Find the sound images used in the poem brook
Answers
Answer:
Lord Alfred Tennyson’s poem ‘The Brook’ is full of imagery. The two images that are most appealing to me are when the brook seems to be hurrying down the hills and slipping ‘between the ridges’. It almost sounds like a swift footed child who is running down a hill at top speed and enjoying himself. There are elements of speed, enjoyment, and naughtiness.
The other image is that of the brook playing in the fields. It annoys and hurts the land in places where it causes erosion and in other places, it causes deposits and makes ‘many a fairyland’. Here again, the brook behaves like a child, going one way and then another. Also, like the child both enjoys with and irritates the parent, the brook does the same with the land. The term ‘fairyland’ reminds me of fairytales that children love to hear.
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Answer:
Tennyson’s ‘The Brook’ is an imagery rich poem. From the first to the last line the diction used in the poem conjures up many images in the reader’s mind. The brook flowing rapidly in the high mountains, sunlight reflecting in its clear water, trouts and graylings swimming in it, its merging into the river beyond Philip’s farm, its water eddying in bays, etc. are a few of the many images evoked by the words in the poem.