Last Chance for the Tarzan Holler: Poems Literary Elements

Last Chance for the Tarzan Holler: Poems Literary Elements

Speaker or Narrator, and Point of View

The poem "Lessons from a Mirror" is told from the perspective of a first person subjective narrator, giving the poem an even more personal feeling.

Form and Meter

The poem "The Continent of Reena and Marcus' Marriage" has no form and meter since it is written in free form.

Metaphors and Similes

In "Lessons from a Mirror", the narrator compares herself with the empty space left by a missing tooth, which everyone feels the need to fill with something as soon as possible. This comparison has the purpose of showing how both her presence and her absence can be seen as a problem and how many people will try to pretend the narrator does not exist at all.

Alliteration and Assonance

We find an alliteration in the poem "The Continent of Reena and Marcus' Marriage" in the line "aging milk, and shredded pumpkin to be silk".

Irony

We find an ironic element in the poem "The Culture of Near Miss" in which the narrator continues to claim she wants to get back with her former lover even though he was the one who hurt her and who abandoned in the first place.

Genre

The poem "Botanical Fanaticism" is a meditative poem.

Setting

The action described in the poem "The Best of the Body" takes place inside a person's body during an unspecified period of time.

Tone

The tone used in "Botanical Fanaticism" is a negative one addressed towards the white racist people the narrator had to live near with.

Protagonist and Antagonist

In "Lessons from a Mirror" the narrator is the protagonist and the antagonist is Snow White.

Major Conflict

The major conflict in the poem "The Culture of Near Miss" is between the narrator's desire to acquire the attention of her lover and the narrator's lover's inability to see the narrator's affections.

Climax

The poem "The Culture of Near Miss" reaches its climax when the photograph of the narrator's former lover started to fade, thus symbolizing the idea that the narrator started to forget her former lover.

Foreshadowing

The absence of the father in "Botanical Fanaticism" is foreshadowed by the narrator's description of "free love" a form of sexual promiscuity from which resulted many illegitimate children and many one-parent households.

Understatement

In "Botanical Fanaticism", the narrator claims the whites and the blacks were equal during the time when her mother got pregnant with her. This if however an understatement as in the later parts of the poem the narrator describes the appalling way in which her mother was treated by her white employees.

Allusions

In the poem "The Best of the Body", the narrator claims the spleen is the most important and most powerful organ inside a person' body. Its power is the result of the bile it produces which is then identified as being depression. Through this, the narrator alludes the idea that depression can be so powerful a person can feel overpowered by it to the point where nothing else seem to matter anymore.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

N/A

Personification

The line "coriander cutting a trench into his mouth" from the poem "The Continent of Reena and Marcus' Marriage" contains a personification.

Hyperbole

We have a hyperbole at the end of the poem "The Best of the Body" in the lines "I believe that came from/ the bottom of your heart, close to the dregs/ the liver and spleen, not the creamy brain".

Onomatopoeia

We find an onomatopoeia in the line "his name screamed at me" in the poem "The Culture of Near Miss".

Update this section!

You can help us out by revising, improving and updating this section.

Update this section

After you claim a section you’ll have 24 hours to send in a draft. An editor will review the submission and either publish your submission or provide feedback.

Cite this page