Thursday, October 10, 2019
ââ¬ÅHelenââ¬Â by Hilda Doolittle Essay
The first thought I come up with when reading Doolittleââ¬â¢s Helen is the extreme difference between her poem, and Poeââ¬â¢s poem, Helen. Doolittle and Poe both describe Helen using her face, eyes, legs, hands, and knees; however, Doolittle expresses the speakerââ¬â¢s growing hatred of Helen while Poe adores her deeply. Doolittle makes an interesting choice when she says ââ¬Å"all Greeceâ⬠instead of ââ¬Å"all Greeks.â⬠She appears to be referring to more than just the people of Greece, but instead the entire culture that lies within Greece. Doolittle expands upon the speakerââ¬â¢s hatred of Helen by including ââ¬Å"all Greece,â⬠especially with her continual use of such dark and descriptive words as ââ¬Å"hateâ⬠and ââ¬Å"revile.â⬠I find it interesting that Doolittle starts the first two stanzas with ââ¬Å"all Greeceâ⬠and the third words describing an extreme dislike, and still begins the final (third) stanza with ââ¬Å"Greece sees unmovedâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬ still being insulting towards Helen. The entire poem remains with the same theme, and continues being both vivid and descriptive. In the first stanza Helen is described with words like olive and white which are both associated with beauty, but she is also described as having ââ¬Å"still eyesâ⬠which creates the idea of a statue like person. The second stanza becomes more involved with Helen being detested by Greece. She is described as wan and growing paler (white). She is remembering what she did wrong in her past, and this begins to change her beautiful appearance. In the end, Helen progresses to either a completely statue-like stage, or perhaps even death. She is unmoved with ââ¬Å"cool feet,â⬠white, and ââ¬Å"amid funereal cypresses.â⬠These words are most associated with death, the skin is a pale color ââ¬â almost white, and they are cold to the touch, just as Helen is described. She goes into this statue/death stage being hated by Greece for causing the Trojan War. The poem encompasses the fact that Greece has no mercy for Helen, even when she smiles. The only way for her to attain compassion, love, and mercy is through her death.
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