2. “The language of a poem is often that of one thing compared to another.” In the work of at least
two poets you have studied, explore how poets have made their subjects come alive through
different means of comparing them.
In poetry poets often use one thing to represent another thing. This is shown in the poem by Emily Dickinson, “Hope” is the thing with feathers. In this, she uses many comparisons to show what hope is.
In the first stanza, she compares hope to a bird. She describes it as perching in the soul. In this, she paints a symbolic picture of a bird perching in the soul, but it represents hope resting in the soul. Then she goes on to talk about how birds sing tunes without words. This is symbolic for how you can be optimistic for the future, even though you may not know what will happen. Then she says the bird's song never dies which represents hope never dying.
In the second stanza, the author continues comparisons to describe hope. She continues to talk about how the song is heard in the storm but this is purely symbolic for hope pursuing even when times are rough. Then it goes on to talk about how the storm must be angry because the storm tried to hurt the little bird, that helped so many people. This is a comparison for hope. It is saying that some angry people will get in the in the way of hope (aka the bird) and try to stop it and put it down.
However, in the last stanza, the reading continues to take a more optimistic approach. It talks about how the song of the bird can be heard in the chillest land and strangest sea. This is compared to hope, and how it can be found anywhere. Then it continues to talk about how the bird has never asked the author for a crumb in the worst of times. This is metaphoric in the sense that it means hope has never asked anything of her or cost her anything even in the worst of times.
This poem has made hope come alive by comparing it to other things, where hope is represented by the bird and it’s songs. Meanwhile, the storm is compared to people who try to bring her down. Perhaps this story is symbolic of her own life where hope has helped her overcome challenges and other people have tried to bring her down and crush her dreams, but hope continued, and she made it through. The moral of the story is that you will always be able to hear the birds singing even on the roughest of days or that there will always be hope for you even on the roughest of days. In this text the author made hope come alive by painting it as a bird.