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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page research paper that examines three poems looking at the role of metaphor in conveying meaning in poetry. The writer analyzes the statement that poetry if the "bread of faithful speech." Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khmetpoe.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
a purpose requires powerful language, and metaphor is one of the poets most power and versatile tools. It is though metaphor that a poem develops its own "imaginative landscape" (Peseroff
12). Metaphor allows the poet to invoke "complex and varied association in the readers mind," which aids the poet in drawing the reader into the desired perspective. It has
been said that poetry is the "bread of faithful speech." This statement is, of course, a metaphor in that explains something, poetry, in terms of something else, in this
case, bread. As this illustrates, metaphor does not belong to the rational mind. "Poetry," being composed of words, both written and spoken, is not the least bit similar physical
to "bread." However, by stating this opinion in this manner, the poet who composed this assessment in a minimum of words conveyed a precise meaning easily and well. Just
as bread is considered the "staff of life," the basic substance on which human beings base their diet, poetry can be looked upon as providing such a service for speech,
because it is so adept at conveying meaning. This principle can be easily demonstrated by analytically evaluating several poems. One of the most famous poems of the modern era
is T.S. Eliots The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock. Through the adroit use of metaphor Eliot invites the reader to undertake a journey with him. This metaphorical journey
explores the inner recesses of human imagination and conscious. Prufrock, the narrator of the poem, leads the reader through an assemblage of various places, each of which is a
metaphor for the decadence and decay of the contemporary world. When the environs become so strange that the reader asks "What is it?" the reply implies that any meaningful answer
...