Song - In this poem, I am expressing my view of women. John Dorn: Song A) expresses the view of women in this poem. John Dawn's poetry has a different view on women. This poem represents a very negative view towards women, especially if "women do not live real and fairly". Even so, a beautiful kind woman can not be found. When she is, she will forge two or three other men. He believes in the certainty of a woman's immorality, but she is a will / a fake. Random indiscriminate, it is very random it will be two people, three people.
The three poems I would like to discuss are 'Maid', 'Song of Mouse' and 'Song of Worm'. All three poems use a strong image to show Margaret Atwood's view of how women are treated. She uses several shades of her poems, and the tone that she normally uses for these three poems is frustration and anger. Another thing that she likes to use is the style of poetry, which keeps the emotions of readers going to the last line of the story. Almost all poems are free verses, and I can not find rhythmic or rhyming equipment. She likes to use symbols to show her point of view, and when they use them, they are direct. One of the interesting things that I found in her work is that she likes to use something like anthropomorphism, but it is also against the contrary. She gives people the quality of animals. Her style of writing is unique and funny, and this style is reflected in three poems.
The preface calls this poem a "song of a song" and is a structure commonly used to express the greatest and most beautiful thing (such as the holy god) of that kind in the Hebrew Bible. Poetry begins with a self-description about the admiration for a female lover and the "daughter of Jerusalem". She insists on her darkness under the sun and compares it to "Kidal's tent" (nomad). ) And "Solomon's Curtain" The conversations between lovers are as follows: Ask a woman to meet a man; he answers with a slightly tingling tone. They competed for flattery ("My beloved people competed to provide a lot of henna in my En-Gedy's vineyard", "Lin apple tree", "Yuri bushi", lay them down Sharing is like a canopy At the end of the section, the woman told her daughter so as not to stir up her love like her until she was ready