How Do I Love Thee and A Dream

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Since the beginning of language, poetry has a role in the recollection of memories, emotions, and creativity. From the oldest surviving poem: Tale of the ship wrecked salor, by Hiratic, to todays poems; poetry has been a staple in the literary world. It is vital language because it is a literary vehicle that takes us on a ride of emotions. Poetry according to William Wordsworth should be, “The spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings.” Poems such as A Dream, by Edgar Allan Poe, and How do I love thee, by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, are perfect examples of good poetry, they have very different views of the same subject, which give a powerful effect on the reader.
The poem, How do I love thee, by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, is about how she loves her beloved and tries to list the different ways in which she loves him. Her love seems to be eternal and to exist everywhere, and she intends to continue loving him after her own death, if God lets her. The Author Ms. Browning, was one of the most famous poets of the Victorian Era, with her poems being popular in both England and United States during her lifetime. She was born on March 6, 1806, in Coxhoe Hall, between the villages of Coxhoe and Kelloe in County Durham, England. She was raised in a religious family, which contributed and influenced her to write poetry that revolve around religion.
Sonnet 43 (How do I love thee), by Elizabeth Barrett Browning will always end up talking about love for this one of the most famous and loved romantic poems in the world and is written as a sonnet. A sonnet has fourteen lines and an iambic pentameter rhyme. Sonnets are nearly always written about the theme of love, almost like a love song. This sonnet,like many others, shows how the p...

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...ct of the poem, which is a dream. In the reader’s mind, the reader has its own opinion for a dream, but his unique choice of words and imagery show how his dreams are and how they have a connection to his life. Poe also used personification when he mentions the word “joy”, saying that joy has departed, able to leave. He also uses a simile when he wrote in a verse: “Hath cheered me as a lovely beam”. By using the word “as” Poe shows the concept of people loving him as an elegant and handsome person. There is also an onomatopoeia “Ah!” used as a sound the narrator gives while narrating this poem to express how he reacted to the news he received. This is showing the sarcastic tone the narrator has during the poem. All of these literary devices contribute to the subject and the theme of his poem, and help compare the dream of the main character to real life.

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