Sunday, August 4, 2019
Comparing Poems Salome, Hitcher, On My First Sonne and The Man He Kille
Comparing Poems Salome, Hitcher, On My First Sonne and The Man He Killed       The poems, Salome, Hitcher, On My First Sonne and The Man He Killed     all have similar themes. The menacing and threatening ideas that the     poets used are all based around death. However, each poem has a     different perspective on the word with different motives and emotions.       The Man He Killed is about a man who talks of the experience he had of     shooting someone and the regrets he has for it. He feels guilty, as he     has no conceivable explanation for shooting the man. He talks of the     similarities he and his foe had such as 'He thought he'd 'list,     perhaps, Off hand like - just as I.'       The use of hesitation and repetition show the threatening side of the     story. It is almost as if he himself is trying to construct an image     in his mind as not to make himself look or feel guilty or censurable.     The use of colloquialism makes the image even more menacing as we do     not understand greatly of this man. Originally, it could be perceived     as an old man who regrets his actions in the past. It however, could     also be seen as a man who enjoyed killing but must come up with an     excuse to the reasons for killing him. 'My foe of course he was,     that's clear enough, although.'       The poem "Hitcher" has a character that expresses violence in a     completely different manner. The poem is a monologue where the speaker     casually admits to possibly murdering an innocent hitchhiker. The     speaker tells us that he has been taking time off work - faking     illness and not answering his phone. Being threatened with the sack,     he goes in to work again and gets a lift to his hired car. As he     drives out of L...              ...he spot. Both of the poems are confusing     and surreal as Hitcher is about the idea of jealousness compared to     Salome, which is about the idea of hatred.       Both The Man He Killed and On My First Sonne are menacing in a     different way. They both are about guilt and empathy. The Man he     Killed is a dramatic monologue of a man confessing to murder whereas     On My First Sonne is an elegy to his Son. In On My First Sonne the man     is desperate for the reason why his son was taken and feels pain and     rage. When compared to The Man He Killed, he is looking for the reason     for why he shot him but feels neither pain nor anger.       All the poems show menacing and threatening ideas but are not all     based around violence. The poets use technical methods to hide a     story. They do this by using repetition of words, hesitations and     enjambment.                        
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