CARISPIBET Broken Chain | Poem memorial bereavement sympathy condolence funeral gift for loss of loved one 12" x 8"

£6.995
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CARISPIBET Broken Chain | Poem memorial bereavement sympathy condolence funeral gift for loss of loved one 12" x 8"

CARISPIBET Broken Chain | Poem memorial bereavement sympathy condolence funeral gift for loss of loved one 12" x 8"

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Description

Author Ron Tranmer was born in Idaho in 1940. He is a self-proclaimed poet who reports writing his first poem at age 8 for a girl in his class. When the poem resulted in the recipient’s pleasure and smile, he kept writing. To date, he has published over 400 poems on traditional themes such as God, country, family, compassion, friendship, and humor. Throughout this poem, the poet makes use of several literary devices. These include but are not limited to: Caesura: occurs when a poet inserts a pause in a line of verse. This could be through the use of punctuation or through a natural pause in the meter. For example, “In death, we do the same.” He goes on to explain that those loved ones we have lost do not go to heaven alone. Rather, as family members pass away, they are reunited again. What Does It Mean To Break The Chain? A poem that speaks to many people, t he Unbroken Chain is a beautiful reminder that our bonds, relationships, and love do not have to end when someone passes away. In this poem, the speaker or author is speaking to the person who has passed away.

The Broken Chain’by Ron Tranmer is a four-stanza poem that is divided into sets of four lines. These are known as quatrains. The poem follows a simple and direct rhyme scheme of ABCB and changing end sounds from stanza to stanza. Readers should also take note of the exact time in the second stanza with the word “you” ending both lines one and three. What is very important in this context is that the author does believe the family will be made whole again eventually, in the afterlife. Use Of The Broken Chain Poem In Sympathy And Memorial Gifts The repetition of the word “you” continues in the second two lines of the stanza. The speaker says, using very simple and easy-to-understand language, that despite having passed away, the deceased person is “always at our side.” This is another commonly used phrase to describe the way that grieving loved ones remind themselves of the close bonds they formed with a person who has passed away. The reference to the chain continues in the final couplet of the poem. The speaker says that the “chain will link again” as everyone who was a part of it during life dies and goes to God’s side. They are in the afterlife, and the speaker and their family members believe they were all be reunited and the “broken chain” will “link again. Repetition: occurs when the poet repeats one or more elements of a poem. This could be the structure, an image, a word, phrase, or more. In this case, the poet repeats the idea that “God” called “you” into Heaven and there was nothing anyone could do about it.

It is apparent that the speaker and his family members did not know the person was going to pass away because God unexpectedly “called his name.” However, the author explains that even though the person is no longer with them on earth, the love of the deceased person has not changed. How to Plan a Funeral - Discover the Easy Secrets to Arrange the Perfect Funeral for Your Loved One The family believes that the “family chain is broken” due to the loss of this life, and that their family unit is irrevocably changed. Nothing will ever be the same again due to the broken chain. Alliteration: occurs when the poet repeats the same consonant sound at the beginning of multiple lines. For example, “dearly” and “death” in lines three and four of the first stanza. It is in the fourth stanza of the poem that the title’s reference to a “chain” is explored. It is also in the stanza that the speaker reveals that the person who has passed away was a family member. The speaker is expressing their emotions along with the emotions of other close family members.

In the second half of the first stanza, which forms another closed couplet that can stand by itself, the speaker tells the person who has passed away that everyone on Earth loves them with the same passion that they did when this person was alive. Wall Art: Wall hangings could be a picture, a framed poster, or a wall tapestry to be used as a home decor memorial gift.There are many beautiful bereavement gifts available that feature the Broken Chain poem. Consider some of these keepsakes as you look for a memorial gift to send to someone mourning their loved one. The broken chain symbolizes a life that has broken. In the fourth stanza, the reader learns that the person who passed away was a family member. The author also tells us that he is not just stating his emotions and feelings; rather, he is sharing the feelings of all of the family members. The poem speaks to anyone who has lost someone. Why? Because e ven though you learn to move on and live without your loved one, you are never the same. Also important in this poem, however, is that the author believes that these family members will be reunited. The author clearly believes in an afterlife where the family will be made whole again. What Is The Lesson In The Poem?

Key Chain: What better gift than a keychain that the person will see each time they grab their keys to leave the house or drive a car?In the second stanza, the speaker admits that the people they left behind on Earth were brokenhearted when their loved one passed away. This is despite knowing that their loved one was going to have to live alongside God. But, the speaker notes that it gave them some solace to know that “you did not go alone.” A part of everyone who loved this person on Earth went along with them when “God called you home.” This is another example of a religious euphemism that refers to death. The poet does not use a specific metrical pattern throughout the four stanzas of this poem. But, there are some examples, in combination with the rhyme scheme, that suggests the poet is interested in the ballad or hymn form. This is seen through their near use of alternating lines of iambic trimeter and iambic tetrameter in some stanzas. Metaphor: occurs when the poet compares two unlike things without using “like” or “as.” In this case, the speaker compares the loss the family suffered to a broken chain that will “link again” when they all are reunited in heaven.



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