Friday, February 8, 2019
A Critical Examination Of My Lover In White :: essays research papers
After reading "My Lover in White," for the first time, I thought of a metrical composition written by Shakespeare that seemed to be in some ways similar in content. The mention of the fair maidens external(a) the gate and the poets observation that his shaft is not with the rest reminds me of Shakespeares Sonnet CXXX. The poem is about the poets love of a woman that is not the most splendid in comparison to most fantasy women she is not perfect, but in his eyes she is only that he could possibly want. It seems that the content of this poem also reflects a devoted love to a maiden that may not be the fairest of them all, moreover she gives him all the delight he needs "She completely gives me delight". The note at the end of the poem comments that the man praises his lover..., contrasted with bonny maidens.... This seems to support the insinuation that perhaps his maiden is not of the same aggregate as the other dating maidens. The poet does not need anythi ng other than the love he receives from this one maiden. It is possible that the product positions that state she is not there out of doors the gate could be referring to something more literal. It could perhaps be literal in the sense that something has happened to her, which is why she is not out there. The note at the ass of the poem clarifies that the gate in the poem refers to the eastern gate of the expectant of Zheng. The significance of the eastern gate seems to be important to the meaning of the lines, however that importance is unclear to the uninformed reader. The two stanzas of the poem are crying yet with subtle differences. It seems common throughout many traditional Chinese poems that the first two lines of each stanza are very much uniform and repetitive, while the following lines show more of a distinction. The first line reads "outside the eastern gate," while the first line of the second reads "outside the outer gate". The next line compares maidens to clouds, while the second line of the second stanza compares them to blooms. The poet uses nature in both stanzas to compare the fairness of the maidens. The one-quarter lines of each, say in different ways that his love is not where all the other maidens are.
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