Need some R. Frost Help REWARD! 1 Free AO Pen!

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  • Glickman
    *Insert Witty Phrase*
    • Sep 2003
    • 2673

    #1

    Need some R. Frost Help REWARD! 1 Free AO Pen!

    Well, im having a little trouble picking out literary devices other then
    Last edited by Glickman; 05-17-2005, 09:00 PM.
  • xmetal2001
    Junior Member at heart
    • May 2001
    • 1994

    #2

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    • Glickman
      *Insert Witty Phrase*
      • Sep 2003
      • 2673

      #3
      cool, as much as u can think of, i already analyzed my other poem, so ive just gotta find recurring devices.

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      • spantol
        Turgid Member
        • Sep 2002
        • 1024

        #4
        You could appeal to antithesis, figurative language, personification, hyperbole, metonymy, prolepsis, and climax in there, too.



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        • Glickman
          *Insert Witty Phrase*
          • Sep 2003
          • 2673

          #5
          Originally posted by spantol
          You could appeal to antithesis, figurative language, personification, hyperbole, metonymy, prolepsis, and climax in there, too.


          http://www.dean.tec.ma.us/MCAS/mcasst.htm
          heh i know what they are, im just having trouble identifing them

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          • SpecialBlend2786
            Registered User
            • Jun 2003
            • 4023

            #6
            "I see for Nature no defeat"

            Nature is capitalized, almost like a name. He can't see "Nature" being defeated. That'd be personification i think

            Also, look at the rhythm and rhyme scheme, how the poem flows.

            You can also look at the tone of the poem. It is basically a man, justifying his actions when he chops down a maple tree.

            I'm not seeing any hyperbole in there.

            I'll post some more a little later tonight, gotta finish my own homework first

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            • Glickman
              *Insert Witty Phrase*
              • Sep 2003
              • 2673

              #7
              thanks for your help guys! ill hook u up with some pens

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              • spantol
                Turgid Member
                • Sep 2002
                • 1024

                #8
                "In one tree's overthrow"

                Well, it's an exaggeration for dramatic effect. And it's certainly not to be taken literally--it's a felled tree, not an ousted ruler.

                That'd make it hyperbole.

                Originally posted by SpecialBlend2786
                I'm not seeing any hyperbole in there.

                Loaded 2004 BKO For Sale

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                • Target Practice
                  irc.zirc.org:6667 = chat!
                  • Nov 2003
                  • 3180

                  #9
                  "At four o'clock I shoulder ax" is a metaphor for "Do your own goddamn homework."


                  "Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats." --Henry Louis Mencken.

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                  • Glickman
                    *Insert Witty Phrase*
                    • Sep 2003
                    • 2673

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Target Practice
                    "At four o'clock I shoulder ax" is a metaphor for "Do your own goddamn homework."
                    this contributed to the thread/board how? ok, give yourself a pat on the back.


                    thanks to the rest of you, all i needed was a few ideas, and im pretty much running with them, maybe ill post the essay for you to laugh at

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                    • tropical_fishy
                      KART
                      • Oct 2004
                      • 1017

                      #11
                      In winter in the woods alone
                      Repitition of a prepositional phrase for emphasis on "alone".

                      Against the trees I go.
                      Underlying theme of man vs. nature.

                      I mark a maple for my own
                      Once again, man vs. nature--alliteration to emphasize the point that he's claimed this tree.

                      And lay the maple low.
                      He's literally cut the tree down, but the "l" sound connects "lay" and "low." Make of that what you wish.

                      At four o-clock I shoulder ax,
                      I don't know if you typed that wrong, it doesn't sound like Frost to leave out words. If it's right, then I'd say it's almost but not quite personification, because he's referring to the ax like a friend or companion with a name.


                      etc, etc, until:
                      For yet another blow.
                      Kind of an enigmatic final line for Frost, but ti can be interpreted in a bunch of different ways. You can take it as the speaker's literal blows to the tree, or as a metaphor for human destruction of nature, or even as a symbol of war between man and nature. Whichever you like. Industrial revolution and all that funness.

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                      • SpecialBlend2786
                        Registered User
                        • Jun 2003
                        • 4023

                        #12
                        yeah...listen to her. She's smarter than me or something..

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                        • spantol
                          Turgid Member
                          • Sep 2002
                          • 1024

                          #13
                          To "shoulder ax" is a more literary way to say "pack up for the day and go home." I'd call it metonymy, the ax standing in for the rest of the process.

                          Originally posted by tropical_fishy

                          I don't know if you typed that wrong, it doesn't sound like Frost to leave out words. If it's right, then I'd say it's almost but not quite personification, because he's referring to the ax like a friend or companion with a name.
                          Last edited by spantol; 05-18-2005, 07:04 AM.

                          Loaded 2004 BKO For Sale

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                          • ScatterPlot
                            Not pop, it's all Coke
                            • Jan 2002
                            • 1960

                            #14
                            Pretty basic one here, guess you can't see the forest for the trees (pun intended )


                            The poem rhymes. I'm pretty sure that's a literary thingy.
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                            • Glickman
                              *Insert Witty Phrase*
                              • Sep 2003
                              • 2673

                              #15
                              actually i ended up using symbolism as my main thing, both poems used tree's to represent people, and escapism

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