Rather than supplying William Wordsworth with an excuse in response to “Invitation into Cumberland”, Charles Lamb justifies the city of London. London is the city he has lived in his whole life, and he holds the city very dear to his heart. Instead of giving Wordsworth a simple rejection, he asks multiple rhetorical questions in an attempt to convey his point. Lamb is very adamant about portraying the glories of living in the city of London, and he desires for Wordsworth to understand why and uses
Mixers by Patricia Hubbell are different and same in a lot of ways, they are both about imaginary poems. They are both about imaginary poems because Concrete Mixers compares concrete mixers to elephants. In The City is So Big you had to imagine the bridges, houses, and trains. The City is So Big is the poem about the scary representation about the city that the writer was in. The author represents the city like he is scared of the city because his tone in the poem was very eerie. An example I have
word Beauty in this section is more of an condescending insult. Columbus’ letter has a slight shift when he discuss the beauty of the objects that he used to manipulate the Natives. He states, “I however made a point that they fhould not be impofed upon by the very trifling and worthlefs articles which were apt to be given them, fuch as broken bits of earthenware, or of glafs, likewife nails; although the truth is, if they might but obtain thefe, they thought themfelves poffeffed of the most beautiful
Often pondered by humanity is the existence of life, life stages, human vs. nature and the finality of it all death. Life, death and the human struggle to understand the existence of a living object in nature or to ponder through man's struggle with the certainty of death is the author’s focus. However, death is not the final frontier; it is but the finality of all life for both humanity and the natural world. Frightening to some, being human and rational beings, both poets ponder the prospect