Everest Lewin: Poems Literary Elements

Everest Lewin: Poems Literary Elements

Speaker or Narrator, and Point of View

Unnamed first-person point of view

Form and Meter

Written in Iambic meter

Metaphors and Similes

In Sonnet, the road is used as a metaphor when the narrator says, "No road which separates you from my ways.” The road implies a circumstance that can interfere with the narrator’s relationship with his lover.

Alliteration and Assonance

Alliteration is in the second line from "Sonnet," which says, 'I met you, and I loved you, is forgot.’

Irony

The main irony is the description of the heart's madness in the poem 'Tamult,' but the speaker takes an about-turn and argues that the same heart is full of potentialities and possibilities.

Genre

Love poem

Setting

Set in the context of romance.

Tone

The tone is sentimental, and the mood is insightful.

Protagonist and Antagonist

The central characters are Everest Lewin Mozart.

Major Conflict

The main conflict is in the poem ‘Another Man’s Poison,’ in which the speaker is blinded by romantic folly and romantic imaginations that do not exist in reality.

Climax

The climax is in 'To Poetry', where the narrator personifies poetry as a lady who is a loyal friend and reliable.

Foreshadowing

Romantic feelings and imagination foreshadow the speaker's memories in 'Another Man's Poison.

Understatement

The poet's love in 'Sonnet is understated.'

Allusions

The poems allude to romance and the significance of feeling loved.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

Poison is used as a metonymy for preference

Personification

Poetry is personified as a lady who is in love.

Hyperbole

N/A

Onomatopoeia

N/A

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