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Comment 22 of 22, added on February 12th, 2012 at 3:44 AM.
TaWIMAPYtOjUxPBEkH
XLPK7N I am getting married on the 15th of November. Congratulate me! Then
will be here rarely!....
oem software from Rwandese Republic (Rwanda)
Comment 21 of 22, added on November 23rd, 2011 at 1:28 PM.
sHBIugoHxtonk
Holy concise data bmaatn. Lol!
Cinderella from Croatia
Comment 20 of 22, added on November 17th, 2011 at 7:01 AM.
poem
WONDERFULLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL
ashley from Bosnia and Herzegovina
Comment 19 of 22, added on August 30th, 2010 at 12:58 AM.
I like to see it lap the miles
At first read I thought the horse was metaphor for the sun moving east to
west, sundown = (docile and omnipotent at it own stable door) or peer
shanties ...
Second read it became clear that the poem is retelling the delighted
experience of seeing a train move through the viewer's landscape. This is,
of course naivety. The iron horse would mercilessly open the west, further
decimate native people, kill of the buffalo ... Like most technology, a
Pandora's box of good and bad.
me455 from United States
Comment 18 of 22, added on March 22nd, 2010 at 6:12 AM.
I'm just wondering,why on the 1st stanza the horse image is projected to be
unmoved to picture the train's movement in the middle of its journey. and
why the final stanza utilizing simile instead of metaphor as it is on the
previous lines.is there any special effect that want to be achieved?i think
so, notes the metaphor 'in horrid-hooting stanza'. How the word 'stanza'
been directly attached to the horse/train image when there is nothing about
stanza/poem has been introduced before? i feel the poem production process
in this poem.
Cs from Indonesia
Comment 17 of 22, added on February 2nd, 2010 at 9:25 PM.
TO ALL YOU GENIUSES OUT THERE
This poem is obviously describing the train as an "iron horse" you idiots.
A Junior in High school from United States
Comment 16 of 22, added on January 24th, 2010 at 7:53 PM.
Ok, seriously people, this poem is obviously about the ocean. My proof? "I
like to see it LAP the Miles" hello? Lap, as in the waves lapped against
the shore? I rest my case.
Abi from United States
Comment 15 of 22, added on February 23rd, 2009 at 4:39 PM.
To me this poem is "superciliously" staring into the shanties of the people
who can least afford the luxury of privacy. If you look at the meaning of
supercilious, you will see a secondary meaning haughty or arrogant. The
train was tearing through new territory at the expense of those who lived
along the roads. The image of a horse crawling over and squeezing through
tunnels may seem playful, but I think Ms. Dickinson was making a social
comment with a far deeper meaning than the whimsical I often hear from
other readers. Anybody out there agree?
BJ from United States
Comment 14 of 22, added on January 29th, 2009 at 2:17 PM.
I think Emily dickinson is a very intellengent women and that poem maybe
means she is comparing a river to a horse. Maybe she was comparing a trian
to a horse!
Jordan from United States
Comment 13 of 22, added on November 5th, 2008 at 7:49 AM.
I thpught thispoem had symbolic meaning to the word athlete. This is a
womon who never really experienced a family and her hosr represent the
American dream of full speed ahead while you can and take your time to get
to where you want to go.
reginald from United States
This poem has been commented on more than 10 times. Click below to see the other comments.
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XLPK7N I am getting married on the 15th of November. Congratulate me! Then
will be here rarely!....
oem software from Rwandese Republic (Rwanda)