William Carlos Williams and Robert Frost - CHSVocab10-3
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Transcript William Carlos Williams and Robert Frost - CHSVocab10-3
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The Red
Wheelbarrow
By William Carlos Williams
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William Carlos Williams
Born: 1883 in Rutherford, New Jersey.
Began writing poetry: While a student at Horace Mann
High School, at which time he made the decision to
become both a writer and a doctor.
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Continued
Returned to: Rutherford where he sustained his medical
practice throughout his life.
Published in: Small magazines and embarked on a prolific
career as a poet, novelist, essayist, and playwright.
Experimented with: New techniques of meter and lineation;
He sought to: Invent an entirely fresh and singularly
American poetry style, whose subject matter was centered
on the everyday circumstances of life and the lives of
common people.
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His major works include: Kora in Hell (1920), Spring and All
(1923), Pictures from Brueghel and Other Poems (1962), (five
volumes) Paterson (1963, 1992), and Imaginations (1970).
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QUIZ BREAK
What style does William Carlos Williams write in?
Imagism – the capturing of an instant of an everyday moment in poetry.
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The Red Wheelbarrow
so much depends
upon
a red wheel barrow
glazed with rain water
beside the white chickens.
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Analysis
Our speaker is invisible.
There's something about the way in which our speaker
reflects on an object as ordinary as a wheelbarrow that
makes us think he has learned a thing or two about life.
It feels like the wheelbarrow is being personified because
it’s given so much importance.
All the speaker has to do to paint the image for us is to tell
that it is a "red wheelbarrow”.
Alliteration in the first line, due to all of those "s" sounds.
Assonance of that long "a" sound in "glazed" and "rain”.
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QUIZ BREAK
Why does the wheelbarrow seem personified?
It seems personified because it says so much depends
on the red wheelbarrow, as though it were a
breadwinner or a god.
What literary devices are being used in “The Red
Wheelbarrow”?
Alliteration and assonance
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Death of a Hired Man
By Robert Frost
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Robert Frost
Robert Frost was born on March 26, 1874 in San Francisco, California.
When Frost was two years old, his mother fled to Lawrence,
Massachusetts, to get away from her husband, who was a drunkard. She
stayed there until her second baby was born, Jeannie, Robert's sister.
Then they went back to San Francisco.
By the time he was 11, Robert Frost had crossed the U.S. three times.
Robert never had any jobs, except being a poet and he published many
poems in his lifetime.
Some of them are: The Road not Taken, The Raft of Flowers, The Pasture,
and others.
Robert also won four Pultizer awards and read The Gift Outright at the
inauguration of John. F. Kennedy.
He died on January 29, 1963 of a heart attack.
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Summary
A farm wife, Mary, pleads with her husband, Warren, to take
back a former farmhand who has always disappointed him.
The farmhand, Silas, is very ill, and Mary is convinced that he
has returned to the farm to die. Warren has not seen Silas in
sick, and is still angry over the contract that Silas broke when
them in the past, does not want to have Silas on his property.
Mary’s compassionate urging eventually convinces him, but
when Warren goes to get Silas, he is already dead.
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QUIZ BREAK
What is the poem about?
A man and a woman, farm owners, who are faced with a dying, temporary
employee coming to their house to die.
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Analysis
This poem contains many of the stereotypical characteristics
of Frost’s poetry, particularly the rural environment, the
everyday struggle of the farm couple over their relationship
to the farmhand, and the colloquial dialogue.
Frost outlines the traditions of duty and hard work that he
explores in many of his other poems. Silas returns to the farm
so that he can fulfill his broken contract to Warren and die
honorably, having fulfilled his duty to the family and to the
community.
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Continued
Silas’ return to the farm also signals the importance of the
work that he performed on the farm as a way to give his life
meaning and satisfaction. Silas does not have any children or
close family to provide a sense of fulfillment in his last hours;
only the sense of duty and the satisfaction of hard work can
provide him with comfort.
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Continued
The poem also creates a clear dichotomy between Mary and
Warren, between Mary’s compassionate willingness to help
Silas and Warren’s feelings of resentment over the broken
contract. Mary follows the model of Christian forgiveness that
expects her to help Silas because he needs it, not because he
deserves it. Warren, on the other hand, does not believe that
they owe anything to Silas and feels that they are not bound
to help him.
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QUIZ BREAK
What distinguishes Frost’s poetry from other poets’?
The rural setting, the everyday struggle of the farm couple over their
relationship to the farmhand, and the colloquial dialogue.
Why did Silas go to that farm, specifically, even though his
rich brother lived nearby?
So that he can fulfill his broken contract to Warren and die honorably,
having fulfilled his duty to the family and to the community.
Why does Warren feel he owes nothing to Silas?
Because Silas was never a good or especially special farmhand.
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Imagism
A twentieth century movement in European and American
poetry that advocated the creation of hard clear images,
concisely expressed in everyday Speech.
A great example of this is “The Great Figure” by William
Carlos Williams
“Among the rain/ and lights/ I saw the figure 5/ in gold/ on a red/
fire truck/ moving tense/ unheeded /to gong clangs /siren howls
/and wheels rumbling /through the dark city”
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Objectivity
Suggests that the writer’s purpose is to report facts, avoiding
personal judgments and feelings.
“Design” by Robert Frost
“I found a dimpled spider, fat and white, /On a white heal-all,
holding up a moth/…Then steered the white moth thither in the
night?
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Subjectivity
In terms of writing, suggests that the writer’s primary
purpose is to express personal feelings, and ideas
“This Is Just To Say” by William Carlos Williams
“I have eaten/the plums /that were in/ the icebox/ and which/ you
were probably/ saving /for breakfast/ Forgive me/ they were
delicious/ so sweet/ and so cold”
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Plot
The series of related events in a story or play, sometimes
called the story line.
“This is Just to Say” by William Carlos Williams
“I have eaten/the plums /that were in/ the icebox/ and which/ you
were probably/ saving /for breakfast/ Forgive me/ they were
delicious/ so sweet/ and so cold”
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Theme
The light about human life that is revealed in literary work
“Design” by Robert Frost
“I found a dimpled spider, fat and white,/ On a white heal-all,
holding up a moth/ Like a white piece of rigid satin cloth/[…] A
snowdrop spider, a flower like a froth/[…]What but design of
darkness to appall?/ If design govern in a thing so small.
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Flashback
A scene that interrupts the normal chronological sequence of
events in a story to depict something that happened at an
earlier time
“The Great Figure” by William Carlos Williams
“Among the rain/ and lights/ I saw the figure 5/ in gold/ on a red/
fire truck/ moving tense/ unheeded /to gong clangs /siren howls
/and wheels rumbling /through the dark city”
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Foreshadowing
The use of hints and clues to suggest what will happen later
in a plot
“Nothing gold can stay” by Robert Frost
“Nature’s first green is gold,/[…] Then leaf subsides to leaf./ So
eden sank to grief,/ So dawn goes down today. /Nothing gold can
stay”
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Motivation
The reasons for a character’s behavior
“This Is Just To Say” by William Carlos Williams
“I have eaten/the plums /that were in/ the icebox/ and which/ you
were probably/ saving /for breakfast/ Forgive me/ they were
delicious/ so sweet/ and so cold”
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Internal Rhyme
Rhyme that occurs within a line of poetry or within
consecutive lines
In the poem Nothing Gold Can Stay by Robert Frost there are
these examples:
“So dawn goes down to day”
“Then leaf subsides to leaf”
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Sound Effects
The use of sounds to create specific literary effects
“The Great Figure” by William Carlos Williams
“On a Red /fire truck/ moving tense/ unheeded/ to gong clangs/
siren howls/ and wheels rumbling /through the dark city”