Wednesday, March 14, 2012

blog 1

 

From Wikipedia

This week we are studying closed forms poems in class, so I decide to write an entry on “Rose” this was published in 5-18-2008.

This is the first time that I’m doing a blog and creating a paper such as this.I choose this poem because "the roses never die"their essence always exist.  All of them are different and have different colors. They have been used to symbolize the love between people, and all occasion.The poets use them to describe the beautiful of the things.
There were several varieties of rose in the ancient world, as there are hundreds in the
modern, but the rose in poetry has always been red (or
“rose”) in color, unless otherwise described. “Red as a rose” is the prime
poetic cliché, and poets have used every other term for red to describe it,
such as Shakespeare’s “deep vermilion” (Sonnets98) or the “crimson joy”
of Blake’s “Sick Rose”. The rose blooms in the spring, and does not
bloom long; the contrast is striking between its youth in the bud and its
full-blown maturity, and again between both these phases and its final
scattering of petals on the ground, all in the course of a week or two. It is
rich in perfume, which seems to emanate from its dense and delicate folds
of petals. It is vulnerable to the canker-worm. And it grows on a plant with
thorns.  All these features have entered into its range of symbolic uses.


1 comment:

  1. I chose this poem, because the roses never die, their essence always exists.All of them are different and have different colors.
    They have been used to symbolize the love between people, and all occasion. The poets use them to describe the beautiful of the things.

    ReplyDelete