Saturday, December 28, 2019

compare the ways the poets use language to represent...

Compare the ways the poets use language to present relationships in, â€Å"To his Coy Mistress† and one other poem in the relationship cluster. In the poem I have chosen to compare In Paris with you to To his coy mistress, in comparison to each other both poems have many similarities but the differences are shown in how the use the structure, language and theme to create different effects on the reader. To show the poems are about relationships the writer has written in first person which is the perspective of one of the people in the relationship talking about the other person. In both of the poems the theme being portrayed is Love in, ‘In Paris with you’ this is shown throughout the language Fenton uses Dont talk to me of†¦show more content†¦It seems to me that it shows that they don’t know where the relationship is going; they just live in the moment, time is not a virtue. This is backed up later in the poem by when it says â€Å"There’s a crack in the wall† this implies that there is time to waste as he notices it and doesn’t realise about the wasting time. This is ambi guous because it could perhaps be interpreted as there are conscious thoughts about the time as the speaker says â€Å"do you mind if we do not go to the Louvre†, this shows that they don’t have a lot of time and just want to stay in the hotel. This is similar to â€Å"His Coy Mistress† in the way that the speaker wants to not do anything except spend time alone as they don’t have enoughShow MoreRelatedThe Epithet in the Novel Jane Eyre18849 Words   |  76 Pagestopicality of chosen by us theme lies in the fact that a human being perceives the reality by means of various images. These images exist everywhere: in art, in nature, in thoughts, and in speech in particular. Each of us at least ones created an image. We use different means (stylistic expressive means and devices) to achieve the aim. In our research we would like to concentrate our attention on â€Å"epithet†, a figure of speech which gives the opportunity to create the most expressive and vivid images. Despite

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