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  1. The poem delves into the complicated relationship between the speaker's faith in a divine being and the world's injustice and misery. It delves into the speaker's effort to reconcile the presence of evil and inequity with the concept of a benign and all-powerful God. Despite the abundance of naturalRead more

    The poem delves into the complicated relationship between the speaker’s faith in a divine being and the world’s injustice and misery. It delves into the speaker’s effort to reconcile the presence of evil and inequity with the concept of a benign and all-powerful God. Despite the abundance of natural beauty and order, the speaker is perplexed by racial discrimination and the misery suffered by marginalized people. The poem’s topic of conflicting components, such as beauty and injustice, produces tension. The poem asks if a righteous and loving God can coexist with the reality of injustice and pain, urging readers to ponder the vast mysteries of life and the limitations of human comprehension.

    Yet Do I Marvel Summary

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  1. The speaker's consideration of God's motivations and the inherent paradoxes in the universe is the poem's central idea. Although the speaker is awestruck by the natural world's beauty, he is bewildered by the presence of inequity and misery. The poem does not present a definite response to the speakRead more

    The speaker’s consideration of God’s motivations and the inherent paradoxes in the universe is the poem’s central idea. Although the speaker is awestruck by the natural world’s beauty, he is bewildered by the presence of inequity and misery. The poem does not present a definite response to the speaker’s queries and uncertainties but rather explores the complicated and perplexing nature of human life in connection to heavenly power.

    Yet Do I Marvel Summary

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  1. Imagery: can be seen when the poet uses particularly interesting descriptions that appeal to the reader's senses. These lines should allow the reader to easily visualize the subject matter the poet is describing. For example: “The little buried mole continues blind, / Why flesh that mirrors Him mustRead more

    • Imagery: can be seen when the poet uses particularly interesting descriptions that appeal to the reader’s senses. These lines should allow the reader to easily visualize the subject matter the poet is describing. For example: “The little buried mole continues blind, / Why flesh that mirrors Him must some day die.”

    • Alliteration: occurs when the poet uses the same consonant sounds at the beginning of words. For example, the use of “God” and “good” in line one and “struggle” and “stair” in line eight.

    • Enjambment: it occurs when the poet cuts off a line before the natural stopping point. For example, the transition between lines two and three as well as lines five and six.

    • Juxtaposition: can be seen when the poet features two contrasting images near one another in a poem. For example in the first stanza when the poet describes God and then moves on to talk about a mole, one of the smallest and seemingly least important creatures.

    Yet Do I Marvel Summary

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  1. This poem has a myriad of poetic devices, some of which are as follows: Alliteration:  A couple of examples would be ‘some more subtle’, and ‘buds that cannot bloom’. Metaphor: The Black Community is metaphorically referred to as the ‘lovely’ night, and flowers ‘that cannot bloom at all/In light’. PRead more

    This poem has a myriad of poetic devices, some of which are as follows:

    • Alliteration:  A couple of examples would be ‘some more subtle’, and ‘buds that cannot bloom’.
    • Metaphor: The Black Community is metaphorically referred to as the ‘lovely’ night, and flowers ‘that cannot bloom at all/In light’.
    • Personification: In the poem, the ‘night’ is personified.

     

    From The Dark Tower Summary

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  1. The central idea of this poem is the Black Community. The injustice they are subjected to forms the crux of the poem.    From The Dark Tower Summary

    The central idea of this poem is the Black Community. The injustice they are subjected to forms the crux of the poem. 

     

    From The Dark Tower Summary

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  1. This poem is in the form of a Petrarchan sonnet. It is thus divided into 2 stanzas wherein the first (octave) consists of 8 lines and the second (sestet) of six. Written in iambic pentameter, it follows the rhyme scheme ‘abbaabba ccddee’.    From The Dark Tower Summary

    This poem is in the form of a Petrarchan sonnet. It is thus divided into 2 stanzas wherein the first (octave) consists of 8 lines and the second (sestet) of six. Written in iambic pentameter, it follows the rhyme scheme ‘abbaabba ccddee’. 

     

    From The Dark Tower Summary

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  1. The theme of this poem is racism. Through the persona, the poem brings out the discrimination and oppression that persons of colour are subjected to.    From The Dark Tower Summary

    The theme of this poem is racism. Through the persona, the poem brings out the discrimination and oppression that persons of colour are subjected to. 

     

    From The Dark Tower Summary

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