Edwin Arlington Robinson 's "Richard Collie" talker is a low level working citizen who conveys the name to the reader as Richard Coco. Richard Corey's famous gentleman, he eventually put a bullet through his head. Every time a narrator, including a narrator, gazes at him every time he sees him. He is "very slim" (4) and is always full of charm and dress. He is very polite. He will use simple "morning" to please everyone's heart. Then the talkie immediately explained that in "calm summer evening" he executed himself by placing a gun at his head.
Edwin Arlington Robinson's poem "Richard Corey" is a poem about a nobleman of a town named Richard Corey. It is written in four quadrant sections, each with a prosodic scheme of a, b, a, b. When explaining Richard Corey, the use of the exaggeration of the poet and the comparison of the royal family helped publicly advertise him, and he said casually suicide of Cory casually shocked the readers. In the first section of the poem, I introduce Richard Cory as a respected townman. The second line uses the word "we are people". This suggests that citizens think they are at a different level than Cory. Imagine that they are "on the sidewalk" and imagine that the people sitting in the street are staring at the wealthy nobles walking. The third line says Corey is "a gentleman from single to crown." The word crown obviously has the meaning of the royal family and is more Corey than the public.
In "Richard Corey", Edwin Arlington Robinson explored the deceptive behavior of the appearance. Richard Corey is a wealthy person who is praised by those who think he is more than his misfortune and is jealous. Richard curry is a model of success, dignity, and wealth. Measure standards of everyone. But Richard Corey has nothing; the desire to live. - In the novel "Killing a Robin", Raped black man Tom Robinson had no opportunity to have a fair trial. There is evidence to prove this and evidence of the novel itself during the period in which it occurred. Tom Robinson made an unfair trial. Because it was a sentencing sentence for White, a useless family, Ewell.