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After Us

AAFTER US In this poem, the poet uses a surplus of imagery to allow the reader to fully see what she is trying to get us to picture. In the first line, she talks about how rain, which can be destructive or helpful, is seeping into a room where books and other material things reside. In the lines to follow, she writes about how everything that flourished under the sun, turned away to try and find the light that they so desperately need. This shows the destructive side to rain because it paints the picture of a dark day with rain falling and silencing all activities that happen during the day. In the second paragraph, the poet writes about a portrait, which has sketches of boats and barns and this creates the image of a perfect utopia where everything is peaceful and nothing has disturbed it. The paragraph that follows this peaceful picture, is where the foreboding and evil rain begins to make its appearance again. She writes about how everything that was ever thought of or invented or t...

Thanks

TThanks 

Outwardly of Yusef Komunyakaa's "Much obliged" is a miserable kind of tale about a youngster in the Vietnam War who relates occasions in which might have been his last. He expresses gratefulness to specific articles, as though they were the explanation that he didn't truth be told get shot, or that he didn't stumble over a landmine. The thanks he is giving could be hindered as on account of God for these articles, or an out and out assertion of an absence of god in his life or this conflict. Komunyakaa is saying something about the conflict, and about his convictions, however it is just with additional analyzation that the peruser can start to see which side Komunyakaa is coming from; the strict side or a nearly denouncement of religion and an absence of a divine being in the Vietnam War. 

The sonnet opens with Komunyakaa expressing gratefulness "for the tree between me and a marksman's shot."

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After Us

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