the poem another sky despicts the everlasting importance of home
Answers
Answered by
17
Answer:
Some say this poem is an invitation to return back home from a sister to a brother. Others say it shows the everlasting importance of home. Everything else can fade away, but home remains bright for all time. ... The poetess is asking her brother to read her poems, for in her poems there is a different world.
Explanation:
MARK AS BRAINLIEST
Answered by
6
Answer:
This poem was written by Emily Dickinson to her brother, Austin, the eldest of the Dickinson’ children, who was in Boston at the time. It was sent to him along with her letters. Different people interpret this poem in different ways, and the real truth behind this piece of poetry can be said to be known only to the persons involved.
Explanation:
Poetic Devices in There is Another
Metaphor: The poem’s name itself is a metaphor. ‘There is another sky’, the starting line of the poem, is a metaphor for ‘there is another place for you’. The poetess is saying that though he, the brother is in someplace else; there is a home waiting for him.
Repetition: ‘There is another sky’ and ‘there is another sunshine’; this gives a poetic vibe enhancing the effect of the individual meanings. ‘Never mind…’ and ‘Never mind…’ in lines 5 and 6 also use the same poetic device. They put an emphasis on the ‘do not mind’ part. Same is the case with ‘Here’ in both lines 7 and 9. In line 1 and line 3 of the poem, repeated sentences are used.
Onomatopoeia: In the 12th line of the poem, use of ‘hum’ is seen in relation with bees.
Hyperbole: There is not a place where frost does not visit sometime or the other. Similarly, flowers are not for eternity. They fade with time, dry and die. But this is exactly what the poetess’s implies in the lines 10 and 11. This is an exaggeration which cannot possibly be true. Hence, it is a hyperbole.
Slant Rhyme: Fair-there, green-been are examples of slant rhyme used in the poem in the lines 2-4 and 8-10 in the poem.
mark me as brainliest plzzzzz
Similar questions