Complete Journal #4 to any ONE of the following poems: “A Red, Red Rose,” “Harlem,” “Ode on a Grecian Urn,” “Hope is the thing with feathers,” “Sonnet 18: Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?” or “Buffalo Bill’s.”
Remember, your journal responses need to be at least 250 word reactions to the pieces you’ve read. Some prompts to consider in typing your journal. Choose ONLY ONE as the basis of your response:
1. What do I think of this text and why?
2. List the emotions (anger, pity, envy, admiration, astonishment, etc.) the work evoked. Then draw conclusions about the reasons you think you felt these emotions.
3. Copy one sentence, one line, or one phrase that struck you as especially beautiful, puzzling, enlightening, and so on. Then interpret how and why the sentence, line, or phrase evoked this response.
4. You can write a letter to the author asking questions or making observations about the reading.
5. Draw conclusions about why you could or could not detect with a particular character or situation in the reading.
6. Reread the work and interpret how your impression of the reading changed from your initial
reading of the piece.
To format a quotation, enclose it in quotation marks and place a slash to designate a change in lines, and retain the original capitalization. Quoting the final two lines of James Wright’s poem “A Blessing,” for instance, would look like this: “… if I stepped out of my body I would break / Into blossom” (Wright 23-24).
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