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https://studentshare.org/literature/1644456-self-and-nature.
Self and Nature The poet in the odes of tomatoes illustrates the importance of tomatoes and its many uses in homes. The poethas used rhyme and imagery in the poem. The poet shows the uses of tomatoes in occasions and seasons. From the poem, tomatoes are harvested in December and every homestead floods with them. The tomatoes are used in weddings as a salad…”floods the salads of Chile”. Tomatoes, together with blond onions and other oils make the perfect salad for any wedding. Summer is the planting season and the poet uses tomatoes to symbolize the stars of the earth.
The poet in the odes of wine describes the color of wine. The poet compares the color of wine to both day and night and the texture as smooth as a golden sword. The poem has employed metaphors and rhyme to illustrate this. The poet also uses wine to develop the theme of love. The wine and grapes enhance imagery in describing the lover. Sipping of wine among intelligent people reminds them of hard labor in making the wine during autumn. The poet personifies the earth as ‘his’ while describing the growth of the grapes.
This serves to give the earth an attribute similar to that of humans in giving life.The poet in “odes to the artichoke” heavily employs imagery to show the defense mechanism of this vegetable. The poet, through personification illustrates the surrounding vegetable,’crazy vegetable’. The odes show various uses of vegetables in homes. Through imagery the poet illustrates the theme of war by using phrases like, militia, ranks and marshal. The last stanza of the odes shows the use of the artichoke vegetable.
The poets in the three odes above profoundly use imagery to communicate important points. Personification has been used to help the reader build mental pictures of the items and provide them with things they can relate to.Works CitedPerloff, Marjorie, and Craig Douglas Dworkin. The sound of poetry, the poetry of sound. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009. Print.
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