Wednesday, March 6, 2019
At Castle Boterel Response Essay
In the first pentad deciphers the writer is impetuous international from a remembered scene. The mention of the junction of lane and highway suggests a meeting of two paths, possibly two completely different characters. It is showery, wet, and gray. The sombre, rainy mood hangs alike(p) a fog over the entire poem, preparing unity for what will happen at the end. The writer gazes at the faraway slope, which is fade away. Yet, like all important memories, he remembers it distinctly yet. The rhyme organization is a multifariousness of soft (highway, byway) melancholy tones and sharp, harsh (waggonette, wet, yet), exuding a mixture of reminiscences and regret.Line six through ten. The writer along with a callow form is climbing the slope. Climbing may represent some fuss in their relationship. Dry March weather supports this assumption. The intelligence agency benighted in line six could mean either taken over by night, or unenlightened. Or, in this case, both. The couple ha d no idea of life, or of how rook it could prove to be. These lines are dark and heavy. The sturdy pony is an image of his agent happiness, which would soon sigh and slow.Lines eleven to fifteen introduce us to the word death. The writer says that what they talked of was of no great importance, which shows his realization of the shortness and immateriality of life. In life death cannot be avoided. In his case, it would seem, there would be more than one sort of death. One would die physically, the other emotionally.The next pentad lines show how small a difference every life makes in the greater scheme of things. The hill, portraying the earth, is climbed by thousands. Yet, to the individual (him) the minute of a single life is of immeasurable importance. Foot-swift, foot-sore symbolizes the haste in living, and also the pain. race strive to get to the top, ruin their lives to get there, possibly, but upon arriving see there is nothing.The following five lines are lighter than any have been forwards yet they are filled with irony. The primaeval rocks (the world, history) have been shaped and inclined colour by many, many passers-by. The writer, however, illustrates individual selfishness by saying that it was him and his fan or wife that gave the shape and colour to those rocks. He is looking game in irony, seeing now, perhaps, how his views have been changed.Lines twenty-six to thirty are a sad depiction of reality. The writer states that Time is severe and harsh, that it has dealt with him mechanically, without any survey given to his emotions and feelings. The substance now, as he calls himself, is only one spectre figure. By calling himself a substance he could be comparability himself to a substance used in scientific experimentation. He has, he feels, been used. Now he is merely a phantom. All life has been taken from him, and all that remains is his physical form. He says that he remains on the slope, meaning that he has not run ford on, or that he cannot move on. The loss of another has left him immobile, lost, or simply without direction.The last five lines shows a picture of the writer driving away from himself. Rain is mentioned again, like tears falling. The person on the hillside is a vision of the man he used to be. That man is shrinking and shrinking and the writer is moving on, changing. The wash of the first five lines has turned into full-on rain, and this makes the person even more cutting in the writers memory.The ground he thought was solid is sinking away (for my sand is sinking), and he comes to the realization that he will neer be able to go there again. He calls the there erstwhile(a) loves domain, which means that he is moving on, perhaps to new love.The final line is abrupt, the shortest in the entire poem. This shows how quickly everything happened to him without warning, all was gone.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment