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fear no more analysis.pptx

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Fear no more
Fear no more
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fear no more analysis.pptx

  1. 1. THE POEM.
  2. 2. STRUCTURE AND FORM OF THE POEM
  3. 3.  Four stanza elegy , extracted from Cymbeline . Rhyming scheme : ABABCC DEDECC FGFGCC
  4. 4. THE POET..
  5. 5. William Shakespeare AKA – Bard of Avon Died – 23rd of April, 1616.  considered as the national English poet and considered as the greatest dramatist of all the time. A clever poet with words and ideas. This poem appears in IV, Scene 2, and is sung by Guiderius and Argiragus, the sons of Cymbeline. Cymbeline is also known as The Tragedie of Cymebline or Cymbeline, King of Britain. By some, the play is considered to be a romance or a comedy.
  6. 6. ANALYSIS
  7. 7. ANALYSIS OF ‘FEAR NO MORE ‘  The elegiac poem ‘fear no more ‘ which was scripted down by William Shakespeare , is extracted from the play ‘Cymbeline’. It has the main concentration on the horrific nature of the death and why people should embrace it in the last pace of one’s own life .  Shakespeare , who was the pioneer in Elezebethern society, has written extravagant plays and poems , dividing poems mainly into fair-youth poems and dark-lady poems (by the critics)
  8. 8. Overall , there is a gigantic usage of poetic techniques in this poem, namely, symbols, metaphors, similes, and sound related techniques such as alliteration, metaphors, repetition, allusion, personification, simile, along with the usage of second person narrative voice, to validate an accusing, sharp tone. “fear no more the heat o’ the sun…”, as the beginning of the entire poem, letting the reciter for a sort of confusion, asking a question from one’s own self ‘ what and why?’ The poet asks to not to be terrified either the heat of the sun or the harshness of the winter.
  9. 9. “…the furious winter’s rages…” can be known as a metaphor as well as a personification. There, the poet has used ‘rages’ to showcase the tough change in the nature. The anger is suggested through the word. The death is as peaceful as the heir of the wage for s laborer at the end of the day, he is elated to earn for his hard work. “taken thy wages…” Since the world and the people who live in the world are equal to the death, death does not segregate anyone, including ‘…golden lads and girls…chimney sweepers…’. Metaphors are used here to denote the wealth and prosper of the people. And there, a literal device named allusion is used, by an extract from the bible , “…come to dust…” . The original quote in the bible is ‘man is made from dust and return to dust’ .
  10. 10. There are two phrases repeated in several stanzas ‘fear no more’, ‘come to dust’, repetition is used here to reinforce the major theme of the poem , death is inevitable. In the second stanza, two metaphors are used; ‘frown of the great’ and ‘tyrant's stroke’. It connotes that once a person is dead, he should not worry of the king being superior, the wrath or the disappointment of the great. Apparently, the dead is not to bother clothes or food ‘…care no more to cloth and eat…’ ‘as the oak’ is a simile and can be also taken as a symbol, to suggest the point that no matter how weak or strong a person is, death equalize all of them. ‘The reed’ is feeble and the oak is muscular, but death is above all. The professions that human beings acquire after the passage of the time, they will not lead to be immortal.
  11. 11. Overall , the death should not bother the harsh criticisms or gossips that the society spreads, even the emotional and sociological ups and downs of life. The final stanza manifests that no evil spirit, exorcisers, even the ghosts are terrified of the newly died, deceased souls. So that the spirit should have the maximum usage of being free. Since ‘nothing ill’ comes to the dead, a complete bed of luck will be there for him, as the reward, along with nothing but fame. ‘…and renowned by thy grave’.
  12. 12. The poem flows with the rhyming scheme of ABABCC DEDECC FGFGCC, in order to give the sense of a poetic work. Apart from the major theme, there are sub themes as well. Time, young and all must die. Golden lads and girls, lovers, screptre, physic, since the death is inevitable. People should have the potential of embracing the death without mourning. Moreover, the poem proclaims that life is brutal and horrifying. If you are born to the world, you will never be able to escape from that. The pioneer of Elizabethan era, William Shakespeare, the poems and plays are yet to be wowed by the society, being fully satisfied with all positive outcomes due to his literal work.
  13. 13. REFERENCES. https://poemanalysis.com/william-shakespeare/fear-no- more-the-heat-o-the-sun/ https://www.britannica.com/biography/William- Shakespeare http://dnaloysius.blogspot.com/2017/12/fear-no- more_23.html https://sites.google.com/site/poemanalysis101/fear-no- more-the-heat-o-the-sun

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