Love Calls Us to the Things of This World

Love Calls Us to the Things of This World Literary Elements

Speaker or Narrator, and Point of View

An unnamed lyric speaker, possibly standing in for Wilbur

Form and Meter

largely free verse

Metaphors and Similes

simile: "moving and staying like white water"

Alliteration and Assonance

alliteration: "air is all awash with angels"

Irony

n/a

Genre

lyric poem

Setting

a quiet bedroom, near a window, near dawn

Tone

serene, untroubled, celebratory, contemplative

Protagonist and Antagonist

n/a

Major Conflict

n/a

Climax

n/a

Foreshadowing

n/a

Understatement

n/a

Allusions

n/a

Metonymy and Synecdoche

synecdoche: "The eyes" in line 1 stand in for the sleeping figure and, later, for the soul that will rise from it.

Personification

anthropomorphism: the soul, throughout the poem, is made to seem like a perceiving body, even though it does not have a bodily form.

Hyperbole

n/a

Onomatopoeia

the "punctual rape" in the second-to-last stanza mimics, with its sound, the puncturing of the dream taking place