Tile 1. TRANQUIL DILIGENCE
"And busily all the night · Had been heaping field and highway · With a silence deep and white"... The line, "And busily all the night" connotes diligence while the line "silence deep and white" lends evidence to a tranquil setting. Thus making tranquil diligence the mood that this excerpt evokes.
Tile 2. EXQUISITE BEAUTY
"Every pine and fir and hammock · Wore ermine too dear for an earl · And the poorest twig on the elm-tree · Was ridged inch deep with pearl"... The mood that is evoked by this excerpt is exquisite beauty because the writer, James Russel Lowell depicts images of nature with descriptions that produce a sense of awe in the beauty of nature.
Tile 3. POWERFUL TURBULENCE
"Enwrapp'd in tempest and a night of storms · Astonish'd ocean feels the wild uproar"... The thoughts of "storms" and "wild uproar" in themselves are pictures of powerful turbulence. As a matter of fact, the word, "Turbulence" is defined as the violent movement of air or water, a phenomenon which is typical of a storm.
Tile 4. LAVISH AFFLUENCE
"From splendid domes of first degree · Where ladies meet to sip their tea"... It is quite apparent that lavish affluence is evoked by this excerpt. The first line, "From splendid domes of first degree" evokes a sense of grandeur in the reader, while the second line, "Where ladies meet to sip their tea" creates an image of a group of women with high standing and wealth, thus evoking a sense of affluence.