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“The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls”
• The speaker of this poem describes a traveler
  coming to a town by way of the shore, while
  the tide rises and falls endlessly. The
  ceaselessness of the waves contrasts with the
  traveler’s brief stay.
  – human action is fleeting, nature is eternal
Stanza Summaries
1. the traveler comes to town;
   nature pays him/her no mind;
   man has little influence on
   nature
2. the waves erase the footprints
   of the traveler; human life is
   nothing compared to the
   power of nature.
3. the traveler’s stay was short;
   the tides are continuous.
Rhyme Scheme
• Words that rhyme with “falls” occur in the first,
  second, and fifth lines of each stanza.
• The rhyme suggests a pattern of recurrence that
  imitates the rise and fall of the tide.
• the rhyme scheme is aabba/aacca/aadda - this
  pattern evokes the image of the recurring waves
  and underscores the cyclical, ceaseless quality of
  nature
• Daylight returns each morning (nature eternal)
  - like the tides - but the traveler will never
  return (humans are temporary)
• The traveler leaves footprints in the sand. The
  wave erases the footprints and the traveler
  moves on.
• Nature stronger than man.
• “Our destined end” or purpose is to act bravely
  and patiently achieve our goals
• Make a mark on the world – be remembered
• great people make their mark on the world and,
  through their example, inspire others to act
lines 17-18 - metaphor


• Life is like a battlefield, the world is full of
  strife, and that individual’s life in the world is
  only temporary, like a bivouac
Compare the two poems
• Reread lines 8-10 in “The Tide Rises...”
  and 25-32 in “A Psalm of Life.”
  Consider what happens to the
  footprints in each poem. Based on this
  and other images, how would you say
  Longfellow’s outlook on life and death
  in each poem is similar? In what way is
  it different?
• In both poems, life is fleeting. “The Tide
  Rises...” is more somber, humans are dwarfed
  by nature and not much remembered -
  indicated by the footprints that the tide erases
• In “A Psalm of Life,” individuals can have an
  enduring impact on the world (indicated by
  the footprints that remain) - a view that is
  denied in “The Tide Rises...”
Symbolism


• Traveler – any human, no identity since
  they’re forgettable
• Tide – continuation of time
• Journey of traveler – life as we live it
• “traveler hastens to town” – people are
  always trying to avoid death
• Reference to animals and the tide at the
  beginning and at the end – life goes on after
  we are dead

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The Tide Rises, the Tide Falls

  • 1. “The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls”
  • 2. • The speaker of this poem describes a traveler coming to a town by way of the shore, while the tide rises and falls endlessly. The ceaselessness of the waves contrasts with the traveler’s brief stay. – human action is fleeting, nature is eternal
  • 3. Stanza Summaries 1. the traveler comes to town; nature pays him/her no mind; man has little influence on nature 2. the waves erase the footprints of the traveler; human life is nothing compared to the power of nature. 3. the traveler’s stay was short; the tides are continuous.
  • 4. Rhyme Scheme • Words that rhyme with “falls” occur in the first, second, and fifth lines of each stanza. • The rhyme suggests a pattern of recurrence that imitates the rise and fall of the tide. • the rhyme scheme is aabba/aacca/aadda - this pattern evokes the image of the recurring waves and underscores the cyclical, ceaseless quality of nature
  • 5. • Daylight returns each morning (nature eternal) - like the tides - but the traveler will never return (humans are temporary)
  • 6. • The traveler leaves footprints in the sand. The wave erases the footprints and the traveler moves on. • Nature stronger than man.
  • 7. • “Our destined end” or purpose is to act bravely and patiently achieve our goals • Make a mark on the world – be remembered • great people make their mark on the world and, through their example, inspire others to act
  • 8. lines 17-18 - metaphor • Life is like a battlefield, the world is full of strife, and that individual’s life in the world is only temporary, like a bivouac
  • 9. Compare the two poems • Reread lines 8-10 in “The Tide Rises...” and 25-32 in “A Psalm of Life.” Consider what happens to the footprints in each poem. Based on this and other images, how would you say Longfellow’s outlook on life and death in each poem is similar? In what way is it different?
  • 10. • In both poems, life is fleeting. “The Tide Rises...” is more somber, humans are dwarfed by nature and not much remembered - indicated by the footprints that the tide erases • In “A Psalm of Life,” individuals can have an enduring impact on the world (indicated by the footprints that remain) - a view that is denied in “The Tide Rises...”
  • 11. Symbolism • Traveler – any human, no identity since they’re forgettable • Tide – continuation of time • Journey of traveler – life as we live it
  • 12. • “traveler hastens to town” – people are always trying to avoid death • Reference to animals and the tide at the beginning and at the end – life goes on after we are dead