Thomas Carew's 'Song Of Ourselves'

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Song of Ourselves Poetry Analysis

Poetry is way to express one’s opinion on a certain topic. In the poems found in the collection Songs for Ourselves, one of the common themes is of the natural world. The natural world encompasses many different subtopics. It includes everything around us, such as the sky, the people who surround us, or even something as simple as a single bird. These poems use imagery to relay their message to the reader with multiple types of literary devices. The methods used and the message given may be different, but all of these poems do communicate a theme. The poems The Spring and Eel Tail both convey their own special meaning to the reader through the imagery in their poems. Thomas Carew, in his poem The Spring, illustrates the transition of winter into spring in the first stanza as the world waking up to welcome “the long’d-for May.” As Carew uses the words, “benumbed earth” and the “dead swallow,” which both carry a morose diction, he epitomizes the dark and brooding …show more content…

In the first stanza, the narrator uses alliteration, “preliminary and pre-world,” to emphasize the mystery and allure of the eel. Throughout the poem, the author builds up an image of the eel as being a mystical and impressive animal. Then, the author breaks the fantastical image of the eel with the repeated statement, “and then as soon as you see them —gone.” The author creates again the image of the eel being some astonishing creature, and then breaks the illusion again with the statement, “and then as soon as you see them —gone.” This pattern is repeated three times during the poem, which creates a sense of sadness and disappointment in the narrator. Other than this poem’s literal meaning, there is a deeper meaning that reveals the author’s view on nature. Even though something may seem alluring and amazing, the truth behind the “eel’s tail,” may be something

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