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Gold Braid Poem What Point Is The Poet Making

Can anyone break this down or summarize this poem . i have read it 5 times and still dont get it?

Highway man wants landlords daughter
Daughter wants highwayman

The Kings men (plod) came to the Inn
To set a trap for the highwayman

The landlords daughter kills herself
the sound warning off her suitor (highwayman)

Last couple of verses> Ghoststory now
the highwan keeps coming, the girl is still waiting.


Mark

Where can I find poems and short stories about Betrayal?

Betrayal

If a man says half himself in the light, adroit
Way a tune shakes into equilibrium,
Or approximates to a note that never comes:

Says half himself in the way two pencil-lines
Flow to each other and softly separate,
In the resolute way plane lifts and leaps from plane:

Who knows what intimacies our eyes may shout,
What evident secrets daily foreheads flaunt,
What panes of glass conceal our beating hearts?


A.S.J. Tessimond

here's a site for classic betrayal poetry by classic poets:
http://www.eliteskills.com/classics.php

What is the meaning behind A Day in Autumn by R.S. Thomas?

The first line, and the last three lines, explain the meaning of the middle lines, which describe a landscape, apparently outside a home where the poet is performing chores.

The poet describes a bird on the lawn and a tree in the fall, when the few leaves that remain are colored golden. He stops from his menial activities long enough to take in the brilliant scene, so that he will remember it during the winter, when it will comfort him amidst the cold and darkeness.

A Day in Autumn

It will not always be like this,
The air windless, a few last
Leaves adding their decoration
To the trees’ shoulders, braiding the cuffs
Of the boughs with gold; a bird preening

In the lawn’s mirror. Having looked up
From the day’s chores, pause a minute,
Let the mind take its photograph
Of the bright scene, something to wear
Against the heart in the long cold.

R.S. Thomas (1913 - 2000 / Wales)

Ronald Stuart Thomas was born in Cardiff in 1913, the son of a sea captain. He was educated at University College of North Wales and later undertook theological training at St Michael's College in Cardiff. He was ordained as an Anglican priest in 1936.

During his time as a rector he began to write poetry and verse. His writing career continued for fifty years during which time he produced twenty volumes of poetry and was nominated for a Nobel prize and awarded the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry. Whilst religion, understandably, was one of the major themes of his work, he also wrote about nature and about Welsh history. Thomas was fervent and often outspoken Welsh patriot and even wrote his autobiography Nab (Nobody - 1985) in Welsh.

Thomas enjoyed working in the countryside and spent his whole time as a clergyman working in rural parishes. He retired in 1978. His first wife Elsi, by whom he had a son, died in 1991 after 51 years of marriage. He later married his second wife, Betty, who was with him until his death. He died at the age of 87, on 25th September 2000.

Whilst still remembered for his Welsh republican views, it is for his religious poetry that he is still held in high regard. Of his work, he said:
"My chief aim is to make a poem. You make it for yourself firstly, and then if other people want to join in... then there we are." His Collected Poems was published in 1993 and is still available today.

Analysis of the poem "Evening Hawk" by Robert Warren?

Evening Hawk Analysis

The poem “Evening Hawk” by Robert Penn Warren is a sophisticated poem which relies heavily on imagery to convey its meaning. The language of the poem paints a metaphorical picture of a stealthy hawk while conveying the meaning behind this image through use of rhythm and metaphors.
Rhythm is used effectively in this piece to portray the image of the hawk gliding and swooping. The beginning lines of the first stanza are flowing, with a couple of commas slowing down the speech, which emphasizes the smoothness and grace of the hawk’s flight. Then line 6 abruptly cuts off this image with it’s sudden and terse sound. This happens again with “his wing” on the next line. The diction of the poem is not particularly advanced, but it is shaped to fit the rhythm needed to express its imagery while also remaining dense with meaning. Which is quick and choppy, yet imitates the sudden swing of the scythe which the hawk’s wing represents.
@ Read more
http://bookstove.com/poetry/analysis-the...

Also...
The poem Evening Hawk may appear to be about a hawk going about during the night, yet it is more than that. It is a poem in which Robert Penn Warren illustrates the transition from day to night and compares it to human flaws.
As the hawk is being introduced, Warren describes the scene using geometric terms such as "angularity," "plane," and "geometries." These words pinpoint on what is being emphasized and which the author is trying to direct our attention to. The shapes created help us to picture in our mind what form they appear to be. As the hawk approaches however, night comes closer and the sharp vivid shapes blend into one another. This stanza can also be compared to human nature as well. The day represents the human surface, what they want everyone to perceive. However, just as the hawk approaches and day changes to night, the surface becomes blurred and blend together while the things beneath the surface becomes clearer.
@ Read more
http://www.studymode.com/essays/Evening-...
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