In the two verses "Crabbit Old Woman and Piano", both writers use the present and past tenses to build emotions and evoke sympathy for one's emotions and their emotions. In the poetry of the piano, Lawrence introduced us at the piano during his childhood. He explained to us the relationship between his childhood memory and his mother, and the comfort that he had in front of her. The first two lines of each of the three sections are current tense and the prosodic system is a small rhyme.
In the two verses of Crabbit old lady and my grandmother's aging, "A Crabbit old lady" and "my grandmother" described the aging experience in a very different way. When my grandmother wrote from the point of view of the speaker, in "Old Woman of Crab" this poem was written from the perspective of an old lady. The poem "The Crabbit Old Woman" began when a woman grew old in an old man's home, and she told her nurses her troubles. "What did you see, a nurse, when you saw me." Then the old lady talked to us about the change in each stage and her life.
"Crabbit Old Woman" and "Remember" are similar in a sense. Because they all have discussion voices. "Crabbit Old Woman" saw an old lady whose purpose was to try to convince a nurse a typical stereotype of an old man. Since the old man is often associated with it, the title of the poem evokes a sense of death instantly. The first 22 rows are a series of questions to nurses trying to reveal the typical beliefs of nurses as they care for older women. The turning point of this poem is from line 23 to line 24. "And open your eyes, you are not looking at me." This line is an old lady who asks the nurse to admit it. The first negative attack on the nurse is now positive and happy memory as we are led in her life