"Neutral tones poetry analysis thomas hardy" Essays and Research Papers

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    Neutral Tones by Thomas Hardy (1867) Neutral Tones BY THOMAS HARDY We stood by a pond that winter day‚ And the sun was white‚ as though chidden of God‚ And a few leaves lay on the starving sod;          – They had fallen from an ash‚ and were gray. Your eyes on me were as eyes that rove Over tedious riddles of years ago; And some words played between us to and fro          On which lost the more by our love. The smile on your mouth was the deadest thing Alive enough to have

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    which Hardy uses the natural world to convey his feelings about love. Throughout Neutral TonesHardy effectively communicates his feelings about love using the natural world and its (neutral) colours and characteristics. His use of rich imagery of the natural world produces a melancholic note about love‚ which resounds through the whole poem portraying the end of an affair between Hardy and his former lover. The backdrop of the poem is set in the first stanza as a ‘winter day’. Hardy uses the

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    Neutral Tones Analysis

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    "Neutral Tones" by Thomas Hardy is very neutral in tone; its melancholic note is created by a narrator reflecting on the termination of a relationship. Throughout‚ a soothing yet depressing language illustrates this duality. Hardy uses a variety of techniques to highlight sadness and emotions in the narrator. In the first stanza the scene and atmosphere is set‚ "we stood by a pond that winter day".No harsh sounds are present and the sentence epitomises the tranquillity yet disheartening nature of

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    Thomas Hardy is an intriguing and enigmatic poet whose poetic themes deviate from war‚ nature and heroism to love‚ the transience of life and the death of the soul. Though penned some eighty years ago‚ the poetry of Thomas Hardy remains remarkably accessible and identifiable to a modern reader. While some critic’s claim that his poetic writing is archaise. His language elegant but awkward and his work difficult to comprehend‚ I enjoyed the poetry of Hardy for its diversity of themes‚ its earthly

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    Neutral Tones Essay

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    Compare and Contrast ‘Neutral Tones’ by Thomas Hardy and ‘Absence’ by Elizabeth Jennings. In both poems Thomas Hardy and Elizabeth Jennings they have lost a person they were close to. There are some similarities in their feeling but there responses are different. Neither poets can forget the experience and are reminiscing on the situation. They are both going back to the place where they were with the people they loved. However in ‘Absence’ she has actually gone to the place they were together

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    Thomas Hardy

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    Thomas Hardy’s life can be divided into three phases. The first phase (1840-1870) embraces childhood‚ adolescence‚ apprenticeship‚ first marriage‚ early poems and his first unpublished novel. The second phase (1871-1897) is marked by intensive writing‚ which resulted in the publication of 14 novels and a number of short stories. In the third phase (1898-1928)‚ the period of the writer’s rising fame‚ he abandoned writing novels and returned to poetry. Thomas Hardy was an English poet and novelist

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    thomas hardy

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    Thomas Hardy‚ OM (2 June 1840 – 11 January 1928) was an English novelist and poet. A Victorian realist‚ in the tradition of George Eliot‚ he was also influenced both in his novels and poetry by Romanticism‚ especially by William Wordsworth.[1] Charles Dickens is another important influence on Thomas Hardy.[2] Like Dickens‚ he was also highly critical of much in Victorian society‚ though Hardy focused more on a declining rural society. While Hardy wrote poetry throughout his life‚ and regarded himself

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    Thomas Hardy

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    Profesorado Superior de Lenguas Vivas Teacher’s name: Susana Company Thomas Hardy Thomas Hardy was born in June the 2nd in 1840 in Higher Bockhampton‚ a hamlet in the parish of Stinsford to the east of Dorchester in Dorset‚ England; and died in January the 11th in 1928 due pleurisy in December 1927. He was an English novelist‚ poet and a Victorian realist in the tradition of George Eliot; he was influenced both in his novels and in his poetry by Romanticism‚ especially William Wordsworth. Charles Dickens was

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    Thomas Hardy

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    Thomas Hardy Frank & Chelsea Here are a few poems and things to write about. The Man he Killed The short lines‚ simple rhyme scheme‚ and everyday language make the piece almost nursery rhyme like in simplicity‚ again in ironic contrast to its less than pleasant subject. The Voice Though the vigorous anapaestic metre of the poem helps convey this initial hope‚ it proves unwieldy for Hardy‚ as is evident in the clumsy third stanza‚ where “listlessness” rhymes with Hardy’s unfortunate coinage

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    Thomas Hardy

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    Literature in English: American Poetry Hardy’s Poetry Presents the World as Terrible According to one of the Thomas Hardy’s autobiography‚ he presents a picture of himself as a sensitive young man who attended church regularly and believed in a personal God who ruled the universe. Then when Hardy went to London in his early twenties and discovered such intellectual ferment as caused by Charles Darwin’s “On the Origin of Species by Means and Natural Selection” (1859)‚ Hardy then lost his faith and

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