader to imagine the scene that this poem takes place in resulting in an enhanced understanding of the theme. The tone Frost’s work presents is an insecure attitude which allows the theme to be brought out due to the fact the theme relates to a dilemma in one’s life. These techniques strongly aid in the revealing of this specific theme.
The 1930’s were certainly a marked departure from the 1920s. The nation plummeted into the worst economic depression in its history and the social and cultural consequences were huge. One of the most interesting developments is the changing relationship between intellectuals and the broader public in those years. Many American writers like Zora Nealle Hurston, F. Scott Fitzgerald, William Faulkner, and Ernest Hemingway grew skeptical and weary of the general public during the 1920s, but during the Great Depression, were moved by the hardship they witnessed, the nation began to empathize with and work through the struggles of ordinary Americans. If the 1920s was marked by cultural division and by the disillusionment of intellectuals, than the thirties were marked by economic despair and by the discovery of the virtuous “common man” by the nation’s intellectuals. The period of the 1920s and 1930s is arguably the richest period in intellectual life of the nation and for that reason alone people should have some familiarity with it. The parallels between the cultural debates of that era: over immigration, religion, the role of the federal government, and the meaning of the American Dream. An understanding of the time between World War I and World War II years will enhance the understanding of the cultural, political, and economic debates of the present.
Henry David Thoreau, Chris McCandless, and Jon Krakauer embrace the ideals of a transcendentalism lifestyle. After reading Krakauer’s, Into the Wild, and Thoreau’s, Walden, it shows that McCandless and Thoreau have similar beliefs. Both men express the beliefs of living simply, rejecting regular lifestyles, and minding your own business. Jon Krakauers, Into the Wild, shows that Chris did not like the normal way of life, he wanted it simplified, simplicity, and he hated regular lifestyles, and wanted people to mind their own business, and all this can also be found in Thoreau’s, Walden.
Walt Whitman, Langston Hughes, and Tupac Shakur have a major role in English Literature, Even though they live during the different time periods from different backgrounds, and they all have written many poems about the American dream. When it comes to the American dream, people have different points of view on the topic. Many people believe that American dream is about all American citizens having equal rights and opportunities to achieve the success through hard work. On the other hand, many people believe otherwise, and they believe that not everyone living in the America has same rights and opportunities like and others because race and backgrounds of an individual play a major role whether they are going to succeed or not. While
Hughes Vs. Frost Langston Hughes and Robert Frost both have two different styles of writing. These well known poets demonstrate these styles of writing by displaying a set of tone and voice along with their racial background and experiences along side. The voice and tone of a poem sets the atmosphere, mood and expresses the authors attitude towards the poem. Hughes and Frost are very well at creating syntax into their poems.
Renowned poets and philosophers Walt Whitman and Henry David Thoreau, although being from different schools of thought, actually shared many of the same views about nature and mankind’s role in society. Whitman, being more of a ‘romantic’ poet, praised nature’s beauty and majestic qualities. Thoreau, on the other hand, was more of a Transcendentalist; The Transcendentalism school of thought emphasized individualism as a common theme and celebrated the ‘self’ as a separate, but equal, counterpart to the nature of our environment. While both of these poets had their opinions on the landscape around us, they were quite similar in their beliefs about mankind’s existence and skirted the line between both schools of thought.
Human nature is something that never seems to change. While humans all seem to be different from one another through physical and emotional attributes, their psychological behaviors are all mostly very similar. In the late 18th century and early 19th century, many authors successfully could explain the characteristics of human nature and the effects that it has on everyone and everything surrounding human beings. Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Edgar Allen Poe all convey the behavior of human nature in separate ways. These three authors show the curiosity, drive for perfection, and fear of human nature throughout their texts in detail. With these characteristics being prominent in human nature itself, it
President Abraham Lincoln, admired by Walt Whitman, blossomed in “Whitman's writing and in American mythology”(Eiselein) for his leadership and nobility. Whitman hoped for a rugged, healthy, who knew what real, physical work was, to be the “[r]edeemer [p]resident of [t]hese [s]tates”(Whitman). His hopes came true “as in a dream”(Whitman) when “four years later, just such a beard-faced boatman”(Goodheart) entered the White House. Walt Whitman discovered the “comprehensive, all-directing soul he had long been seeking”(Reynolds) in Abraham Lincoln’s life. Therefore Whitman, a patriotic American, would see Lincoln’s death as not only a grave tragedy but also a “promise [of] ultimate purgation and unification for America.”(Reynolds).
Robert Frosts’ “The Road Not Taken” was written in 1916 and is one of his most famous poems. He uses a rhyme scheme of A, B, A, A, B in every stanza. In this poem, the speaker has come to “Two roads diverged in a yellow wood (line1)” and is not sure of which road to take. He would like to take both roads although he cannot. Regret seems to creep in when he states “and sorry I could not travel both (line2). He looks down both roads and chooses one over the other “Because it was grassy and wanted wear (line8)”. Frost uses alliteration with the repetition of the “W” in line 8. “So he was choosing between two roads, or futures, that were different but potentially equally good (Shmoop).” In reality both these roads are pretty much the same. The
“Poetry is when an emotion has found its thought and the thought has found words,” Robert Frost once said. As is made fairly obvious by this quote, Frost was an adroit thinker. It seems like he spent much of his life thinking about the little things. He often pondered the meaning and symbolism of things he found in nature. Many readers find Robert Frost’s poems to be straightforward, yet his work contains deeper layers of complexity beneath the surface. These deeper layers of complexity can be clearly seen in his poems “ The Road Not Taken”, “Fire and Ice”, and “Birches”.
Katherine Anne Porter, Ernest Hemingway, and Robert Frost were only some of the author’s that reflected the modern era in their literary work.Change , rebelliouness, fresh, current, etc., are words that could be used to describe the Modern Era. The Modern Era Consist of many changes, changes the revolutionized the world. The lost generation is an example of a change that occured the Modern Era. The lost generation basically was a grouo of writer’s that served in the war that felt alienated. The Lost Generation questioned the “American Dream” after seeing the conditions of work places. This was a change because before this time rarely ever did anyone ever question the American Dream or even the way of American living. Another, change that took place in the Modern Era was Jazz Age. The Jazz Age was a tim when the younger generation started questioning a lot of things. The younger and older generation also started conflicting with each other because they were acting out, being more “new school”/ modern rather than old school. Change especialy took off during this time with Flappers, who started to be more rebellious withe there clothes, hair, etc.; Speakeaises, underground clubs that served alcohol during the Prohibtion which was the banning of alcohol; and Music, such as Jazz;afterall, it was called the Jazz Age. The biggest change was in the NYC. The literaary scene in NYC changed dramatically, because of the rebelliousness. The literary scene started to becom more hippie