In her poem "Stanzas," author Charlotte Bronte employs the literary devices of imagery, mood, and repetition in order to successfully add depth and meaning.

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Elsbeth Loughrey                                                        February 4, 2002

        In her poem “Stanzas,” author Charlotte Bronte employs the literary devices of imagery, mood, and repetition in order to successfully add depth and meaning.  These instruments are aided by careful and skillful word choice as well as by other literary tools such as alliteration and assonance.  Together, these devices work together to produce a complex and masterful collection of verse and thus fulfill the author’s intentions of creating a thought-provoking and meaningful piece.

In this piece, mood is used to develop greater intensity and complexity through its establishment and subsequent shifts in character.  The author uses carefully chosen words and phrases in both the creation of the desired sentiment and in the introduction of modifications in its nature.  The mood changes several times throughout the poem, and each variation is skillfully planned and implemented through the use of imagery and diction.  The composition begins in a soft and soothing mood with the use of words like calm, placid, serene, and sweet.  Imagery of this same nature is exemplified in phrases regarding heaven, summer, and “soft and golden light” in the second and third stanzas, and again in the fifth stanza with “sunset soft and moonlight mild.”  This smooth and mellow ambiance is also established by the use of alliteration in the first stanza with the words “day’s decline,” and again in the third stanza with the phrases “breezeless boughs” and “bird’s belated.”  

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A shift in the mood of the poem occurs in the third stanza, along with a change in the lighting; as dusk falls, the mood of the poem becomes more somber, but is still soothing and mellow.  This more depressed feel is created through the author’s use of words like gloom, silent, and breezeless.  These terms invoke images of loneliness and emptiness and thus successfully establish a more melancholy sentiment.  However, towards the end of this third stanza the mood is again uplifted with the imagery describing a “soft and golden light” and “unclouded sky,” which continues throughout the fourth ...

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