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Term Papers on Poetry and Poets |
Essay Interpreting "One Art" By Elizabeth Bishop
Number of words: 364 - Number of pages: 2.... lose a realm, the speaker seems to be
comparing the realm to a large loss in her life. Finally, the statement in the
final quatrain "Even losing you" begins the irony in that stanza. The speaker
remarks that losing this person is not "too hard" to master. The shift in
attitude by adding the word "too" shows that the speaker has an ironic tone for
herself in her loss or perhaps her husband or someone else close to her.
Language and verse form show in "One Art" how the losses increase in importance
as the poem progresses, with the losses in lines 1-15 being mostly trivial or
not very importa .....
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Stoutenburg's Reel One: An Analysis
Number of words: 553 - Number of pages: 3.... It feels
that once the movie is gone so is all the excitement in his life, that
through the movies he can explore something that he cannot in real life.
Stoutenburg or the person he is writing about does not seem to want to live
outside of this fantastic dreamscape.
Although Stoutenburg is with his girl friend throughout the whole
poem, he does not make mention of her until the second body paragraph, "I
held my girl's hand," (line 9). He is so caught up in the movie that he
fails to acknowledges her existence. In lines sixteen through eighteen you
can feel Stoutenburg's obsession .....
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Robert Frost Used Many Elements Of Nature To Show Fear And Uncertainty
Number of words: 1118 - Number of pages: 5.... the dirt from his eyes as he went;
And well I knew what the Demon meant.
“He represented himself as having conducted a search for the modern Demiurge named Evolution in hope of learning the secrets of life, but when finally found him all he was rewarded was indifference, atheism, and laughter” (Thompson 327). The uncertainty lies in the Demiurge’s answer of indifference and atheism. This answer may inspire some fear but much of it resides in the face of Evolution, an element of nature.
Another poem that conveys fear and uncertainty is “Into My Own.” In lines 1 through 4 Fr .....
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Andrea Del Sarto: A Statement Worthy Of Examination
Number of words: 1814 - Number of pages: 7.... can be
inferred from these relatively simple lines. They seem straightforward
enough, yet contain deeper, more specific meaning. First of course, the
pessimistic mood of the statement must be identified. For to understand
the implications of the quote, the pessimism needs to be understood.
Browning is writing from the point of view of del Sarto, a severely
depressed painter, yet comments like these come from the mind of Browning.
How is Browning to know del Sarto’s particular beliefs? In fact, Browning’
s knowledge of del Sarto is confined to one, single biography of the
painter th .....
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"Life Is A Series Of Tests And Challenges": A Critical Analysis Of Sir Gawain And The Green Knight
Number of words: 812 - Number of pages: 3.... one of the things that knighthood represented,
fearlessness. People accept those kind of challenges everyday. This could
possibly be where the term "sticking your neck out" could have come from.
When people accept challenges, most do not want to accept the consequences
as a result of being unsuccessful. Gawain was not like this. When the year
passed he gallantly mounted his horse and set off for the Green Chapel.
This showed that Gawain was brave. This was preceded by the warning "Beware,
Gawain, that you not end a betrayer of your bargain through fear."
Along this journey Gawain face .....
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Thanatopsis: An Analysis
Number of words: 318 - Number of pages: 2.... out
of living he/she can possibly get because it is good, and do not be afraid
to die but go pleasantly. This is described in lines thirty-one through
eighty. The best example of this is when Bryants writes: ..."approach thy
grave like one who wraps the drapery of his coach about him and lies down
to pleasant dreams"(79-80)
This poem has taught the reader that death is not a bad thing. It
is just a ticket to a pleasant life after death. So have fun in your life
and live life to its fullest. When you are sad and need a friend look to
nature and he will always be there. Even after you a .....
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Emily Dickinson: Individuality
Number of words: 1301 - Number of pages: 5.... in life. People like Emerson and Thoreau believed that answers lie in the individual. Emerson set the tone for the era when he said, “Insist on yourself; never imitate” (McMichael 691). Emily Dickinson believed and practiced this philosophy. When she was young, she was brought up by a stern and disciplined father. In her childhood she was shy and already different from the others. Like all the Dickinson children, male or female, Emily was sent for formal education in Amherst Academy. After attending Amherst Academy with many other conscientious thinkers, and after reading many .....
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Poem "Lucifer In The Starlight": New Meanings And Ideas
Number of words: 780 - Number of pages: 3.... dominion." Ironically, the first line refers to Lucifer
honorably, as a "Prince", while in the second line he is tagged as a fiend. This
leaves the reader feeling perplexed, yet still thinking of Lucifer as the enemy.
At first it may seem as Lucifer has risen to the Earth, but it is further
clarified that he has elevated himself above the "rolling ball". However, god
imagined the world as planar, with heaven on a higher plane, and hell on a lower
plane, not spherical as defined here. From his place in the stars above earth,
Lucifer looks down through the clouds, and observes the sinners. .....
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Exploring The Theme Of Premature Death In Three Poems
Number of words: 1605 - Number of pages: 6.... anticipated the reader’s expectations, and took the poem in a different direction. The character in the story is certainly not having a “normal” spring break at all, as he is spending it grief-stricken over the death of his four-year old brother. If one examines this title on an interpretive level, the word “break” takes on a new meaning, as it could refer to the death of the child as breaking the heart or spirit of the family and the speaker.
The situations and tones in the poems are very similar, in that all the poems deal with the speaker in the poem expressing deep emotion ove .....
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Poe's Literary Vengence
Number of words: 1277 - Number of pages: 5.... age.
Fortunato was a wealthy man who was admired in his community. I feel that is how Poe relates Forutnato to his step- father. Martha Womack quotes from Kenneth Silverman's book Edgar A. Poe: A Never-Ending Remembrance. "Allan much resembled Fortunato being a rich man, respected, admired, beloved, interested in the wines, and a member of the Masons." Womack goes on to quote from Silverman's book "Even the Allan name can be seen as an anagram in Amontillado." In the second paragraph of the story I feel this is where Poe expresses how he dealt with his father's estrangement. .....
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