In “Spring in War-Time” and “Sonnet,” you can spot difference in speaker and tone. The speaker in “Sonnet” is a seasoned veteran who claims to have seen “men’s homes burst into sudden flower.” Contrasting from “Sonnet” is Teasdale’s poem where the speaker is unknown but, you can recognize that the individual has been affected by war in some way. The unknown …show more content…
For example, the theme of each poem is war and the effects it can have on people whether they are fighting or not. In “Sonnet,” the veteran who is the speaker emphasizes that there is “so much war (has) taught me.” Similarly, “Spring in War-Time” mentions how people who aren’t in the war still are worried about those fighting it as they feel conflicted by the beautiful spring season and asking “how can the daylight linger on for men to fight, still fight?” Also in addition to the poem’s similarity in theme they also share a similarity in figurative language in how they both personify the objects mentioned in each work. For example in “Spring in War-Time” by Sara Teasdale, she uses personification to say “the grass is waking in the ground, soon it will rise and blow in waves.” Lastly, the poems mentioned show similarities in the irony created. They both are situational due to the conflicting circumstances that are presented. In Sonnet, something as gruesome as war can still receive strong praise by what John Buxton likes to call “poor, blind fools.” If you read Sara Teasdale’s “Spring in War-Time,” you see that although the speaker is writing this in such a beautiful time in regards to the weather, it is hard to ignore that in this great time of year there is a something so horrific going on in the midst of all this beauty. Teasdale describes the beauty of nature and how