Thomas' s pain and sorrow "Please do not enter such a fortune gently" and Sexton's "talking to God for Eleanor Boylan" ends our way, life, death, we begin to live We began to die I will. Dylan Thomas's "Do not go into that for elegance" and Anne Sexton's "speaking to God for Eleanor Boylan" represents death performance and loss of loved one. Thomas' message is a necessary hint and concrete energy, Sexton's tone is more passive, quiet and more sad. It is not anger.
Dylan Thomas proposes several different types of figurative languages. There are examples of rhyme, but it is not night. Night lighting, day and night are examples of resonance. It is a metaphor on line 14, "Blindness may burn like a meteor shower". On line 8, he uses personification by giving the ability to "behave" the dance. In The Negro Speaks of Rivers, Langston Hughes compared the existence of the river with the black experience. "My soul grows deep like a river." The third line is a metaphor. Ancient, human, I am an example of rhyme in this poem. Like black people, all these rivers are the main source of surrounding states and civilizations. Hughes invoked a Mississippi song
In a line saying "Please do not enter this lovely night gently," the speaker said that night is good. Night replaces death in a metaphorical way. A reference to "good night" indicates good death that can occur and the ease with which it can be obtained. This is why the lecturer insists that his father makes a living, not "to spend its wonderful night smoothly". Likewise, in the case of a speaker's complaint, "being angry about the death of light" indicates a similar charm of his son. The death of light sees life as a kind of light shining to prove the existence. If the light goes out, life will no longer exist.