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What Is The Mood Of The Poem From The Brooklyn Bridge

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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. …show more content…

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

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