"And consummation comes, and jars two hemispheres." line 33I don't think this poem takes place in chronological order. It begins with the ship, the Titanic, already sunken below the sea and ultimately ends with the devastating collision. When many people think about the tragic Titanic shipwreck, they think about all the lives that were lost. But, in this poem, it seems that the author is more concerned and hurt by the loss of the ship itself. I think that this author must have had some sort of connection to the ship. Perhaps he was a staff member or craftsman. I highly doubt he was a passenger due to his judgement of them, "Deep from human vanity." Either way, he had some passion about the ship. His tone seems distraught when saying, "The sea worm crawls--grotesque, slimed, dumb, indifferent." As the poem progresses, I feel like the author saw some sort of inevitability to the crash. Based on my background knowledge of the Titanic, maybe he knew about the ignored ice warnings. Lines such as "A Shape of Ice, for the time far and dissociate." and "In shadowy silent distant grew the Iceberg too," support my thinking of inevitability. I think that this poem is reflective upon the popularity and status of the ship. Looking back, the author can see how unimportant vanity was, because ultimately, the ship ended up under the sea.
Monday, September 5, 2011
Imagery Poetry 5- The Convergence of the Twain
Labels:
Inevitability,
Titanic
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