A Psalm of Life

A Psalm of Life Literary Elements

Speaker or Narrator, and Point of View

The Young Man

Form and Meter

ABAB

Metaphors and Similes

Metaphor: Life is spoken of as a battle that we must fight to survive.
Metaphor: A person's accomplishments are "footprints on the sands of time"
Simile: "Still, like muffled drums, are beating / Funeral marches to the grave" compares our hearts to quiet drums whose rhythms beat onward to death

Alliteration and Assonance

Alliteration: "In the world's broad field of battle, / In the bivouac of Life, / Be not like dumb, driven cattle!"
Assonance: "Still achieving, still pursuing"

Irony

-It is ironic that a young man has a better sense of the meaning of life rather than an older teacher. We expect experience to lead to wisdom; but the speaker argues that the teacher's resignation and refusal of activity has led him to miss life's meaning. Since he thinks life is worthless, he has not been open to learning from experience, and his greater experience has not led to insights about life.

Genre

Poetry

Setting

The 19th century

Tone

Hopeful, dynamic, sincere

Protagonist and Antagonist

None

Major Conflict

Whether the young man will be able to convince the psalmist—and himself, and perhaps the reader—that life is more than just waiting for death, but rather about action and striving and hope.

Climax

When the young man claims we must "Act,— act in the living present!"

Foreshadowing

n/a

Understatement

n/a

Allusions

-"Dust thou art, to dust returnest" alludes to Genesis 3:19
-The words "psalmist" and "numbers" allude to books of the Bible

Metonymy and Synecdoche

n/a

Personification

-"Let the dead Past bury its dead!"

Hyperbole

n/a

Onomatopoeia

-"muffled drums"