I know that pain of losing a loved one. My family and I have gone through 3 deaths in a year and a half. My nephew was only 21, sleeping in his bed, when our home was burglarized. He was shot in the head and killed. Four months after that my brother died from cancer. Five ...
I am truly sorry to hear about the devastating loss of your son. Losing a loved one to suicide is an incredibly painful and difficult experience, and my heart goes out to you during this unimaginably challenging time. Discovering the poem on your son's phone must have been both surprising...
I am sorry for the loss of your loved one. I hope you’ll accept my deepest sympathies at this difficult time. I too have felt that deep pain of losing a loved one and know how overwhelming this experience can be for anyone.Many who grieve find it the challenge of delivering a funeral...
Losing a whole city or even an entire continent would not bring disaster either so even losing this person is not a tragedy. From the hint of anger in this poem, I believe Bishop may be trying to show the ludicrousness of “the art of losing is not hard not master”, by taking the ...
Kay masterfully explores ideas about grief through this powerful confessional poem. The poem’s nebulous nature reflects complex emotions regarding losing a loved one. The poem’s lack of clarity perhaps heightens the effect of suggesting the speaker is lost without their significant other....
It’s clear that the speaker feels so strongly about the fallen leader that he experiences a close, almost paternal relationship with him. The fact that the speaker’s intense, private grief contrasts so sharply with the cheering crowds suggests that losing a loved one can create a painful ...
Explore different types of poetry, ranked by experts, on a range of different elements, such as themes, topics, time period, form, and more.
A poem about lost things Photo by Michael Dziedzic on Unsplash 'One Art' The art of losing isn’t hard to master; so many things seem filled with the intent to be lost that their loss is no disaster. Lose something every day. Accept the fluster ...
Analysis of the Poem 'The Waste Land' by T.S. Eliot Analysis of the Poem 'Journey of the Magi' by T.S. Eliot Poem Analysis: 'The Highwayman' by Alfred Noyes Analysis of Poem "Ulysses" by Alfred, Lord Tennyson
And fear of losing them, and fear of tears in vain. Yet all that has a beginning doth too have an end; And there lies still a new one: when you more tears do send! So here you are where you did start: Awaiting love to fill your heart and then be ripped apart! You should ...