Wednesday, May 29, 2019
Natalie Meyers Hidden Heart and Astophils Astohpil and Stella Essay
Natalie Meyers hole-and-corner(a) Heart and Astophils Astohpil and StellaLonging to bleed my love into words that stain his  sum total,That in my wounding he take, delight that has no wearDelight may light a fire, of burning thoughts to start,To fan the flame of pity, would help to spark his care,Desperate to  fork up my sorrow with words equal to art.Searching round the depths for lucid language, fair,The force behind my mind locked round a solid part.Some spry ideas seeped,  by dint of my reason with a tear,But whisked into a wind, that twirled them in a haze,And dizzy fog that blurs my head into a stare,Becomes a source of strength to break my  pachydermous gaze.Frustration takes a dive, and offers me a dare,A new voice (not my own), calls me from within,Write with your heart not head and now I can begin.The Spirit to  scrivenerThe desire to express ones feelings can be a complicated and stressful task. In the free imitation poem, Hidden Heart, by Natalie Meyers, a young woman exp   resses the frustration she experiences when trying to write her loved one. Likewise, the first sequence of Sir Philip Sydneys sonnet, Astrophil and Stella, explores one mans struggle to write from his heart and eliminate the yearning to select the perfect words for a letter written to his love, Stella. Both Astrophil and Meyers are distraught over what to say and how to say it. Since Hidden Heart is an imitation of Sydneys sonnet, several parallels can be drawn between their common theme, word choice, and form. The Hidden Hearts theme of free expression, its diction, and structure,  mustiness be compared and contrasted with intertextual references from Astrophil and Stella, in order to effectively analyze it.Throughout the poem, Natalie ...  ...each a resolution by the end of the poem. Both meter and rhyme are  truly essential in building a solid, yet fluid structure to each poem. Hidden Heart mirrors Astrophil and Stella in many ways, but contains several  extraordinary qualities a   s well. Natalies account was based on personal experience, where Astrophil is a character creation of Sir Philip Sydney. The similarities and differences of the theme, diction, and structure helped enrich both poems without cheapening them. Overall, both stressed the  magnificence of writing with ones heart to convey true emotion instead of agonizing over the literary quality of a personal letter. Also, the  rhetorical aspects of each poem carefully wove in a tone that contributed to their personality. With all of these attributes combine, Natalie and Sydney demonstrate the value found in linking two poems together through imitation.                  
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