I Like To See It Lap The Miles Literary Devices

539 Words2 Pages

In the poem, “I Like To See It Lap The Miles,” by Emily Dickinson, personification is used to give the train human qualities that it doesn't actually have, and also make me understand imagery in the story better. This poem is in first person, the train is the one talking in the story. The tone of the story is soothing because it's talking about the trains life, and what it's like as a train. If you can't conquer something, then don't give up. The setting is outside be mountains and hills. The literary device that is repeated and focused on in the story is personification. The author is giving the train human qualities, that it doesn't actually have. Personification helps me imagine the story and get the message a lot better. Here are some examples of personification in the story. …show more content…

This example means that the train is going up the valleys, doing what a train does. It relates to the poem because the poem is about a train and where and how it travels. This example helps me imagine the train and it going up the hills. If it wasn't in the story, I wouldn get the message of the poem and there wouldn't be any imagery in the poem. That was one example of personification in the poem, here is another example of personification in this poem.
The second piece of personification in the poem by Emily Dickinson, is “and stop to feed itself at tanks.” Trains first off can't even feed itself. The example means that the train needs power, to go up hills and mountains. This relates to the poem because the poem is talking about trains and their life. The impact of this example on the message is that if this sentence wasn't in the story, I wouldn't imagine the story very well and get the theme. That was another example of personification in the story. Here's the last piece of personification in the

Open Document