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Poetic Terms in "terence, This Is Stupid Stuff"

Essay by   •  November 17, 2010  •  Essay  •  745 Words (3 Pages)  •  1,662 Views

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A.E. Housman's "Terence, this is stupid stuff" is a poem that starts out as a friend of Terence talking to him, but it then shifts to Terence talking to his friends. Then shifts from a humorous tone to a more serious tone. It also shifts in setting, time, place, and idea. This poem demonstrates figurative language which is language employing figures of speech; language that cannot be taken literally or only literally. This poem also has several different poetic devices, which is a device that contributes to content and poetic structure that does not involve meaning in term of language. This poem in certain lines is very hard to follow without knowing the background.

The first verse of this poem Terence friend is speaking to him about how sad all his poems are; all of them are about death. His friend is telling him he needs to lighten up and get drunk. His friend says, "It gives a chap the belly-ache. . .To hear such tunes as killed the cow". Terence's friend is referring to Terence's poetry. He is also referring to his poetry that it killed the cow because it was so sad. These are both an example of a hyperbole (overstatement) that is a figure of speech in which exaggeration is used in the service of truth. All the verses in this poem have a rhythm, which is any wavelike recurrence of motion or sound. The rhythm is eight beats per line.

The second verse in the poem Terence is talking to his friends about getting drunk and having a good time. He also says that it's great to get drunk and forget all your problems, but they are still there the next morning when you wake up. Terence uses humor in this verse to get across his point. Terence says, "And malt does more than Milton can To justify God's ways to man". When Terence uses malt he is using it as a synecdoche, which is a figure of speech in which a part is used for the whole. Malt is only half the beer you could never just drink the malt. Milton is a famous poet and he was the first to say to justify God's way of man. It is a famous line from his story "Paradise Lost".

The third verse moves to a serious tone. Terence is saying how the world is full of evil that there is less good than evil. For instance he says, "Much good, but much less good than ill . . .Luck's a chance, but trouble's sure . . .". This is the theme of the poem. He is describing his view of the

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