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Poetry Analysis

1. Use MLA formatting.2. Introduce your poems and authors in the opening paragraph in a compelling way. Build up to the thesis statement, which should be the last sentence in your introduction. Your thesis statement will make an argument about the poem(s) you have selected, in terms of a literary element.Example:Sylvia Plaths Daddy and Robert Haydens Those Winter Sundays relate deeply held emotions of an adult child toward a parent through vivid and personal imagery of the parent.Then, in your body paragraphs, you will provide evidence for the thesis.You will offer detailed analysis with examples (quotations, paraphrases, and summaries) from the primary text(s) and from critical sources as needed. While critical sources are not strictly required for this paper, I strongly encourage you to get your feet wet by practicing using them now, so you will be better at it by the time you start the research paper. Also, the research you do now will pay off because you will have less to do later.In your conclusion, you will restate the thesis in a fresh and emphatic way.A tutor can help with all of these steps, and I strongly recommend that you work with one. Im going to provide an example paper without any critical sources by Dr. Gary Light, and youll see the kind of in-depth analysis that is possible. I also provide separately some examples of how I would supplement the paper with critical (secondary) sources.If you use sources, you must cite them parenthetically and on a Works Cited page, in MLA format.This paper should be a minimum of 3-4 pages.

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poetry analysis

poetry analysis

Acquainted With the Night
I have been one acquainted with the night.
I have walked out in rain — and back in rain.
I have outwalked the furthest city light.
I have looked down the saddest city lane.
I have passed by the watchman on his beat
And dropped my eyes, unwilling to explain.
I have stood still and stopped the sound of feet
When far away an interrupted cry
Came over houses from another street,
But not to call me back or say good-bye;
And further still at an unearthly height,
O luminary clock against the sky
Proclaimed the time was neither wrong nor right.
I have been one acquainted with the night.
Week 8

Read the poem “Acquainted With the Night” included in this module, then answer the
questions below:
INSTRUCTOR’S INTRODUCTION TO THE POEM: This is the second of the Frost
poems. If you remember, Frost likes to play with duality. In this case, the outside
represents the inside. “Acquainted With the Night” is a poem about depression.
Everything that takes place in this poem does so in the poet’s head. He is not Literally
taking a walk through a city; he is Figuratively taking a walk in his own mind. “Night” in
this poem represents Depression, so another way the title can be put is: “Acquainted
With Depression.” So with this in mind, as you answer the questions, keep in mind that
eveything mentioned in the poem is an aspect of depression in the poet’s head.

QUESTION 1 What did you think about the poem as a reader?
QUESTION 2 “Rain” is a metaphor. What does the poet mean when he says
he “has walked out in rain and back in rain”? Be sure to explain your answer well.
QUESTION 3 “Light” is a metaphor. What does the poet mean when he says
“I’ve out-walked the furthest city light”? Be sure to explain your answer well.
QUESTION 4  What does the poet mean when he says “I’ve looked down the
saddest city lane”? Be sure to explain your answer well.
QUESTION 5 Given that the city represents the poet’s mind, what is the
“watchman on his beat” and why does the poet feel that he has to “drop his eyes” when
passing it? Be sure to explain your answer well.
QUESTION 6  Explain what the “interrupted cry…but not to call me back or
say goodbye” means? Could this be the reason for his depression? Explain your answer
well.
QUESTION 7 What is the luminary clock at an unearthly height that
proclaims the time is neither wrong nor right? If the poet was taking a literal walk
outside, it represents the moon. But the poet is taking a “figurative” walk inside his mind,
so metaphorically speaking, what is this luminary clock? Look up the definition of
“luminary” if it helps, but make sure that you are using the correct definition with regard
to the theme (Depression) of the poem. Provide a thorough answer.

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