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发表于 2008-7-12 21:51:12
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Interpreting a Poem: "Bright Star" (III)
2008-7-12
---Keat's grave in Rome
"Here lies one whose name was writ in water."
"This Grave contains all that was mortal, of a YOUNG ENGLISH POET, who on his Death Bed, in the Bitterness of his heart, at the Malicious Power of his enemies, desired these words to be Engraven on his Tomb Stone."
The tense of the verbs in the clauses is also worth discussing. Keats describes the star as “watching” the “moving waters”. The present participle “watching” implies the star’s eternality. When expressing his own will, he uses infinitives, that is, “to feel” and “to hear”. And what is more interesting is in the last line: “And so live ever – or else swoon to death.” It’s in present tense. So, from the grammatical perspective, this line is a coordinate clause with the rest part of the poem. This change of tense implies that the speaker turns from expectation or dream to reality. He does know that he cannot be with his love forever, and he must face this unavoidable reality.
III Sound Pattern
The sound pattern of this poem is delicate. The rhythm is almost regular, but there[strike]’s [/strike] are some interesting exemptions. For example, in the eleventh line, the defective foot “fall” suggests a relatively longer duration of the sound and makes the phrase “fall and swell” vivid. What’s more effective is the repetition of sounds in an intricate way. On the one hand, the end-rhymes are almost all perfect, only with two exemptions. On the other hand, the effect of internal rhymes is rich, which can be seen in the sestet more clearly. Again take a look at the eleventh line. There are two groups of alliteration in this single line. The former consists of “feel”, “forever”, and “fall”, and the latter “soft” and “swell”. The word “forever” appears again in the next line, and in a variation of “ever” in the last line. The consonance among “swell”, “sweet”, and “swoon” is also significant. The repetition of sound “f” and “s” amounts to a sense of something soft and gentle, which pertains to dream or something more peaceful, i.e. death. In this sense, the image of a man swooning to death appears at the end of the poem not so surprisingly, but as naturally as sleep or dream.
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