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Analysis of Edwin Arlington Robinson’s "the Mill"

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“The Mill” is a poignant poem written by Edwin Arlington Robinson. The poem is a representation of hardship in family. The speaker of the poem is an omniscient narrator and the poem is set in a miller’s house and mill. The poem has an (ababcdcd) rhyme scheme in three eight line stanzas. The poet uses many elements to display the adversity of a miller and his wife.

The poet uses a morbid tone and grim diction along with cold imagery to attest the austerity of a man losing his livelihood. He uses words such as black, cold, and dead to describe a dark time in a person’s life. Throughout the poem the poet has a morbid tone as he shows the darkness associated with this person’s troubles. Imagery is used in this poem to display a person’s death and insignificance of his life to the world around him. Lines 21-24 are a perfect example of the poet’s use, “Black water, smooth above the weir/ Like starry velvet in the night,/ Though ruffled once, would soon appear/ The same as ever to the sight,” which means that when the lady jumped into the dark water, it would soon consume her and no one would know of her whereabouts, or even notice her dead.

Allusion, irony, and symbolism are also used throughout the poem to further explain the theme of death and destitution. Words such as “cold tea,” dead fire,”

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