Friday, October 26, 2018

Due Monday, October 29th - Petrarchan Sonnets: A Study in Poetic Form

Overview:  The sonnet, as a poetic genre, began in Italy in the thirteenth century, and, under the later influence of the Italian poet Petrarch, became internationally popular. Petrarch established the basic form of the so-called Petrarchan sonnet Also called Italian sonnet: 14 lines divided into two clear parts, an opening octet (8 lines) and a closing sestet (6 lines) with a fixed rhyme scheme (abbaabba cdecde). Often the octet will pose a problem or paradox which the sestet will resolve. Petrarch also established the convention of the sonnet sequence as a series of love poems written by an adoring lover to an unattainable and unapproachable lady of unsurpassed beauty. The Petrarchan sonnet convention, in other words, established, not merely the form of the poem, but also the subject matter.


"Sonnet 292" from the Canzoniere
translated by Anthony Mortimer 


The eyes I spoke of once in words that burn,
the arms and hands and feet and lovely face
that took me from myself for such a space
of time and marked me out from other men;
the waving hair of unmixed gold that shone,
the smile that flashed with the angelic rays
that used to make this earth a paradise,
are now a little dust, all feeling gone;
and yet I live, grief and disdain to me,
left where the light I cherished never shows,
in fragile bark on the tempestuous sea.
Here let my loving song come to a close;
the vein of my accustomed art is dry,
and this, my lyre, turned at last to tears.



The eyes I spoke of with such warmth,
The arms and hands and feet and face
Which took me away from myself
And marked me out from other people;
The waving hair of pure shining gold,
And the flash of her angelic smile,
Which used to make a paradise on earth,
Are a little dust, that feels nothing.
And yet I live, for which I grieve and despise myself,
Left without the light I loved so much,
In a great storm on an unprotected raft.
Here let there be an end to my loving song:
The vein of my accustomed invention has run dry,
And my lyre is turned to tears.



Gli occhi di ch'io parlai sì caldamente,
et le braccia et le mani e i piedi e 'l viso,
che m'avean sì­ da me stesso diviso,
et fatto singular da l'altra gente;
le crespe chiome d'òr puro lucente
'l lampeggiar de l'angelico riso,
che solean fare in terra un paradiso,
poca polvere son, che nulla sente.
Et io pur vivo, onde mi doglio e sdegno,
rimaso senza 'l lume ch'amai tanto,
in gran fortuna e 'n disarmato legno.
Or sia qui fine al mio amoroso canto:
secca è la vena de l'usato ingegno,
et la cetera mia rivolta in pianto.




Directions:  Please choose a sonnet by Petrarch (see link below).  Cut and paste it into your post, and analyze it using the terminology we learned in class (see "The Poetry Cheet Sheet" below).  Most importantly, include a detailed personal analysis of the poem in your post. 



The Poetry Cheat Sheet 


Tone: This is the attitude of the speaker of the poem. You always have to consider the tone of the speaker even if you’re not specifically asked to analyze it. Tone relates to many of elements below. It’s a “big-picture” or “umbrella” concept. (You should have a “bank” of words in mind: angry, happy, carefree, bitter, sympathetic, sad, nostalgic, ironic, satirical, etc.)

Repetition: Poets often rely on repetition. This can be words, phrases, sounds, images, ideas. If a poet repeats something, it takes on more meaning.

Diction: This refers to words. What words does the poet use? Does he repeat any specific words? What connotation do the words have (positive, negative)?

Syntax/Structure: Do the sentences within the poem or stanzas have a recognizable structure? Does the structure or pattern change at a specific moment?

Imagery (sensory details): This refers to the images of the poem, especially those that appeal to many senses (sight, sound, taste, touch, smell).

Sounds: Sound is often conveyed in poetry. Look for rhyme and repetition, and things such as alliteration, consonance, and assonance (which are repetitions of specific types of sound).

Metaphors/Similes: Comparisons are often used to support imagery, but they can also be used to anchor a poem, to convey a poem’s main message. Any time a poet compares something to something else, you should take note of it.

Irony: This is HUGE in poetry. If something is said or happens that is unexpected, it’s ironic. If it’s sarcastic or satirical, it’s ironic. If you can recognize irony, you’re golden.

Allusion: This is a literary or historical reference. It is not as common on the AP exam, but you should know what it is and how it works.

Rhythm/Rhyme: This is covered with other elements above. This just refers to the recognizable pattern of a poem that gives it a sense of rhythm and flow.

Also:  Sestet (six line stanza), Octet (eight line stanza), Quatrain (four line stanza), couplet (two line stanza)

28 comments:

  1. ‘Per fare una leggiadra sua vendetta’
    To make a graceful act of revenge,
    and punish a thousand wrongs in a single day,
    Love secretly took up his bow again,
    like a man who waits the time and place to strike.
    My power was constricted in my heart,
    making defence there, and in my eyes,
    when the mortal blow descended there,
    where all other arrows had been blunted.
    So, confused by the first assault,
    it had no opportunity or strength
    to take up arms when they were needed,
    or withdraw me shrewdly to the high,
    steep hill, out of the torment,
    from which it wishes to save me now but cannot.
    The Poem I chose is called “Per fare una leggiadra sua vendetta”. The english translation is “To make a graceful revenge”. The tone of this poem is angry and the speaker obviously seeks for revenge. It is angry but not aggressively angry but in a more peaceful manner. There is no clear repetition. It uses “violent” or “aggressive” words like “torment” or “assault”. It does not use much advanced vocab. There is no specific stanza structure. It is just lines of words, breaking off after each sentence. There is no pattern in this poem. It expresses a lot of emotion using strong emotional words. This poem does not use similes or metaphors but does express emotion using objects and actions that actually can’t happen, like “Love secretly took up his bow again”. It is more personification because love is not an entity that can pick up a bow. There is no rhyme or specific rhythm throughout this poem, but all of the sentences are the same length making it flow well.

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    Replies
    1. I thought you described the sonnet very well with powerful and developed vocab
      -Michael DiCenzo

      Delete
  2. Hanna Saad
    ‘ A pie’ de’ colli ove la bella vesta’

    At the foot of the hill where beauty’s garment

    first clothed that lady with earthly members,

    who has often sent wakefulness to him,

    who sends us to you, out of melancholy sleep,

    we passed by freely in peace through this

    mortal life, that all creatures yearn for,

    without suspicion of finding, on the way,

    anything that would trouble our going.

    But in the miserable state where we are

    driven from that other serene life

    we have one solace only, that is death:

    which is his retribution, who led him to this,

    he who, in another’s power, near to the end,

    remains bound with a heavier chain.


    Finding the meaning of this sonnet was not easiest task for me. I got from this is someone or multiple people are trying to make a peaceful journey to heaven or to another place on this earthly world. supported by this statement "we passed by freely in peace through this mortal life, that all creatures yearn for."
    "But in the miserable state where we are driven from that other serene life we have one solace only, that is death." I believe this quote means that they died or they have not succeed to reach heaven but they fell into hell. "who led him to this, he who, in another’s power, near to the end,remains bound with a heavier chain." Then I realize he is talking about someone or some thing when he said "At the foot of the hill where beauty’s garment first clothed that lady with earthly members, who has often sent wakefulness to him," a few lines prior. As I think more about this sonnet, he talks about "another's power" referring to a non-earthly figure or entity. then he says "that is death: which is his retribution" then "who led him to this."

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  3. Michael DiCenzo

    ‘Per fare una leggiadra sua vendetta’
    To make a graceful act of revenge,
    and punish a thousand wrongs in a single day,
    Love secretly took up his bow again,
    like a man who waits the time and place to strike.
    My power was constricted in my heart,
    making defence there, and in my eyes,
    when the mortal blow descended there,
    where all other arrows had been blunted.
    So, confused by the first assault,
    it had no opportunity or strength
    to take up arms when they were needed,
    or withdraw me shrewdly to the high,
    steep hill, out of the torment,
    from which it wishes to save me now but cannot.

    The Poem I chose is called “Per fare una leggiadra sua vendetta”. The english meaning is “To make a graceful revenge”. The tone of this poem is angry and the speaker seems to want revenge. It is angry but not very angry but in a more calm manner. There is no repetition. It uses “violent” or “aggressive” words like “assault”. It doesn't use developed vocab. There is no specific stanza structure. There is no pattern in this poem. It expresses a lot of emotion using strong words. This poem does not use similes or metaphors but does express emotion using objects and actions that actually can’t happen, like “Love secretly took up his bow again”. It is more personification for example in this stanza “because love is not an entity that can pick up a bow”. There is no rhyme or specific rhythm throughout this poem, but all of the sentences are the same length and making it very flow well.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Dowol Lee

      Good work Michael! Great job on the blog!!!

      Delete
    2. Robbie M
      Good work Dowl! Great job on the blog response! lol XD

      Delete
  4. Suhani Karki

    I have not seen you, lady,
    leave off your veil in sun or shadow,
    since you knew that great desire in myself
    that all other wishes in the heart desert me.
    While I held the lovely thoughts concealed,
    that make the mind desire death,
    I saw your face adorned with pity:
    but when Love made you wary of me,
    then blonde hair was veiled,
    and loving glances gathered to themselves.
    That which I most desired in you is taken from me:
    the veil so governs me
    that to my death, and by heat and cold,
    the sweet light of your lovely eyes is shadowed.

    The poem I chose was ‘Lassare il velo o per sole o per ombra’ (11). The tone of this poem is nostalgic and sad. There is no repetition in this poem, all the words are original and do not reoccur throughout the poem. The words that the poet usually repeats (diction) are words like: ‘veil’ and ‘desire.’ I do not think that there is a recognizable structure within this poem. The words do not seem to form any pattern and are not in any ordered placement. The imagery is strong in this poem. I can seem imagery in this stanza: “the sweet light of your lovely eyes is shadowed.” This is a stanza that appeals to my sight and smell senses (sight: lovely eyes, smell: the sweet light). There are some Metaphors/Similies in this poem such as: “The veil so governs me, that to my death, and by heat and cold” The poet is comparing the veil to death and heat and cold. Other than that there aren’t many forms of metaphors/similies. I do not think there are any forms of irony in this poem. There are no allusions in this poem either (this poem refers to the present time and not the past). There are some slant rhymes in this poem like ‘desert’ and ‘desire.’
    I think that this poem reflects a man falling in love with a woman, but she is concealing her self and not opening up to this man (with her veil). The man wants to see the woman (for who she is), so he wants her to take off her veil. Later on in the poem, the man sees the woman without her veil (but when Love made you wary of me, then blonde hair was veiled).

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    Replies
    1. I thought you description of the sonnet was very good
      -Michael DiCenzo

      Delete
  5. Dylan Brenner
    ‘Solo et pensoso i piú deserti campi’
    Alone and thoughtful, through the most desolate fields,
    I go measuring out slow, hesitant paces,
    and keep my eyes intent on fleeing
    any place where human footsteps mark the sand.
    I find no other defence to protect me
    from other people’s open notice,
    since in my aspect, whose joy is quenched,
    they see from outside how I flame within.
    So now I believe that mountains and river-banks
    and rivers and forests know the quality
    of my life, hidden from others.
    Yet I find there is no path so wild or harsh
    that love will not always come there
    speaking with me, and I with him.

    The poem I chose was ‘Solo et pensoso i più deserti campi’. The tone of this poem is calm and relaxing. There is no repetition in the poem. The poet doesn’t really repeat any words, but the connotation is positive. There's not really a specific syntax or structure, but one things I noticed was that all of the lines were 6-7 words. There is some imagery in this poem for example in line 1, “Alone and thoughtful, through the most desolate fields”. I can just paint a picture in my mind of someone being alone and just thinking in an empty place. There is not really and rhyme or repetition (sounds) in this poem. There is no specific similes or metaphors. There is no irony or allusion in the poem, but there is some personification. There is not that much rhyme or rhythm in the poem. The poem in english is “Only the most desolate fields are thoughtful”.


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  6. Yasmiin Ali

    If my life of bitter torment and of tears
    could be derided more, and made more troubled,
    that I might see, by virtue of your later years,
    lady, the light quenched of your beautiful eyes,
    and the golden hair spun fine as silver,
    and the garland laid aside and the green clothes,
    and the delicate face fade, that makes me
    fearful and slow to go weeping:
    then Love might grant me such confidence
    that I’d reveal to you my sufferings
    the years lived through, and the days and hours:
    and if time is opposed to true desire,
    it does not mean no food would nourish my grief:
    I might draw some from slow sighs.

    The poem that I picked was ‘Se la mia vita da l’aspro tormento’(12). The tone that the poem is sending is sad and wanting the truth to come out. There is no repetition in this poem. The diction in this poem shows both negative and positive words, for example, ‘bitter torment and tears,’(line 1) and ‘Love might grant me such confidence...’(line 9). There is no Syntax or Structure in this poem. However, in this poem, there is a lot of imagery. When the author writes about how sad the character is in his life without his lover, ‘...and the delicate face fade, that makes me fearful and slow to go weeping:’(line 7&8). There is no sound used in this poem. This poem doesn't have any metaphors or similes. The poem also doesn't have Irony, Allusion, Rhythm, or Rhyme. This poem is about a person feeling so much sadness that they believe a woman with golden hair and green clothes will help them gain their confidence.

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  7. Celia Hoffman

    ‘Se la mia vita da l’aspro tormento’
    If my life of bitter torment and of tears
    could be derided more, and made more troubled,
    that I might see, by virtue of your later years,
    lady, the light quenched of your beautiful eyes,

    and the golden hair spun fine as silver,
    and the garland laid aside and the green clothes,
    and the delicate face fade, that makes me
    fearful and slow to go weeping:

    then Love might grant me such confidence
    that I’d reveal to you my sufferings
    the years lived through, and the days and hours:

    and if time is opposed to true desire,
    it does not mean no food would nourish my grief:
    I might draw some from slow sighs.

    The poem I picked is ‘Se la mia vita da l’aspro tormento’. The tone of the poem is longingness and sadness. The author is longing to tell their loved on the truth but is sad and depressed that he doesn’t have to confidence to do it. I think the poem does have repetition because the author is repeatedly talking about their loved one and how they are making the author feel. The poem does have diction, there are some words and lines that express the author's feeling like “If my life of bitter torment and of tears” and “then Love might grant me such confidence, that I’d reveal to you my sufferings.” There is no structure in this poem because. There is imagery in this poem, and it comes through when the author says lines loke “and the golden hair spun fine as silver.” There isn’t really sound used in this poem and I think that's because it doesn't have a lot of structure or rhythm. There is similes in this poem on being “the golden hair spun fine as silver”. There is no irony or allusion in this poem. There isn’t any rhythm either. I think the author of this poem wanted to tell their loved one of they felt but did not have to courage to express their feelings.

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  8. Shruthi Saravanan

    I turn back at every step I take
    with weary body that has borne great pain,
    and take comfort then from your aspect
    that makes me go on, saying: Ah me!
    Then thinking of the sweet good I leave,
    of the long road, and of my brief life,
    I halt my steps, dismayed and pale,
    and lower my eyes weeping to the ground.
    Sometimes a doubt assails me in the midst
    of sad tears: how can these limbs
    live separated from their spirit?
    But Love replies: Do you not remember
    that this is the privilege of lovers,
    freed from every other human tie?

    The Sonet I chose is called ‘Io mi rivolgo indietro a ciascun passo’ (15). The overall tone for this poem was sad and dark. “with weary body that has borne great pain” and another part where I felt this was “ lower my eyes weeping to the ground”. There was no repetition of a certain statement put the tone and emotion of this poem was brought up many times throughout the sonet. It has a unique form of stanzas which are when emotions that this person is feeling asks them questions or statements such as “that makes me go on, saying: Ah me!”, “in the midst of sad tears: how can these limbs live separated from their spirit?” and “But Love replies: Do you not remember that this is the privilege of lovers, freed from every other human tie?”. The sonet over all doesn’t have too many rhymes to my knowledge but there are a few in the mix. Though there is a lot of imagery in the poem, it’s mainly about how the person sees themself, or how they see their life. “dismayed and pale”.
    This poem shows someone who might be struggling in life, and due to the last stanza I have a prediction that it could deal with this person’s love life. Maybe they just were in a relationship and they miss it, or they are not in a relationship with someone who they really want to be with (“this is the privilege of lovers, freed from every other human tie”). Though overall they are not happy with whatever is going on and they don’t really seem like they see a point in continuing.

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    Replies
    1. Suhani Karki

      I really liked how you explained this poem thoroughly. I like your personal view of the poem!

      Delete
  9. Griffin Littlewood

    There are creatures in the world with such other
    vision that it is protected from the full sun:
    yet others, because the great light offends them
    cannot move around until the evening falls:
    and others with mad desire, that hope
    perhaps to delight in fire, because it gleams,
    prove the other power, that which burns:
    alas, and my place is with these last.
    I am not strong enough to gaze at the light
    of that lady, and do not know how to make a screen
    from shadowy places, or the late hour:
    yet, with weeping and infirm eyes, my fate
    leads me to look on her: and well I know
    I wish to go beyond the fire that burns me.


    I read the poem Son animali al mondo de sí altera. In this poem repetition is shown he talks about light from the fire that burns him multiple times. He shows a lot of diction from repeating ''Fire'' throughout the poem. This poem is mostly made up in quatrains. In this poem there is no rhyming. The attitude is very hard to tell it sounds like they are angry they can't look beyond the light.

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    1. Griffin Littlewood
      ^^ Extension-He also talks about the creatures that are all protected by this light. They say that it burns him but saves the others and how he is not strong enough to see the light. They are not able to look beyond it. It is a mystery to them. It is a mystery they wish to solve but can't because it will end up hurting them.

      Delete
  10. Nick Entner

    To make a graceful act of revenge,
    and punish a thousand wrongs in a single day,
    Love secretly took up his bow again,
    like a man who waits the time and place to strike.
    My power was constricted in my heart,
    making defence there, and in my eyes,
    when the mortal blow descended there,
    where all other arrows had been blunted.
    So, confused by the first assault,
    it had no opportunity or strength
    to take up arms when they were needed,
    or withdraw me shrewdly to the high,
    steep hill, out of the torment,
    from which it wishes to save me now but cannot.

    This shows someone bowing down to someone that is higher up than them or someone that they addor. This shows a mortal bowing down. This shows him getting strength to become stronger and able to do more for the other people.

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  11. Anthony Dimuzio
    To make a graceful act of revenge,
    and punish a thousand wrongs in a single day,
    Love secretly took up his bow again,
    like a man who waits the time and place to strike.
    My power was constricted in my heart,
    making defence there, and in my eyes,
    when the mortal blow descended there,
    where all other arrows had been blunted.
    So, confused by the first assault,
    it had no opportunity or strength
    to take up arms when they were needed,
    or withdraw me shrewdly to the high,
    steep hill, out of the torment,
    from which it wishes to save me now but cannot.
    The tone is serious. The Imagery is cupid shooting love arrows. This poem is in stanzas.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Olivia Dionisio

    To make a graceful act of revenge,
    and punish a thousand wrongs in a single day,
    Love secretly took up his bow again,
    like a man who waits the time and place to strike.
    My power was constricted in my heart,
    making defence there, and in my eyes,
    when the mortal blow descended there,
    where all other arrows had been blunted.
    So, confused by the first assault,
    it had no opportunity or strength
    to take up arms when they were needed,
    or withdraw me shrewdly to the high,
    steep hill, out of the torment,
    from which it wishes to save me now but cannot.

    This shows him gaining strength and it shows him being able to do more for people. The tone of this poem is very strong and has a serious manner.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Luke Newton

    ‘Per fare una leggiadra sua vendetta’
    To make a graceful act of revenge,
    and punish a thousand wrongs in a single day,
    Love secretly took up his bow again,
    like a man who waits the time and place to strike.
    My power was constricted in my heart,
    making defence there, and in my eyes,
    when the mortal blow descended there,
    where all other arrows had been blunted.
    So, confused by the first assault,
    it had no opportunity or strength
    to take up arms when they were needed,
    or withdraw me shrewdly to the high,
    steep hill, out of the torment,
    from which it wishes to save me now but cannot.

    “Per fare una leggiadra sua vendetta”. The english translation is “To make a graceful revenge”. The tone of this poems comes off harsh and angry. It uses strong words such as “assault”. There is no specific stanza structure and there is no pattern involved with this poem. There is really no rhyme or specific order to this poem, but i thought it had a very nice flow to it.

    ReplyDelete
  14. To make a graceful act of revenge,
    and punish a thousand wrongs in a single day,
    Love secretly took up his bow again,
    like a man who waits the time and place to strike.
    My power was constricted in my heart,
    making defence there, and in my eyes,
    when the mortal blow descended there,
    where all other arrows had been blunted.
    So, confused by the first assault,
    it had no opportunity or strength
    to take up arms when they were needed,
    or withdraw me shrewdly to the high,
    steep hill, out of the torment,
    from which it wishes to save me now but cannot.
    The tone is serious. Cupid is shooting his love arrows but it shows a strong tone.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Evan Lin


    ‘Or che ’l ciel et la terra e ’l vento tace’

    Now that the sky and the earth and the wind are silent
    and the wild creatures and the birds are reined in sleep,
    Night leads its starry chariot in its round,
    and the sea without a wave lies in its bed,

    I look, think, burn, weep: and she who destroys me
    is always before my eyes to my sweet distress:
    war is my state, filled with grief and anger,
    and only in thinking of her do I find peace.

    So from one pure living fountain
    flow the sweet and bitter which I drink:
    one hand alone heals me and pierces me:

    and so that my ordeal may not reach haven,
    I am born and die a thousand times a day,
    I am so far from my salvation.

    The tone of the sonnet is happy-ish. The speaker in the sonnet is talking about the bad things happening in his life, but he says that "only in thinking of her do I find peace". The sonnet is made up of 2 quatrains and 2 triplets. The poem personifies many objects. "night leads its starry chariot in its round, and the sea without a wave lies in bed". The speaker is saying that the night is clear and the sea is calm. "So from one pure living fountain flow the sweet and bitter which I drink: one hand alone heals me and pierces me". When he thinks about her, he forgets about all the bad things that are happening around him.

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  16. Robbie Mahlebjian
    O beautiful hand that clutches my heart

    shutting my life in so small a space,

    hand on which Nature and Heaven lavished

    all art, and all care, to do it honour,

    with five pearls of orient colour,

    and only to wound me bitterly and cruelly,

    those long gentle fingers, that Love consents

    to show me naked, now, for my enrichment.

    White, graceful glove dear to me,

    that hides polished ivory and fresh rose,

    who ever saw such sweet spoils on earth?

    If only I had as much of her lovely veil!

    O the fickleness of human things!

    But this is theft, and she comes whom I must not plunder.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Jacob Moore
    ‘S’amor non è, che dunque è quel ch’io sento?
    What do I feel if this is not love?
    But if it is love, God, what thing is this?
    If good, why this effect: bitter, mortal?
    If bad, then why is every suffering sweet?
    If I desire to burn, why the tears and grief?
    If my state is evil, what’s the use of grieving?
    O living death, O delightful evil,
    how can you be in me so, if I do not consent?
    And if I consent, I am greatly wrong in sorrowing.
    Among conflicting winds in a frail boat
    I find myself on the deep sea without a helm,
    so light in knowledge, so laden with error,
    that I do not know what I wish myself,
    And tremble in midsummer, burn in winter.

    The poem that I picked was ‘S’am or non è, che dunque è quel ch’io sento?. The tone in this poem was confusion because the person was constantly questioning things and wasent sure of things. There was most dfinitely repetition in this poem because the author constantly was questioning himself. The diction in the poem refers to the use of the word “Why” and “what” these words are used constantly in the begginig of the poem but later slows down in the poem. The syntax/structure in the poem is around the part where the author is no longr questioning things and he starts to say what position he is in. There was alot of imagery in the poem the author talks about seasons such as midsummer and feelings like grieving. I couldent find any sounds in the poem but there most likely were I was just not able to find any. In the poem there was one big metaphor and that was when the author talked about how he was in a frail boat and he found himself out in the deep sea without a helm. I think the irony in this poem is when the author says that he has very little knowledge because I belive that the author knows what he is talking about and is asking somebody elese these questions. The poem dosent have any allusion. The rythem in the poem was shown with the author questioning things because it stayed at a steady pace the whole time.

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  18. Jillian Boyer

    ‘Dicesette anni à già rivolto il cielo’
    The heavens have revolved for seventeen years
    since I first burned, and I am never quenched:
    but when I think again about my state,
    I feel a chill in the midst of flame.
    The proverb is true, that our hair changes
    before our vices, and though the senses slow
    the human passions have no less intensity:
    making a dark shadow to our heavy veil.
    Alas, ah me, when will that day be,
    when, gazing at the flight of my years,
    I issue from the fire, and such long suffering?
    Will the day come, ever, that only as I wish
    the sweet air that adorns her lovely face
    might please these eyes, and only as is fitting?

    This poem seems to have a theme about age, as they mention “The heavens have revolved for seventeen years since I first burned” and “that our hair changes...and though the senses slow”. So i think there are a number of things that this sonnet could be about. The diction of this poem shows that it is also very much about a passionate love, as he uses words related to a flame, which is a common simile to love. Maybe he is saying how much he will still love her even in his old age, “though the senses slow the human passions have no less intensity”. Or maybe he is too old or too young for her to requite his love, “Will the day come...that only as I wish...her lovely face might please these eyes?”. The diction of this poem shows that it is very much about a passionate love, as he uses words related to a flame, which is a common simile to love.

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  19. Anthony Dimuzio
    In the beginning of the play the soldiers are nervous and afraid of the enemy because they are outnumbered and they think they are going to lose the fight. Then King Henry motivates them by giving a speech that boost their confidence and makes them want to become soldiers and win the battle and it worked and they went out to fight and they won. ''This day is called the feast of Crispian'' ''He that outlives this day, and comes safe home, ''Will stand a tip-toe when the day is named,'' ''And rouse him at the name of Crispian.'' ''For he to-day that sheds his blood with me
    Shall be my brother''

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Due Friday, June 14th - All I Really Needed to Know I Learned in Mr. Pellerin's Freshmen English

Overview :  Go back to our first blog, and walk through the 2018-2019 school year.  Revisit the books we read and our class responses.  Look...