Exotic Setting Reading The Great Gatsby
Here, I am standing on the dock, looking outward for the green light to which Fitzgerald mentions in The Great Gatsby.
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
The Convergence of the Twain
In The Convergence of the Twain by Thomas Hardy imagery is used to convey the deep vain of the tremendous Titanic ship, marked with a lifestyle of wealth and taking immense form on the glassy sea, summoned by force to meet a terrible fate. Stanza IV depicts the showiness and wealth the ship is a symbol of: "Jewels in joy designed, to ravish the sensuous mind,"(Hardy, lines 10-11, pg.778). The speaker in the poem condones such a lavish lifestyle of jewels and riches and in a way, through the use of imagery it is understandable how the speaker sees the titanic in a picture of grandiose, pride, and vanity. "The smart ship grew in stature,grace, and hue,"(Hardy, lines 22-23, pg 779). The imagery evoked by these lines further the idea of the extravagance and huge the appearance of the ship and how it can be portrayed as being vain in it's greatness. Furthermore, the speaker goes from the opening stanza, the ship in solitude, standing lone in the sea, to meeting it's fate of ultimate consummation: convergence with an equally extravagant and vain structure, the iceberg, perfect that they are united to the same fate of coinciding together. Just as "The Immanent Will" or "Spinner of the Years" prepares this outcome, the force commands the result in the final stanza: 'Now!' Though, who The Immanent Will is or Spinner of the Years is unknown, the imagery of such a force or creature is shown as having stronger or more ultimate control over the fate of the Titanic, willing it to crash and sink.
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