Friday, May 22, 2020

Poem Analysis The Soldier by Ruper Brooke - 772 Words

â€Å"The Soldier† is a poem about a generic, yet ideal soldier, which is indicated by Rupert Brooke’s use of the word â€Å"The† instead of â€Å"A† when describing the soldier in the title. The usage of â€Å"I† and â€Å"me† in the poem suggests a first person point of view, which makes the poem more personal and realistic to the reader. This poem is a sonnet because the first stanza contains eight lines and the second stanza contains six. Throughout â€Å"The Soldier,† the repetition of â€Å"English† and â€Å"England† shows how important his homeland is to the soldier and his high level of patriotism. In line five, England is personified, and although England is not a living thing, the soldier sees his country as his creator and as a sort of mother figure. Brooke’s use of alliteration throughout the poem helps it flow; the use of caesura breaks up the lines. Perfect external rhyme scheme and iambic pentameter are used throughout the poem, which both give the poem flow and rhythm. The â€Å"dust† in lines four and five is a metaphor for the soldier’s life; England created him and he will become â€Å"dust concealed† when he dies and is buried. The first stanza of â€Å"The Soldier† uses various lines of imagery: â€Å"some corner of a foreign field†¦ In that rich earth a richer dust concealed†¦ flowers†¦ Washed by the rivers, blest by suns of home.† These forms of imagery emphasize the soldier’s death and how his death will cleanse him of any wrongdoings he had done in his time on earth. The â€Å"rivers† and â€Å"suns† are personified as

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