Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Essay --
Hopelessness is an intense emotion every person feels at one point in their life, a feeling closely interlinked with depression and suicide. In the poems ââ¬Å"It was not Death, for I stood up,â⬠and ââ¬Å"I felt a Funeral, in my Brain,â⬠by Emily Dickinson and ââ¬Å"No worst, there is none. Pitched past pitch of grief,â⬠by Gerard Manley Hopkins, the theme of the poems is hopelessness, but the authors approach the theme differently in each poem. In the poem, ââ¬Å"It was not Death, for I stood up,â⬠Dickinson uses words to describe the sense of hopelessness she feels as she tries to pinpoint the source of her anguish. In the first two stanzas, she uses specific sensory details to convey her chaotic feelings to tell the reader what her condition cannot be. A repetition of ââ¬Å"it was notâ⬠(1) is then followed by a reason of why she eliminated the possibility, using the senses of sound or touch. She merges together the conditions she had eradicated and through her chaotic state, her thoughts turn toward funerals. This causes her to think about her death and her current state of mind. She feels her ââ¬Å"life were shavenâ⬠(13), so that the only emotions left were despair and terror with the feeling of hope lost. She also ââ¬Å"could not breathe without a keyâ⬠(15); terror does not directly affect a personââ¬â¢s breathing, but it sometimes causes a person to feel as if he were suffocating, unable t o breathe. Her ââ¬Å"keyâ⬠that she needs is to understand what she is feeling, but she cannot figure it out (15). The last stanza in the poem expresses an overwhelming feeling of bleakness, there is no opportunity for rescue, ââ¬Å"like Chaosââ¬â Stoplessââ¬â â⬠¦ / Without a Chanceâ⬠¦ / Or even a Report of Landââ¬ââ⬠(21-23). In the last line, there is a paradox, that since there was no possibility of hop... ...er already confused and chaotic mind, her thought process leads her to thinking about death and hopelessness of being healed. Hopkinsââ¬â¢s poem starts out differently, with him thinking that there was nothing that could be worse than what he was going through, but in the process of searching for relief, he discovers there is no relief with death. His poem comes to the same conclusion as Dickinsonââ¬â¢s, the hopelessness of having no cure to save them. The ending to Dickinsonââ¬â¢s second poem is similar to this that after her descent into insanity, there is no hope for her of ever going back to reality. In these three poems, imagery plays a large part with helping the author describe their thoughts and situations, which increases the feeling the reader has because it seems more lifelike. The three poems begin at various places, but end with the revolving theme of hopelessness.
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