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Emily_Dickinson,_Poem_328
2013-11-13 来源: 类别: 更多范文
Emily Dickinson, Poem 328
Analysis of Dickinsons Poem #328
Few poets capture the beauty and essence of nature and sports. As a Robin gracefully flies through the sky, so, too, does Emily Dickinson write her verse. In poem 328, A Bird came down the walk--, Emily Dickinson magically connects the innocence of a Robin and the grace of a rower. Crew, although wholly elegant itself, becomes but a fraction of the beauty Dickinson writes of the Robin in flight.
The initial encounter with the Robin in the first stanza not only describes the bird with words but also with the meter. The iambic triameter is a very choppy, short phrased meter which accents the rhythmic walk of the Robin. A Robin hops with a very short and consistent step, much like that of the meter Dickinson uses. The line He bit an Angleworm in halves (328/3) uses a visual cue to describe the method by which the Robin eats worms.
Dickinson allows the reader to minimize oneself and enter fully into the natural world. By writing And he ate the fellow raw/ And then he drank a Dew/ from a convenient Grass (328/4-6), Dickinson brings the reader into the smaller
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