This poem uses a plant as a metaphor for language and identity.
Search for My Tongue
This poem is built from repeated “If” clauses.
If—
This poem is about a child being punished and confused about time.
Half-past Two
This poem uses direct address (“Explain yuself”) to challenge the reader.
Half-caste
Both Piano and Poem at Thirty-Nine explore this shared theme.
memory of / relationships with parents
This poem uses non-standard English to directly challenge the reader’s assumptions.
Half-caste
This poem uses a fixed repeating structure (villanelle) to reinforce its central message.
Do not go gentle into that good night
This poem presents water as something rare and life-changing.
Blessing
This poem uses second-person narration to place the reader inside a childhood experience.
Hide and Seek
Both Search for My Tongue and Half-caste explore identity through this idea.
language and/or dialect, gujarati and patios
This poem uses sensory imagery of sound to collapse time between present and past.
Piano
This poem is a dramatic monologue where the speaker unknowingly reveals his own character.
My Last Duchess
This poem presents love as constant and unchanging despite time.
Sonnet 116
This poem contrasts calm, ordered structure with chaotic subject matter to highlight emotional control.
War Photographer
Both If— and Do not go gentle… present this shared attitude.
resilience / control in the face of challenge
This poem uses violent, industrial imagery to reflect emotional detachment from suffering.
War Photographer
This poem delays its main clause until the final line, creating a sense of reward and resolution.
If—
This poem presents the fear of being shaped by a corrupt world before birth.
Prayer Before Birth
This poem uses cyclical repetition to mirror the inevitability of death.
What is Do not go gentle into that good night?
Both Prayer Before Birth and War Photographer explore this idea about humanity.
human cruelty / suffering / vulnerabilty
This poem uses rhetorical questioning and contrasting imagery of creation to explore the nature of divine power.
The Tyger
This poem’s structural shift moves from desire for remembrance to acceptance of forgetting, altering the emotional resolution.
Remember
This poem presents love as dangerous and destructive through a supernatural encounter that strips the speaker of agency.
La Belle Dame sans Merci
This poem uses a single speaker’s controlled narrative to expose themes of power, possession, and implied violence.
My Last Duchess
Both La Belle Dame sans Merci and My Last Duchess present relationships where power leads to this outcome.
control becoming destructive / loss of autonomy / emotional or physical destruction