1 / 11

The Bitter World of Sprin g

The Bitter World of Sprin g. Thesis: William Carlos Williams uses a variety of literary devices to represent the difficulties of writing poetry that a reader wil l be able to understand. . Luis Rivera & Brittney Biggs. Overall Interpretation.

basil
Download Presentation

The Bitter World of Sprin g

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Bitter World of Spring Thesis: William Carlos Williams uses a variety of literary devices to represent the difficulties of writing poetry that a reader will be able to understand. Luis Rivera & Brittney Biggs

  2. Overall Interpretation • Objects are upside down because they are reflected on water • On a wet pavement, the white sky recedes mottled black by the inverted pillars of the red elms (1-3) • And brown smoke Is driven down, running like Water over the roof of the bridge- (6-8) • Readers need to understand • -Shall the philosophers capture it?- (11) • Reader – other half • The poet relies on the reader to interpret the poem the way it’s meant to be

  3. Sense: Meaning & Language • Point of View: 3rd person • Mood: Lonely/Empty • Bridge-keepers Cubicle • No mentioning of human figure • Announced by the silence of a white bush in flower, close under the bridge (13-16) • Repetition: • Down 2x (7, 12) • Water 3x (8, 13, 20)

  4. Sense: Imagery & SymbolsVisual & Auditory • “On a wet pavement, the white sky recedes” (1) • “Running like water over the roof of the bridge keeper’s cubicle” (7-9) • “The shad ascend midway between the surface and the mud” (16-17) • “Water headed, unrelenting, upstream.”(20)

  5. Sense: Imagery & SymbolsVisual & Auditory • Colors • “the white sky recedes” (1) • “mottled black” • “pillars of the red elms” • “And brown smoke is driven down” • “announced by the silence of a white bush in flower” • “red-finned in the dark”

  6. Style: Poetry Techniques • Personification • “that lift the tangled net of their desires” (4-5) • “and you can see their bodies” (18) • Simile • “the fight as to the nature of poetry” (10) • Metaphor • “And brown smoke is driven down, running like water” (6-8)

  7. Structure • Interjection • “-Shall the philosophers capture it?-” (11) • Constant use of water • “On a wet pavement” (1) • “tangled net of their desires hard into the falling rain” (5-6) • “running like water” (7-8) • “casting an eye down into the water” (12-13) • “water headed, unrelenting, upstream.” (20)

  8. Sound • Assonance • And brown smoke is driven down, running like water over the roof of the bridge- keeper’s cubicle. And, as usual, the fight as to the nature of poetry… (6-10)

  9. Connection to Other Works • Similar Poems • The Widow’s Lament in Springtime • Spring and All • The Mind Hesitant

  10. Activity

  11. Conclusion The literary devices found throughout the poem help describe the difficulties of producing poetry a reader will understand.

More Related