Textuality » 4BSU Interacting
'I find no peace'
'I find no peace' is sonnet by Thomas Wyatt.
The intelligent reader understands it's a sonnet because it was organised in 4 stanzas: two quartains(create a octave) and two tercets(create a sestet)
In the first stanza there is a repetition of the subject personal pronoun 'I' (seven times) to focus on it the attention of the reader. The speaking's voice expresses an inner conflict expresses throught a list of oxymorons. Indeed the reader comes across a series of semantic opposition that range from the words to verbs (peace-war, burn-freeze).
The choise wants to convey the strugle of somebody who is looking for peace, serenity and tranquillity. In a few words, he looks for an emotional rest after all fights, he has had to cope with so far. The reader also understands that the speaking voices, who speaks in the first personal singular and seven times in the space of first stanza. In addition, his climatic desperate mood resorts to hyperboles to make his feeling clear and evident: 'I fly above the wind' 'Can I not arise?'
Exaggeration helps and adds to meaning and the reader totally perceives the speaking voice's inner situation and, as a conseguence, feels involved and hopfully feels empathy for the subject.
In the second quartain the poet uses the complement pronoun 'me' to underline his mood. Also there are some alliterations of the sound 'eth'.
The last two stanzas the poet uses oxymorons: 'I desire to perish, and yet I ask health' ' I feed me in sorrow, and laugh in all my pain'. He loves a woman but he hates himself because he doens't find peace and tranquillity.