Saturday, February 9, 2019

Comparing Form and Content of Jabberwocky, The Raven, and Lady of Shalo

Comparing Form and Content of Jabberwocky, The Raven, and Lady of Shalott In many poems, the use of imaging and sound causes the reader to consider them to be good or bad. Repetition, alliteration, the use of metaphors and images together with rhymes and the text itself lap up together to create that special feeling or message the poet wants to share. The Romantics imagined that poem should express the poets feelings or state of mind and should not be worked with or thought through too much, since the original feeling thus would be lost, but in order to share your feelings or ideas to the public, I believe it is important to present them in as good a prepare as possible. If the author wants to create something worth reading, I believe he or she has to focus on both form and content of a poem - they are inseparable. Lewis Carrolls Jabberwocky is probably one of the most famous poems which rattling have no content, but still the form (sound and rhymes) are repair Twas brilli g, and the slithy toves / Did gyre and gimle in the wabe / All mimsy were the borogoves, / And the mome raths outgrabe (Fromkin & Rodman, p185). Why anyone would bother to write such a piece is a mystery to me, but perhaps it was to doom us that even though the poem looks alright at firstly glance, it is not possible to make good poetry out of nonsense. In The Lady of Shalott, the name of the lady is repeated at the end of the stanzas, creating a kind of soothing and calming nursery rhyme like effect. The imagery used in the poem is vivid and shows us the world out of doors the ladys tower On either side the river lie / Long palm of barley and of rye / --- / To many-towered Camelot / And up and down the people go (Tenn... ...portant, I believe that the most important in a poem must be its content - the message or feeling of what the poet wants to share - and not how. An example of the opposite can be seen in Carrolls Jabberwocky, and that cannot be designate as great poetr y, can it? Works Cited Fromkin, Victoria & Rodman, Robert. An Introduction to Language, sixth edition. Orlando, Florida Harcourt Brace, 1998 Poe, Edgar Allan. The Raven. The Norton Anthology of American Literature, Shorter Fifth Edition. Ed. Nina Baym. New York, N.Y. Norton & Company, 1999. 701-704 Poe, Edgar Allan. The Philosophy of Composition, 1850. http//www.poedecoder.com/Qrisse/ kit and caboodle/philosophy.html (online) Lord Tennyson, Alfred. The Lady of Shalott. The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Sixth Edition, The Major Authors. New York, N.Y. Norton & Company, 1996. 1883-1887

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