Rudyard Kipling's 'The Way through the Woods'. The Poetry Voice
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Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)
If it weren’t for the rhymes, this poem feels as though it could have been written by Thomas Hardy.
Kipling could be tub thumpingly obvious when he wanted to be, riding a steady rhythm that takes his poems close to sing song. Here rhythm and rhyme are used to contribute to the way that he suggests a mood and a place and a story and leaves them to settle into the reader’s imagination.
Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)
If it weren’t for the rhymes, this poem feels as though it could have been written by Thomas Hardy.
Kipling could be tub thumpingly obvious when he wanted to be, riding a steady rhythm that takes his poems close to sing song. Here rhythm and rhyme are used to contribute to the way that he suggests a mood and a place and a story and leaves them to settle into the reader’s imagination.
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