URGENT Please help me. Check grammar
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URGENT Please help me. Check grammar

Transcribed Image Text:Storm on the Island and the prelude present nature as something they fear. In Prelude, the speaker uses
personification to illustrate how "with trembling oars (he) turned." The adjective "trembling" highlights how the
speaker's fear of the mountains is transmitted to his oar as he panics and rows away frantically. While the
speaker in the poem "The Preludes" is frightened by a mountain, which suddenly appeared from nowhere.
William encounters a "huge peak, black and huge." The repetition of the adjective "huge" highlights how the
epic scale of the mountain causes him to suddenly lose composure. Similarly, the adjective "black" could
suggest that the speaker sees the mountain as a menacing and sinister force. "As if with voluntary power
instinct/ Upreared it's head. I struck and struck again, And growing still in stature the grim shape Towered up
between me and the stars, and still." William battles through the aloneness of the lake. The adjective "Struck"
implies struggles, and the new negatively toned words such as "grim, towered" imply that the journey has taken
a shift from going well to being a battle. In the prelude, the structure becomes more chaotic after the volta, and
it makes heavy usage of enjambment to reflect the speaker's reaction to the mountain. Similarly the
conjunction "And" is also repeatedly used to reflect the speaker's breathlessness.
While nature's power is more visible in the prelude, nature's power is more destructive in the Storm on the
Island. In the poem "Storm on the Island," the speaker describes "it is a huge nothing that we fear." The
oxymoron "huge nothing" could refer to how the storm and heavy wind have no foundation. But, yet it causes
damage to communities. Heaney describes how the community is "bombarded by the empty air." The verb
bombarded" emphasizes the incessant assault by the wind. Again enjambment is used throughout our to
mirror the unpredictable nature of the storm and its capacity to cause destruction. The enjambment is best
shown in stanza three "spits like a tame cat/Turned savage." This quote uses a simile to describe how the sea
splits By including the enjambement in the middle, helps to emphasize the spontaneity of the sea and its
capacity of the overwhelming power of nature. These two poems share a common ideal. In the conflict
between nature and man, nature will always win.
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