This section contains 329 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |
The Sun Rising by John Donne
Summary: This is an analysis of John Donne's poem The Sun Rising. It includes a look at his figurative language, rhetorical techniques and use of hyperbole.
"The Sun Rising" by John Donne uses figurative, rhetorical and hyperbole techniques to demonstrate the displacement of the outside world in favor of two lovers' inner world and how the sun fulfils its duties by revolving around their bedroom.
Donne uses figurative language throughout the poem. The first stanza compares the sun to a "Busy old fool" (1) and "Through windows, and through curtains call on us"" (3) is figurative language for eyes. A wink allows the sun to come into the lovers' inner world. The reader knows the lovers' bedroom is not the center of the world and the sun does not "contract[ed]" around their bed.
Donne's displacement of the outside world, in favor of the lovers' inside world, uses a rhetorical technique to attempt to prove by reason the durability and power of a couples love. When Donne asks why the sun "calls on us"" (3), "Why shouldst...
This section contains 329 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |