Tony Hoagland’s poem “Jet” presents a carpe diem ideology as the narrator reminisce over the past and desires return. Discussing past events the narrator talks of how he would drink and spent time with his friends and the joy it would bring them. The poem then shifts when the narrator explains how he would give anything to live those moments a bit longer. In “Jet”, Tony Hoagland, the author, uses interstellar imagery, lively diction, and memorable flashbacks to convey his delight in being young. With a tittle of “Jet” one could only expect a poem full of space references and with the amount that are found there is no disappointment. The use of this interstellar imagery is seen before the shift of the poem and not so much after that as the narrator uses it to bring a sense of delight when talking about the past. “we soar up into the summer stars. Summer. The big sky river rushes overhead, bearing asteroids and mist,” (Hoagland 6-8). The imagery used describes many wonders of space presenting a feeling of nostalgia. This allows the reader to understand the joy the narrator had when he was younger and how full of life he was. …show more content…
Of this diction specific words tend to stand out with their description of the youth and the life of the youth. “On Earth, men celebrate their hairiness, and it is good, a way of letting life out of the box, uncapping the bottle to let the effervescence gush.” (Hoagland 10-13). The narrator states how men celebrate their liveliness on Earth through the use of words like hairiness and effervescence. Saying on Earth the narrator makes it out as though he is in a different place, mentally, and he no long celebrates his youth or “hairiness”, so he can't enjoy life or “let the effervescence flow”. The narrator misses being young and the delight it gave
This also reveals that he realizes how cruel he was to Doodle and Doodle and the narrator had to suffer the consequences. All in all, having a character like the narrator who is important to the story since he realizes what is right and what is
In her novel “My Antonia,” Willa Cather shows the impact the Hired Girls have on Jim is the way they offer him a nostalgic connection to his past by using the works of Virgil, and from this connection Jim is able to reach deep intellectual and personal understanding. After being away from his childhood home for many years, and in the midst of pursuing his studies, Jim is reunited with Lena Lingard. The effect she has on him is immediate and lasting, and after seeing her for the first time Jim finds himself thinking of the past. “When I closed my eyes I could hear them all laughing - the Danish laundry girls and the three Bohemian Marys.
Childhood never lasts forever. No matter who you are, where you come from, and who you think you are, age will catch up to you and tear you down like it has everyone else. Although aging is brutal, there is an incredible range of emotions throughout. A primitive way to differentiate the two is by happy and sad. These are not mutually exclusive and this is unequivocally displayed in the Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison.
“Nineteen”, by Elizabeth Alexander uses language and tone to form a multi-sensory poem about remembering her youth and desire to connect to her past Vietnam vet lover. These aspects of language and tone are embedded in the outer form of the poem, as the author forms an imaginative recreation of her young adult life, which directly impacts the reader to allow for an enjoyable simple read. The elements of language and tone formation ensure the translation of Alexander’s emotions or feelings of her youth for the audience to relate and understand. In the first place, the language within “Nineteen” is casual and not really poetic.
In Joyce Carol Oate’s “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”, the coming of age message is to avoid living in your childhood fantasies so much that you can’t face the realities of adulthood. Connie is a fifteen years old girl who wants to act mature but constantly living in her childhood fantasies. When it comes to her craving of acting like a grown up, she goes to the Big Boy restaurant with her friends but left them behind when a boy is asking her to go out for dinner. When she gets home, she dreams that ‘the boy’ she met last night whose ‘sweet, gentle’ and just like ‘in the movies and promised in songs’(52). Sweet and gentle are being expressed as imagery to describe the boy that Connie met the night before.
I. Introduction A. Lisa Parker is snapping beans with her grandmother on the porch, but she is in the process of being changed by her college experience. B. The poem is “Snapping Beans” by Lisa Parker C. Lisa is a Southern girl, who is home from college in the North; she is going through struggles that are bringing about questioning and changing. D. Lisa is letting go of her safe past so that she can move forward into her own life. II.
After reading the memoir, Rocket Boys, written by Homer H. Hickam. Jr, one can easily see how the setting of the town, Coalwood, was a prominent character throughout the course of the book. Sonny would not be the man he was today if the action of the story was set in another town or area. “...nearly everything that i knew in Coalwood is gone... Yet I believe for those of us who keep it in our hearts, Coalwood still lives” (Hickam 367)
Rhetorical Analysis for “Once More to the Lake” Life is fleeting and time moves quickly. In the blink of an eye, childhood becomes only a memory and the difficulties of the world become a factor of everyday life. E.B. White reflects on his earlier years in his personal essay “Once More to the Lake,” a detailed account of his childhood memories with his father at the lake. He carries on the father-son tradition by bringing his own son out to the lake, experiencing flashbacks to his youth. White lost his sense of self, as he began identifying himself as his son, feeling as though he was back at the lake with his father.
The book “Flight” by John Steinbeck was written in 1938. Some works written by Steinbeck are The Pearl, The Grapes of Wrath, East of Eden and tortilla Flat. He writes about true happiness in life and a lot of books are surrounded in the setting of Salinas, California. He writes about realistic and imaginative things.
How does Jim make the movement from innocence to experience in the text ‘Fly away peter’ In the novel ‘Fly Away Peter,’ David Malouf uses the main protagonist, Jim Saddler, to move from a state of innocence and wellbeing to a stage of experience and fear. Malouf demonstrates to the reader the theme of innocence throughout the novel, and when coming to close the aspects of experience shines through. The use of several techniques such as binary opposites, metaphors, foreshadowing, and symbolism helps the narrative to illustrate the horrors and loss of the First World War and the exquisiteness and attractiveness of nature.
This poem central theme is youth of all of the wonderful stages, and how sad a person can be when they are about to lose it. Youth is not eternal. This poem shows how the narrator is feeling how he remembers his youth and tells us his experiences. Alienation is described in this poem because the author is isolating in his youth years he can’t separate the stages and the sense of understanding events in which he is engaged. Also, we can say that he feels lonely with no one to share his new life style and the new change of entity.
By nature, shorter poems are more densely packed with cues and devices because authors cannot express their intended message over the sweeping length of a poem but rather they must be more concise and creative. A poet may write a shorter poem to juxtapose a simple surface message to a more meaningful deeper message. Thus, complexity and artistic value are unrelated to length, but rather, they are developed through masterful writing. “Good Times” by Lucille Clifton embodies the double-edged sword of complex storytelling within a short poem, as she identifies the speaker 's occasional good memories to develop an image of the speaker’s typical abject life. The short poem is crafted with patterns of repetition, for there are so few lines to fit meaningful insight into.
In the poem, “A Hymn to Childhood,” Li-Young Lee talks about having fragmented individuality from childhood due to war. He is lost in perception of a traumatic childhood caused by war and a normal naïve childhood. Lee depicts the two diverged childhoods from his memory through the use of antithesis to emphasize the world perceived by a self fragmented individual. Throughout the poem, he consistently presents two opposing ideas to show what it feels like to grow up with emotional trauma.
The Ugly Transformation John Steinbeck’s ‘Flight’ tells the story of a young individual who, although is portrayed as aimless, young, and naïve, attempts to make a name for himself in the world he lives in. ‘Flight’ is a man vs. society piece, one that gives us vital insight into how society can deteriorate an individual into a totally different individual through the course of his/her actions - in this case, for the protagonist Pepe. In many ways, what initiates this transformation is when Pepe kills a man with his father 's knife - instead of owning up to this dirty act like a responsible human being, he cowardly decides to flee into the rough mountainous terrain in hopes of redeeming himself. By him killing this man, his childhood innocence
With the novel being read from a ‘twelve’ year old whose history motivates his understanding, perception and interpretation of the events he encounters and interprets to the reader,