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Meyer compares poems to songs. He says that we have to listen several times a song before we hear it all and before we understand it. The title of a poem provides a sense of what the poem is about. It can tell you about the poem’s subject, tone, and genre. While reading poetry we need to pay attention to elements such as speaker, image, metaphor, symbol, rhyme, and rhythm. Also, Meyer defines doggerel as a “derogatory term used to describe poetry whose subject is trite and whose rhythm and sounds are monotonously heavy-handed”. It is characteristic of children’s game rhymes. In addition, by characterizing poetry as “undefinable” and “unmistakable”, Robinson says that it can have different purposes, subjects, emotions, styles, and forms.
The poem “Snapping Beans” by Lisa Parker is about a speaker and her grandmother. The girl is adjusting to college life, but she is having problems and cannot tell her grandmother; instead, she tells her, “School is fine”. She revels her inner thoughts in order for the reader to determine she is depressed and heart wrenched. It is hard for her to tell her religious grandmother about her friends writing about “sex, about alcoholism, about Buddha”. At the end Parker writes, “It’s funny how things blow loose like that.” This is a comparison to a college student and how they have to go away from their family and learn how to live on their own. Moreover, the poem “Those Winter Sundays” by Robert Hayden is about a father and a son relationship. His father wakes up every Sunday morning to light fireplaces to warm up their home and nobody thanks him for doing this. “Sundays” in the title evocate more feelings than the other days of the week do. Sundays may be pleasant family days at home or dull and depres...

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... predictability must be avoided in order to be engaging and satisfying. Thus, we must pay attention to what the poem says, expect to be surprised, and concentrate on it.
Another poem that the title contributes to the overall meaning of the story is “The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost. The speaker is in the woods considering a fork in the road. Both ways look the same, but he chooses the one and thinks he is going to take the other one another day, which it is unlikely to happen. The title of this poem is a clear statement of its subject since it suggests the two roads and the decision that has to make in order to choose one of them. This is a comparison to decision making in life. People encounter different paths in life, but at the end we end up choosing one but still thinking of the road not taken. We usually ask ourselves what if I took the other road instead.

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