Saturday, August 3, 2019
Poem Comparison of Mr bleaney by Philip Larkin and In Memory of My Gran
 Poem Comparison of Mr bleaney by Philip Larkin and In Memory of My Grandfather by Edward Storey         The two poems that will be conveyed and compared will be 'Mr Bleaney'     (by Philip Larkin) & 'In Memory of My Grandfather' (by Edward Storey).     Both verses describe the character of the poem. The character in the     poem on the Grandfather has admiration, but Mr Bleaney is disturbed.     In this essay I will compare the character, poets feelings and     attitude to each man. Furthermore, the similarities and differences in     structure, language and image between the two poems will be compared     and lastly my preference and emotional responses.       To begin with what each poem is about. Mr Bleaney is a descriptive and     narrative verse. There are two voices the landlady's and the poets, Mr     Bleaney is given in the view of the depressed lyricist. Mr Bleaney is     given the life of the writer through his lonely years. It is about a     man named Mr Bleaney who lives through a lacklustre yet ordinary life,     but the place he lives in is shown through a kitsch light. On the     other hand the Grandfather is compared to a tree and the whole poem     has the description of his appearance through the grandson's     observation.       Now I shall move on to the characters. Mr Bleaney has a sad life     because he lives in a place called 'The Bodies.' The word body is used     when someone is departed. So this means who ever lives in this house     is nobody. They are metaphorically deceased. The poet describes Mr     Bleaney using environments and surroundings. He suggests Mr Bleaney is     not intellectual, 'sixty watt bulb' very dim, has a restricted life.     Additionally he has no possessions of his own, 'behind ...              ...uthor achieved his expectations of the character by evaluating him     with a tree, 'his voice rough as the bark of his cracked hands.' So     both artists have achieved their prospect to an extent.       The reactions and images that I received from this poem vary from the     writer. My preference is that I had learnt a lesson from the Mr     Bleaney's poem is 'we treat ourselves the way we tell other people to     treat us.' The grandfather poem did not give me many lessons except     that he is the most respected character in the lyric and the whole     sonnet is personified, with the tree. Additionally I blemished many     disparity and distinction between the poems. There weren't numerous     resemblances though. In conclusion the Mr Bleaney has told me he was a     lonely and a middle class man, but the grandfather was a free sprit     and lived life his way.                        
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