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Herman Melville’s “Shiloh” Analysis American War Poetry

American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

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Page 1: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

Herman Melville’s “Shiloh”Analysis

American War Poetry

Page 2: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

Poetry Analysis Essay prompt

(Taken from Kaplan 2012)

Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville transforms a painful experience into something beautiful. In your analysis, consider such elements as imagery, tome, alliteration, symbolism, and end rhyme.

Page 3: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

Herman Melville

(August 1, 1819 – September 28, 1891) He was an American novelist, short story writer, essayist, and poet. He is best known for his novel Moby-Dick.

Page 4: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

BACKGROUND INFOThe Battle of Shiloh, in Tennessee, took place on 6-7 April 1862. Casualty levels were unprecedented: the 3500 men who died there amounted to more than the United States had lost in the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812 and the Mexican War combined.

http://war-poets.blogspot.com/2009/10/herman-melville-shiloh.html

Page 5: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

What the prompt asks “how Melville

transforms a painful experience into something beautiful”

The techniques transform the pain of battle into a song of peace and respect

Page 6: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

Title and subtitle “Shiloh” = battle of Shiloh in the Civil

War A Requiem = a funeral song for the

departed Pays homage to those who died in battle Emphasizes the tragedy of war rather than

glorifying pain and heroic death

Page 7: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

TONE Peaceful,

somber Swallows Clouded days Forest field Night Noon Eve Hushed

Page 8: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

STRUCTURE Repeated refrain (lines 4,9,19) = musical

nature, suggests cyclical nature of life and death

Meter and rhyme = regularly irregular Soothing, peaceful Like a lullaby

Page 9: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

alliteration “S” and “sh” (whole poem)

Soothing peaceful Line 11 “parting groan” – like a calming shhh to

the dying “F” (lines 13-15)

Puts emphasis on the idea that in death, they are all equal, no longer “foes”

Page 10: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

Symbolism “April rain” (5)

Wash away the suffering “reborn” into afterlife

“night” (7) + “eve” (14) Symbol of death

“church” (9) Symbol of peace final resting place (graveyard)Shiloh Church before the

battle

Page 11: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

Irony “April”

Springtime usually connotes new life, but here it is all death

Lines 13-14 “Of dying foemen mingled there-- / Foemen at morn, but friends at eve”

Enemies in battle, but all equal in death now Line 16 “(What like a bullet can undeceive)”

The bullet, or death is the “great undeceiver” – shows soldiers they are not enemies any longer—were they ever?

Page 12: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

Irony continued Melville gives the fatally wounded the

opportunity to overcome their hostility. Americans all, they live as foe and die as friends: the schisms of civil war are healed in deaths which transform churchyard into graveyard. That the battlefield should have been a site of Christian worship emphasizes the appalling costs of this fratricide as well as the possibilities for its redress.

http://war-poets.blogspot.com/2009/10/herman-melville-shiloh.html

Page 13: American War Poetry. (Taken from Kaplan 2012) Read the following poem by the American writer Herman Melville. In a well-organized essay, explain how Melville

Lame introductions Be careful in your introduction of

simply repeating the prompt. I read essay after essay that started with “Melville uses x, y, and z to transform a painful experience into something beautiful.”

This is unoriginal and boring and starts your essay off poorly Make it more original.