A Red, Red Rose
How does Robert Burns use imagery in A Red, Red Rose?
![](https://d22o6al7s0pvzr.cloudfront.net/images/bookrags/qa/avatars/School/Stack_of_Books.png)
Asked by
bookragstutor
Last updated by
Jill W
The poem's imagery looks after the matter of the beauty of appearances. But what catches the reader by surprise is that the beloved, in being compared to a "melodie / That's sweetly play'd in tune," is established not only as the subject of the lyric but as the lyric itself. To say that his "luve is like a melodie" is to association the beloved with the poem itself and its very lyricism.
BookRags