The Brooklyn Bridge became a symbol of modern world, and is represented in poetry and art. In 14 years, 600 workers, 2 dozen lost lives, and 15 million dollars later it was finished. As well as having the longest span in the world at 1,600 feet from tower to tower, it was the first ever steel suspended bridge. John Augustus Roebling was the pioneer of this piece of art. Roebling is credited with being the first to use steel as a component in his bridge design. Roebling has inspired many pieces of art and structures that we know of today.
One of the pieces that took inspiration from The Brooklyn Bridge is From the Bridge: Atlantis By: Hart Crane. It is the final stanza from one of his most renowned poems. The mood is almost somber but quite proud. Cranes voice in the poem is speaking of the bridge like it is an entity. There is a few points in the poem where someone--or something is speaking. When I read it, it sounds as if the bridge itself is speaking. Crane is using the literary technique personification, the bridge is the narrator of this poem. It is explaining what it has witnessed in its lifetime, how the water washes upon its carrier bars, or how the cables lining the steel are like the tendons of human muscles. The whole premise of this poem is explaining the bridges life and experiences living as the bridge.
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Stellas interpretation can be seen as an explanation to the turmoil and success of the bridge. The blocking of colors and usage of so many shapes could be explaining the years of hard labor and money put into the bridge. There were many lost lives and “the bends” caused by working in the caissons. But it could also be interpreted as an explanation of the constant change that happens on the bridge. With new people crossing each day the bridge would have some stories to
The first completed steel bridge was the Eads Bridge, in St. Louis Missouri. Steel was a very new material and was just starting to become commercially available. Steel was a smart choice to use because it is extremely hard and resists rusting. The Eads Bridge was the longest arch bridge in the world, of 510 feet long. St. Louis became a very important city in the midwest and had to really compete with Chicago during the Civil War. After the Civil War, St. Louis started growing in all directions. “.... the city of St. Louis wanted to reestablish its prewar dominance as the economic powerhouse of the midwest” (Ostrow 75). The main reason to build the Eads Bridge was to connect settlers from the East to the lands of the West. At the time there
On a stormy December night in 1776 general George Washington and his men braved the cold and crossed the Delaware River to attack unsuspecting British soldiers. This bold move helped to turn the tides of the American Revolution and proved to be one of the most important American victories of the war. This historical battle was commemorated through a painting by German artist, Emmanuel Leutze. The painting of George Washington crossing the Delaware River properly represents the fighting spirit and resiliency of the colonial forces during the American Revolution.
This spectacular bridge is 8,981 feet, or 1.7 miles, long. The total weight of the bridge is about 887,000 tons. The two towers stand 726 feet above the water and 500 feet above street level. They weigh
Pittsburgh is called the City of Bridges because it has 446 of them. The Smithfield Street Bridge is the oldest extant bridges. It was built from 1881 to 1883. It was not the first bridge to built in that spot. The first bridge to built there was Pittsburgh first bridge, a wooden bridge designed by Lewis Wernwag. That bridge was destroyed in the Great Fire. John Roebling’s suspension bridge was built next. The bridge was destroyed a year later due to stability. Then there are the “Three Sisters” bridges. Vernon Covell and his group of engineers plus an architect by the name Stanley Roush designed and built the
In the spring of 1989, the construction of the new bridge began. The base of the Trent River was a flotilla of barges carrying the workers, cranes and equipment needed to prepare the temporary pillars that would support the new bridge, as well as maneuver the huge steel girders into place for the new bridge. It was an awesome sight for the entire town, as we watched barges float the steel girders into the harbour, one section being 74 meters in length and two more that were 54 metres each. The new steel box girder bridge had a total length of 182 metres and weighed 2,950 metric tonnes (Anderson & Trenkler, 1991). Temporary cement pillars were poured to support
A Broken Tower, by Hart Crane, is a metaphor-rich poem that is very ambiguous but seems to describe the difficulties of the creative process and the way in which the artist is bound and compelled by it. Crane uses many religious metaphors and references, directly mentioning God and also bells, which are associated with churches. It is possible to interpret the poem in a religious sense, but it could be argued that religion and art are similar metaphors; that, for the poet, his writings are both a method of spiritual expression and a search for truth. The title, A Broken Tower, refers to a continuing metaphor in the poem and suggests the deconstruction of established paradigms which is necessary for artistic progress. Throughout the poem,
New York's Brooklyn Bridge is not only the longest bridge in the United States, but it is also the world's largest bridge. The length of the bridge is calculated as 6016 feet. The bridge extends over the East Rive and connects the Manhattan and Brooklyn boroughs. History John Augustus Roebling from Ohio was the architect of this bridge.
As Professor Farquharson’s studies progressed, modifications on the bridge continued. Tie-down cables were positioned on the bridge’s sides and wires were stretched diagonally across the bridge’s deck and main cables. Thus, the problem was believed to be solved. However, one of the reinforcing tie-down cables, placed only a month prior, snapped due to high speed winds on November 1. The date of this malfunction marks the start of a week-long series of unfortunate events ultimately leading to the bridge’s collapse on November 7.
Mass - I believe the mass is actual. The Bridge itself is the bulk of the artwork, its mass size stretches across the painting.
This poem opens with an extreme and vivid simile, “The bright wire rolls like a porpoise” (line 1). This beginning not only grasps the attention of the audience, but the image intensifying language that Kooser has chosen
In the poem, “Backwards,” by Warsan Shire the poem dramatizes the conflict between the long for the past and the hatred of the present. This poem highlights the rough situation that the speaker is in as well as a need for what life was like before. One can easily see that the speaker in this poem is a child in the family, because of the context of line 3, “that’s how we bring Dad back.” This is referring to the longing for their dad before they were in the situation they currently are in. Although, there is not line to line rhyme scheme the poem is written backwards at the beginning of the second stanza. This is likely showing the reader the need for the past and emphasizing the importance of the current situation. The overall theme of this poem is showing what life was once like and what it is now.
The basic design of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge itself was a suspension bridge with a center span of 2800 feet and two side spans of one 1100 feet (Farquharson, 1950, p. 17). Its two lane, reinforced concrete roadway was twenty-six feet wide with two 5 foot, 9 inch sidewalks (Farquharson, 1950, p. 19). Overall the superstructure was 5939 feet, including the suspension structures, approach spans and anchorages (Farquharson, 1950, p. 19). Anchorages were made of solid concrete and were fifty feet by 170 feet and were fifty feet high (Farquharson, 1950, p. 19). The main towers which the cables saddle were 425 feet in height and with a spacing of thirty-nine feet at the top and fifty feet at the bottom (Farquharson, 1950, p. 19). Each cable consisted of nineteen strands of galvanized wire and totaled a diameter of seventeen inches. The design of the bridge may sound rather large and structurally stable but as mentioned before the bridge was designed to be very sleek looking. By
In “America the beautiful” the author’s use of diction creates an uplifting spiritual tone in the poem.The author uses the same words “oh beautiful for…”focusing not on America's flaws but on the beauty. For instance the start of stanza 4 she writes “o beautiful 4 heroes proved in liberty strife who more than self her country loved and marymor than life”.She apads for the people who believe in freedom of america by sacrificing their lives for their
" I took out of my own mouth to give to her... ...I walked hungry
In The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne executes an interesting literary technique. The brilliant author employs the use of settings that correlate with, or relate, to the major events and trends that are analyzed throughout the novel. Such correlation between the setting of a scene and its action allow for the reader, with a prior knowledge of Puritanic Society and a basic understanding of its values, to truly grasp the essence of the text. Hawthorne’s fuzzy use of such settings contributes to the overall context of the story being similar to that of the movements of a pendulum: Hawthorne may arouse both the reader and text with a “big bang,” but can also swiftly shift gears to a new setting and “drop low” in deep suspicion of the events