identify the elements of poetry used in the poem gabu the battering restlessness of the sea, brutal the daylong bashing of its heart, the waste of centuries us grey and dead, and neutral where the sea has breached its brine, where the split salt of its heart lies spread, among the dark habiliments of time, the vital splendor misses, all things foreited are most loved and dear➡️➡️the choices are imagery diction symbolism figures of speech rhyme scheme stanza
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Identify the elements of poetry used in the poem gabu
"The battering restlessness of the sea,
brutal the daylong bashing of its heart,
the waste of centuries us grey and dead,
and neutral where the sea has breached its brine,
where the split salt of its heart lies spread,
among the dark habiliments of time,
the vital splendor misses, all things forfeited are most loved and dear."
Answer:
ANALYSIS-
- First stanza:
‘Battering restlessness’ is simply temporary chaos. Words like ‘sea’ and ‘beach’ are wont to denote life. ‘Wasteland’ probably refers to the land filled with ‘foulness’ made by humans. - Second stanza:
‘Brutal bashing’ could also be equivalent to life’s chaos. ‘Rock stones’ may depict devastation, and ‘elemental wound’ ask the depths of the sea. - Third stanza:
‘Waste of the centuries’ may mean the ‘past,’ and centuries-worth of waste, pertaining to ‘brine’ and ‘split salt’ washed off to the shore, becoming ‘grey and dead’; colors related to emptiness. - Fourth stanza:
Vital splendor’ may pertain to the once ‘glory’ of the beach, and therefore the tide being ‘ageless’ means that it has been on a ‘never ending journey.’ - Fifth stanza:
The ocean containing a ‘habit of shores,’ may depict the connection between ‘life’ and ‘death.’ ‘Shore’ can mean ‘afterlife’ during this stanza’s context.
INTERPRETATION-
- Within the first stanza, the author was trying to spotlight the destruction brought by the sea’s ‘restlessness’ eliminating life forms. The beach, once serene, is getting exhausted .
- The second stanza maintains the identical savage tone and says that the sea’s madness is subsequent and powerful. Again, the thought of something peaceful is being ruined by the sea.
- The third stanza explains the allusion of ‘wasteland’ from the primary stanza to time. Time carries memories, even the unhappy ones.
- The fourth stanza reflects that even everything that has of all time been loved, are often destroyed and lost.
- The last and fifth stanza says that life is restricted by time.
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