Assonance Essays

  • Use of Alliteration, Assonance, and Cacophony

    684 Words  | 2 Pages

    Use of the Rhetorical Strategies of Alliteration, Assonance, and Cacophony Candice Scheffing, a student a New Mexico Tech, not to long ago sent an email to the Clark112-list on the subject of gender. She had analyzed an essay by James Q. Wilson called "Gender" for his use of rhetorical strategies. Many rhetorical strategies can be seen in the email. The rhetorical strategies that can be found are alliteration, assonance, and cacophony. The major rhetorical strategy that Scheffing used was

  • Paul Lawrence Dunbar Sympathy Literary Devices

    612 Words  | 2 Pages

    compares the oppression of his race to the scene of a captured bird. The speaker also uses poetic devices such as Assonance, alliteration, and cacophony in the poem to create a powerful message and bring emphasis to certain points and phrases. In the poem “Sympathy” by Paul Lawrence Dunbar the speaker utilizes literary and poetic devices such as allusion, cacophony, alliteration, and assonance to bring forth his powerful message of oppression and the intense longing for freedom. The speaker uses the

  • Seamus Heaney – The Skunk Commentary

    673 Words  | 2 Pages

    Seamus Heaney – The Skunk Commentary Skunk is a poem by Seamus Heaney about his married life. The poem is a tribute to his wife – how living away from home has caused him to miss his married life. Exiled from his wife, Heaney is recalls the skunk which reminds him of his wife. There are two settings in this poem. The first five stanzas are based on memories of California nights, and the last stanza is a recent memory of waiting in bed for his wife as she changed into her nightdress.

  • We Didn T Start The Fire Analysis

    763 Words  | 2 Pages

    Numbers vs. We Didn’t Start The Fire Bill Gates, one of the most successful entrepreneurs in the world, states, “It’s fine to celebrate success but it is more important to heed the lessons of failure.” Instead of only looking at the advancements that his business, Microsoft, has made, Gates evaluates and learns from the mistakes or failures he’s also made, and finds ways to prevent them from happening again. Billy Joel’s song “We Didn’t Start the Fire” is about all the people or events that made

  • We Real Cool Figurative Language

    621 Words  | 2 Pages

    and identification. The usage of both elements helps the reader understand and imagine the actual setting, while reading the poem. The author of the poem relies a multiple combination of uses of figurative language including using alliteration, assonance, and usage of parallel structure. Alliteration was presented multiple times through the poem, with the usage of musical rhythm and the flow of the overall writing. The usage of alliteration made every stanza stand out to create a flow with reading

  • The White Doe, by Francesco Petrarch

    1183 Words  | 3 Pages

    Title: When looking at this poem's title, one can get many ideas of what the poem will be about. One of the ideas that I got when I read the title was that it was going to be about a white female deer that was being hunted by a hunter. Another one that I thought up was that a white deer is an angel from heaven that will save someone. The last idea that I came up with was that it was about a white deer that was camouflaged in some snow to escape a predator. Paraphrase: In the first stanza, the

  • From Preface To God's Determination By Edward Taylor

    864 Words  | 2 Pages

    Then God said, "Let lights appear in the sky to separate the day from the night. Let them be signs to mark the seasons, days, and years.” God created all from none so that his people could praise him eternally. Edward Taylor uses allusion, simile, and rhyme in “From Preface to God’s Determination” to relay his message that there is a higher power that created all. Edward Taylor’s background of living in a district noteable for its cloth making and weaving is very evident in this poem. His background

  • Walt Whitman's A Sight In Camp In The Daybreak

    546 Words  | 2 Pages

    Walt Whitman employs numerous poetic devices in “A Sight in Camp in the Daybreak Gray and Dim” to convey meaning, tone, and significance. He uses assonance in line 1 repeating the long a sound in the three syllables of “daybreak gray” and in line 12 repeating the long e sound in “sweet…cheeks.” There are several examples of alliteration: in line 1, “daybreak…dim;” in line 7, “silent stand;” in line 8, “fingers…from…face…first;” in line 9, “gaunt…grim…gray’d;” and line 15, “dead…divine.” Repetition

  • Where Have You Gone?

    648 Words  | 2 Pages

    Where Have You Gone? The poem is effective because its states very evidently what the situation is between the author and the other person. The theme is strong and fits the situation the author is going through and makes you and the author have many different emotions going through your head. At the same time it makes you think about your real life situation how you would react if it happened to you. The poem includes a tone, metaphors, alliterations, and repetition, The theme deals with abandonment

  • Analyzing The Axis Soldier's Poem '

    1045 Words  | 3 Pages

    b) 1. Alliteration in this poem occurs in various verses, expressing itself with different tones. An example includes the 3rd line of the 2nd verse, where the soldier stops to think. The sounds that come from the words “suddenly”, “slow” and “started” seems as if the soldier is hypnotized by his conscious, beginning to reflect upon the meaning of love. A second example expresses this technique on the 4th line of the 5th verse. The words “wishing”, “was”, “where” and “won” express the soldier’s intolerance

  • 'The Listeners' Analysis

    687 Words  | 2 Pages

    ‘The Listeners’ by Walter De La Mare is a narrative poem. It tells us about a traveller that comes to a house and knocks but nobody answers. He tries knocking a few more times but leaves. There are 36 lines in this poem and every other word rhymes. We know that the poem is set in a dark forest as the word ‘forest’ is used at the start of the poem. There are quite a few ancient words which are used throughout the poem. We do not use these words now, so we know that the poem is set a long time ago

  • Analysis Of The City Of The End Of Things

    1039 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the poem “The City of the End of Things” by Archibald Lampman he paints an image of a dystopian and mechanical future. The theme of this poem is a prediction of the natural world 's destruction and of the current industrialized future. Humans cannot live without nature, thus with the destruction of the natural world comes the downfall of humanity. Lampman wrote “Its roofs and iron towers have grown / None knoweth how high within the night”(9-10), which provokes a picture of a city that is ever

  • The Bells

    1119 Words  | 3 Pages

    “The Bells,” a poem written by Edgar Allan Poe, conveys a cheerful tone through distinct sounds and repetition of words. A deeply onomatopoeic poem, “The Bells” progresses after every stanza. Primarily, the alliteration, assonance, and onomatopoeia in the poem produce a happy tone; but, towards the end of the poem, the sound devices help establish a gloomier tone. In each stanza, the bells are made of a different metal substance. In the first stanza, the bells are described as silver. In this case

  • Shel Silverstein's Cloony The Unfuny Clown

    608 Words  | 2 Pages

    techniques to enhance the poem including alliteration, assonance, meter, rhyme, rhyme scheme, and irony. The authors use of these techniques gives the reader a better understanding of the poem and creates a nice flow throughout the poem. Often found in many different poems, alliteration and assonance are perhaps the most common literary techniques used within poems. One of the most used literary devices within this poem include alliteration and assonance. “He was floppy and sloppy and skinny and tall”,

  • Analysis of I wondered Lonely as a Cloud by William Wordsworth

    1320 Words  | 3 Pages

    on this poem. As literary devices, we have Alliteration on the second line of the first stanza, alliteration and assonance on the fifth line of the first stanza and personification on the last line of the first stanza. On the second stanza, we have a simile on the first line, inversion on the eleventh line and personification on the last line. On the third stanza, we have assonance, alliteration and repetition of the word “waves” on the first line, and again repetition on the seventeenth line. On

  • Analysis Of The Lake Of Innisfree

    1189 Words  | 3 Pages

    with many different techniques throughout the entire poem, and it creates a dominant sense of tranquility on the Lake of Innisfree. The words of the poem graciously flow together creating an overall pleasing sound to the poem. Rhyming, repetition, assonance, alliteration, punctuation, and the lively description of nature really brings the reader into the peaceful paradise of Innisfree. A melody is a piece of music that is very pleasing and calming to listen to. Rhyme is used in this poem to create a

  • At A Window Analysis

    1007 Words  | 3 Pages

    Loneliness is an emotion many people express in art in order to feel better. These works of art are often songs and poems. The song "Eleanor Rigby" by The Beatles and the poem "At a Window" by Carl Sandburg explore loneliness and how it affects those who experience it. Poetry and song have both been used to express emotion for decades. The two art forms are so comparable that practitioners of either try to convert those on the "other side" to express their art in the other way. As Adam Kirsch

  • Eminem's Lose Yourself

    782 Words  | 2 Pages

    In famous rapper Eminem’s popular hit song “Lose Yourself”, the rapper combines poetry with his skill of rapping while implementing an urban twist on the art form. Eminem includes common poetic techniques such as plot, internal rhyme, assonance and couplets and manipulates them in order to emphasize the message of his song. Through these techniques, Eminem relays a message of persevering through the struggles of life in order to transcend from poverty to success. The use of poetic techniques enables

  • Distinctive Voice in Carol Ann Duffy’s Anne Hathaway and The Laboratory by Robert Browning

    710 Words  | 2 Pages

    ‘Anne Hathaway’ the voice seems more real and down to Earth because in ‘Anne Hathaway’ she is talking about the good side of love unlike in ‘The Laboratory’ where they just talk about the evil side. I think the most effective technique would be assonance because the sounds made can compare to certain things and give people those characteristics. In ‘Anne Hathaway’ I think the message was it doesn’t matter how expensive or valuable things are it’s about the memories you have with them.

  • Poetry Of Sound

    509 Words  | 2 Pages

    of words—allow the poet to get beyond, or beneath the surface of a poem. Both of Charles Roberts poems "The Herring Weir" and "The Skater" emphasize poetic sound to express their themes. Assonance—the repetition of the same or similar vowel sound, especially in stressed syllables—can also enrich a poem. Assonance can be used to unify a poem as in Roberts' poem in which it emphasizes the thematic connection among words and unifies the poem’s ideas of the humanoid and nature. Roberts indirectly links