Hope (Emily Brontë poem)

Hope (Emily Brontë poem) Literary Elements

Speaker or Narrator, and Point of View

The perspective is that of a first-person speaker. She is a person struggling with her unbalanced relationship with hope.

Form and Meter

The poem is written in five quatrains with an ABAB rhyme scheme.

Metaphors and Similes

The speaker uses simile to compare hope to a "false guard."

Alliteration and Assonance

There is alliteration in the D, S, and W sounds of the lines "Through the bars one dreary day," "Even Sorrow saw, repenting" and "Hope, whose whisper would have given."

Irony

N/A

Genre

Victorian poetry

Setting

Unspecified location; suggestions of a cage

Tone

Somber

Protagonist and Antagonist

The protagonist of the poem is the speaker. The antagonist is despair.

Major Conflict

The central conflict of the poem is the speaker being unable to rely on hope.

Climax

The climax of the poem occurs when the speaker is at her lowest moment and hope abandons her.

Foreshadowing

N/A

Understatement

N/A

Allusions

N/A

Metonymy and Synecdoche

N/A

Personification

The speaker personifies "hope" as a "timid friend." She also personifies Sorrow in the fourth stanza, describing how it "saw" her.

Hyperbole

The line "When my last joys strewed the ground" is a hyperbolic description of hopelessness.

Onomatopoeia

N/A

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