The set of poems we read are really different from what we have read. I could not imagine reading these poems separately and trying to combine the techniques and style such as Andrew Hudgins did in 2001. I really would not imagine anyone combine this two very unlike poems. I enjoyed them separately but together they do not make sense to me.
I enjoyed William Butler Yeats, “The Wild Swans at Coole" describes a young man's disappointment about love. He walks down Coole Park in Galway, Ireland. Through the introduction in the beginning of the poems we learn that Coole comes from an Irish word meaning "a niche" or "a retreat." That is exactly what he was doing retreating from his daily routine. He came to reminisce about his rejection of the lady he loved.
The only similarity that Hudgins and Yeat's poem, "We Real Cool" have in common is the resemblance of "Coole" and "Cool."
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment