The poem “The Village Blacksmith” was written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. The poem was first published in 1840. The main character is a blacksmith who lives in a small village.
This poem is a mix between a lyrical and narrative poem. The first three and the last two paragraphs are more like a lyrical poem, and don’t follow any kind of story. These paragraphs describe what the blacksmith’s work is like. Two of the paragraphs, the fifth and the sixth, are more like a narrative poem. They actually have some kind of story in them that describes the blacksmith’s feelings. The fourth paragraph though, is a mix between the other two kinds of paragraphs in the poem. It is lyrical, but it has a very small narrative element which is the children stopping on their way home from school to watch the blacksmith.
There are many characters in this poem, but not all of them are there physically. They include the blacksmith, his sons, his daughter, his wife, other children, and the narrator. For most of the poem the narrator is describing to the reader what the blacksmith’s life is like. But during the last paragraph the narrator thanks the blacksmith for what he has taught him.
The poet uses many rhymes along with easy and hard to rhyme words such as sinewy and brawny, and hard and rough. Most stanzas use the rhyme scheme a,b,c,b,d,b, and all of the stanzas are six lines long.
The blacksmith has big rough hands, is very strong, and has long black hair. He works all day, all week, just to feed his family. But he doesn’t owe anybody any money. When he went to church. His daughter’s singing made him happy and sad, because it reminded him of his wife, who had died previously.
This poem is one of my favourites that I’ve read so far because it’s easy to understand and is interesting. I think that the meaning of the poem is that you can’t have a full happy life without any hard work.
Monday, August 24, 2015
Friday, May 22, 2015
A Book
The poem, “A Book” is a
lyrical poem that was written by Emily Dickinson. The poet is the person
speaking in the poem, and also is the person talking to the reader. The poet is
telling him or her how books are an inexpensive way for people to travel to
different places.
The poem only has one
rhyme in modern English, “soul” and “toll”. But when the poem was written, “poetry”
probably rhymed with “away”. The poet
tells the reader that books take you to faraway places in your head, without
actually travelling there. She then goes on to describe how it barely costs any
money to buy a book, and you don’t need anything else. Then she declares that
people who are too poor to visit faraway lands can use a book to do so inexpensively.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)