Professor Luck
English 301B
June 8, 2016
Seeing T.S. Elliot's city T.S. Elliot's poem, "The Winter Evening Settles Down", is a four piece poem. Now, paying attention to only the first stanza, many examples of form and sound can be found. Sound and form is one of the many central devices to complete a poem. Poets use this not only for the work to be faultless, but to have the readers admire poetry. They use sound to express emotion, mood and rhythm; that carries a poem. In T. S. Eliot poem, found and form is evident. This poem is where he observes the streets of his city during nightfall. He applies sound and form to bring his readers along on a walk in his shoes through his town and captures the imagery to allow them to see it. To start …show more content…
Elliot's rhyme scheme we see that it is not consistent A.B.C.B.D.D.E.F.E.F.E.G.G. With the Line two and line four have a end rhyme and Line three and line six have 0---- also. However, we do a consistent iambic meter and number of feet throughout the poem. The only time he breaks from this is in lines three, six, and nine, but then comes back to the iambic tetrameter. I think he does this because the night always changes so he wanted his poem to match his evening. The lines alternates among one, two and four feet. Mostly with the iambic tetrameter. We see this with the poem beginning with an iambic tetrameter's rhythm. He has begun his walk and it fits the movement of the heart beat. The first line also establishes the setting of the poem. "The winter evening settles down". The day is ending. The second line, he smells a familiar aroma with the phrase" With smell of steaks in passageways.", like he has walked by this place many times. Within line 2, the speaker uses alliteration of the s sound to