The poem The Dead Crab by Andrew Young is a short and seemingly simple piece of work. However, its length and subject matter do not diminish the poem's rich stylistic qualities.
In a general outline of the poem, it is a Sonnet with an AABBCCDDEEFFGG rhyme scheme. From the first reading the reader can already discern the textual patterning of the poem. It is divided into two parts, which deviates from the conventional sonnet of 3 stanzas with four lines each and an ending couplet. The first part starts from line 1 to line 9, while the second part from line 10 to line 14. The first part is the persona's physical description of the crab, but the second is his reflection of the subject. The Dead Crab also makes use of poetic license to make syntactic manipulation through the use of inversion, parallelism and principle of end-focus, as discussed later on.
The first part leaves little room for literary interpretation as it is a rather unambiguous description of the crab's anatomy. However, stylistically, the persona leaves much room for analysis through his interesting choice of words and punctuation.
the message is no mater how well protected , armoured ,or strong we are in life the reality of death will still eventually come to us
She preserved the body of her dead husband. Also, she decided to eat parts of her husband's dead body. By this, she was able to merge death and life. She was able to have a spiritual union with his lost husband. Love is crazy, indeed.
it is lined with dead bodies
In Twelfth Night we have several people who might be in love, but have found various other ways of occupying their time. (Olivia is in permanent mourning for her dead brother; Sir Toby would rather stay dead drunk all day than sort something out with Maria; Andrew is chasing a girl he knows he won't catch, even though there was once a woman who loved him; Orsino is making the same mistake as Andrew; Viola is in love, but can't do anything about it because she is pretending to be a man).In the middle of all this Feste comes onstage and sings a beautiful song about how if you waste your time when you are young, it is no good complaining when you are old that it's too late now.What is love: 'tis not hereafterPresent mirth hath present laughterThe people onstage don't notice (of course they don't, they are drunk, as usual) - but Feste's song is a warning the audience cannot miss.Fall in love when you are young - even if you get hurt. It is better to get hurt while you can still care about feeling the pain - if you don't feel the joy and the pain of love while you are young, you have lost your chance forever.In delay there lies no plentyThen come kiss me, sweet and twentyThe characters onstage can't understand what old, mad, lonely Feste is telling them - but they will discover it for themselves before the play has ended. We, the audience, can hear the song clearly though.Perhaps we will even be able to remember its lesson after we have left the theatre.
NO HE IS NOT DEAD!
Andrew Young wrote the poem "The Dead Crab" to reflect on the fragility of life and the inevitability of death. The poem was published in 1987 as part of his collection of poetry called "The Centaur and Other Poems."
the message is no mater how well protected , armoured ,or strong we are in life the reality of death will still eventually come to us
No....
If there is a STRONG fishy odor coming from the crab it means that he is dead.
Well this sort of crab (the camouflage crab) I've researched it and it scavenge's all the dead particles in the water
A dead mammal
probely its dead or not
not possible
Any dead creature in the water will putrefy and the resultant putrefaction will kill any fish in that water. So yes the dead crab will kill the Betta eventually.
Smell the tank, if it smells like a dead fish, then a hermie is dead :(:(
Of course they do! Unless the crab is dead.
No he is alive.