We live only a fleeting moment in the time of the universe. Us, human beings, just come and go, while everything around us generally stays the same. In Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poem, “The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls”, he writes about a traveler, who comes and goes passed a shore where the tide slowly washes away his footsteps. Even though this poem seems like just a simple piece of work about a man on vacation, it actually has a much deeper meaning and conveys a larger message.
The poem starts off with a day nearing its end at twilight and the “traveler hastens toward the town”. The traveler represents a human being going through life. We can be considered travelers since we just come and go with the passing of time. The person here, leaving at twilight, represents the ending of a life as they move on to the next part of the human life cycle. Then time passes and it is night and the sea, with its waves, “efface the footprints in the sand”. The sea represents time, and as the waves slowing move in and out, erasing the footprints the traveler left, it shows how a memory of a person who was once there is slowly washed away. The erasing itself is not harsh, but gentle, like it is shown with the waves and their “soft, white hands”. And finally when morning comes, the town life goes on, but the traveler will never again return to the shore. The average life in the area is portrayed by the “steeds in their stalls”, and it describes how the day returns but not the traveler. Everything around, nature, stays generally the same with the passing of time, but us humans, the traveler, will never be there again after a certain amount of time.
As a person reads this poem, they feel somewhat lonely and sad. The traveler, although representing a...
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...ings of the tide and time. Another show of style from the poet is from the basic outline of the poem, simple but deep. There is a basic plot line, with simple characters, but it holds a much deeper meaning, going passed just the shore, but to the world and the role of time altogether.
The poem “The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls” evokes feelings of sadness and loneliness, but also a subtle sense of comfort as well. The poet conveys a deep message about life and beyond, using three simple stanzas and a basic story line to show it. He seems to suggest that time is not really something measureable beyond the infinity of tides rising and falling, that perhaps time does not exist at all and that the events recognized in the poem, the curlew calling, the erased footprints, the hostler calling, and the life of the traveler, are all very brief events in one moment of eternity.
The opening lines of Janie’s story consist of, “Ships at a distance have every man’s wish on board. For some they come in with the tide. For others they sail forever on the horizons…” These words suggest the necessity in life to endeavo...
The timeline carries on chronologically, the intense imagery exaggerated to allow the poem to mimic childlike mannerisms. This, subjectively, lets the reader experience the adventure through the young speaker’s eyes. The personification of “sunset”, (5) “shutters”, (8) “shadows”, (19) and “lamplights” (10) makes the world appear alive and allows nothing to be a passing detail, very akin to a child’s imagination. The sunset, alive as it may seem, ordinarily depicts a euphemism for death, similar to the image of the “shutters closing like the eyelids”
In the story “Incoming Tide” by Elizabeth Strout, one character haunted by the past, Kevin. Many readers overlook what happens in the past but it can certainly affect the future for a person. What happened in the past translates to a dark future for him. The past is a dark symbol that helps present the underlying mood of the story.
This poem captures the immigrant experience between the two worlds, leaving the homeland and towards the new world. The poet has deliberately structured the poem in five sections each with a number of stanzas to divide the different stages of the physical voyage. Section one describes the refugees, two briefly deals with their reason for the exodus, three emphasises their former oppression, fourth section is about the healing effect of the voyage and the concluding section deals with the awakening of hope. This restructuring allows the poet to focus on the emotional and physical impact of the journey.
The poem is a combination of beauty and poignancy. It is a discovery in a trajectory path of rise and fall of human values and modernity. She is a sole traveler, a traveler apart in a literary romp afresh, tracing the thinning line of time and action.
The ocean is mysterious to mankind. The unfathomable vastness of the ocean intrigues humanity into exploring it. In life, the immense possibilities that lie in the future compel us to reach for the stars. In the poem “The Story” by Karen Connelly, an individual willingly swims into deep waters even though they are fearful of what may exist in the waters. The swimmer later finds out that their fears were foolish, which illustrates the human tendency to venture into the unknown. The theme conveyed in this poem is that life is like a rough, uncertain, uncontrollable ocean that we must find get through with experience.
He describes how the sand on the beach flows and moves on the shore. For example, in the first line of stanza two, he says, “Slush and sand of the beach until daylight.” This description of the sand really helps you visualize it.
As the man in the poem continues his journey, he takes time to notice things in detail. This I believe is a way of cherishing what you might not see again. This also shows us that he cares about the community to notice the little things one last time. For example Edward Field describes the "magnolia trees with dying flowers" and the "bright spring day" (qtd. in Schwiebert 41). The man even picked up the local newspaper before he left, this shows that he cares what is going on in the town and feels enough apart of the community to find out what is in the newspaper that day.
It is important to consider the meaning of home when analyzing The Seafarer. The narrator of this poem seems to feel a sense of belonging while traveling the sea despite the fact that he is obviously disillusioned with its hardships .The main character undergoes a transformation in what he considers home and this dramatically affects his life and lifestyle. Towards the end of The Seafarer the poet forces us to consider our mortality, and seems to push the notion that life is just a journey and that we will not truly be at home until we are with God.
Relief,” Millay used a similar form of imagery to describe the rain that resulted in the remembrance of the persona’s love: “…I miss him in the weeping of the rain…” (Millay, 3). This description of the rain not only helped better visualize the rain itself, but also emphasized the sorrowful and desolate undertone of the poem. Another exemplification of visual imagery utilized in Millay’s poem was used to illustrate the tides: “…I want him at the shrinking of the tide…” (Millay, 4). The retreating of the tides was easily concei...
When exiled from society, loneliness becomes apparent within a person. The poems The Seafarer translated by S.A.J. Bradley and The Wife?s Lament translated by Ann Stanford have a mournful and forlorn mood. Throughout each poem exists immense passion and emotion. In the two elegiac poems there is hardship, loneliness and uncertainty for each character to live with.
“In this poem, the night represents his destination — the poet’s own inner life, possibly self-knowledge. The poet, then, feels at least partially alienated from himself in much the same way that the night promotes a feeling of alienation from other people” (Kidd 2). Therefore, the reader can assume this rest of the poem is going to be about the narrator getting to know his place in this world while he is on a night stroll. The second line of stanza one states “I have walked out in rain –and back in rain” (Frost 157). His repetition of going in the rain twice emphasizes his miserable condition on this dark, rainy night. Nonetheless, he embraces nature and continues on with his walk past “the furthest city light” which tells the reader that he is now in complete darkness. Stanza two focuses primarily on his relationship with society. The narrator is casually walking in the city at night and sees the “saddest city lane” and
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. “The Tide Rises, the Tide Falls”. Elements of Literature: Fifth Course. Austin: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 2008. 196. Print.
Matthew Arnold begins his poem by describing a calm, beautiful scene. Dover Beach is lying "fair" in the moonlight. It is high tide and he sees the coast of France and "the cliffs of England... / Gleaming and vast, out in the tranquil bay." All seems lovely and quiet. According to Baum's research on the date and circumstances of the poem, Arnold is probably speaking to his new bride (86) as he says, "Come to the window, sweet is the night-air." But gradually the reader senses a shifting of mood and tone. Now he describes the "line of spray... / Where the sea meets" the land as "moon-blanched." And the tide, tossing pebbles as it comes, is a "grating roar" with a "tremulous cadence slow" that "bring[s] / The eternal note of sadness in." This melancholy mood grows deeper as he thinks of man's long span of history-- "The turbid ebb and flow / of human misery."
This piece of the poem is full of the images of nature. The image of sun and the moon can be find throughout the whole work, but in this part it probably poses as a symbol of rationality and intellect. Its function differs from the function of the moon and its light shines its rays of light on things to make them clearer, more comprehensible and earthly. T...