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Term Papers on Poetry and Poets |
Analysis Of Plath's "Daddy"
Number of words: 568 - Number of pages: 3.... being kept under a man’s thumb all her life.
In lines 71-80 the speaker compares her father and her husband to vampires saying how they betrayed her and drank her blood--sucking her dry of life. She tells her father to give up and be done, to lie back" (line 75) and in line 80, she says, "Daddy, daddy, you bastard,
Plath’s attitude towards men is expressed in this passage through her imagery of the villagers stamping and dancing on the dead vampire. The speaker says "If I’ve killed one man, I’ve killed two–" most likely meaning that all men are the same and ridding the world of .....
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Dover Beach: Conflicting Imagery
Number of words: 516 - Number of pages: 2.... is clearly
reinforcing the idea of the sea being the bearer of misery. The reference
is to Sophocles tragic plays and the suffering that necessarily accompanied
them. This image becomes powerful as the reader realizes that the poet is
saying that he can hear the same message on Dover Beach that Sophocles
heard so many years ago by the Aegean. He is basically saying that the
nature of life doesn't change. There was suffering in the times of the
Greeks, suffering in his time, and there will be suffering after he is gone.
The poet finishes the poem of with several images that lend even
more p .....
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Poet's Use Of Mockery As Diction In Poem
Number of words: 382 - Number of pages: 2.... nonchalant. The word "chap"
conveys an casual attitude towards the heroes as people. It seems to elevate
the status of the majors to a false superior position. "Scrap" makes it seems as
if the soldier's death occurred on a playground, not a battlefield. It seems to
trivialize war in general.
"And when the war is done and the youth stone dead,
I'd toddle safely home and die - in bed."
The poet's last lines give the reader an insight into the true wishes of the
soldier. The youth stone dead allow the reader to acknowledge the finality of
death and the wasted lives of th .....
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Element Of God In Poetry
Number of words: 1961 - Number of pages: 8.... the strength of an
evil predator. If we are the Lamb, then we must rely on the protection of
our Shepherd, God. Why would Blake call us a Lamb then? Aren't we stronger
than any other animal upon this earth? I think that God would tell us "No,"
for it is He who gives us life strength, as Blake says in the next few
lines… Gave thee life & bid thee feed, By the stream & o're the mead; Gave
thee clothing of delight, Softest clothing wooly bright, What strength
could man have without the gifts of God: life, food, clothing. We would
have none! And Jesus said to them, "I am the bread of life. He w .....
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Poetry: The Law Makes Me Go
Number of words: 217 - Number of pages: 1.... and with help from my pal,
All I haved learned in that class is Qué tal?;
I head for my desk just to wait for the bell,
Then it's off again, get me out of this hell;
In Biology we're learning what makes you cough;
In History It's notes 'till my arm falls off;
English however Is alot of fun;
Then IT's P.E....do I have to run?
When you see me jumping and shouting horray,
You will know I'm in the last class of the day;
Math has just started and I've had enough;
Am I ever gonna really use this weird stuff?, .....
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Sonnet 18
Number of words: 612 - Number of pages: 3.... images of natural nuisances such as windy days that "…shake the darling buds of May"(ll. 3); which hot weather magnified because it is coming from heaven and the seasons are changing. Shakespeare has taken the idea of a warm breezy summer day and twisted it into a sweltering day with the sun beating down on us.
However, in the lines after the destruction of a nice day, he twists things back by the comments he showers on his love. He tells us that his love's beauty shall remain the same at all times, "…thy…shall not fade"(ll. 9). He places an exclamation on that line by using the word .....
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Interpreting Poetry
Number of words: 688 - Number of pages: 3.... shall death brag thou wander’st in his
Shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou growest:
So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.
In the simplest terms possible, Shakespeare is saying that the woman of whom this poem speaks of is beautiful. But even more than that, the eloquence in which he expresses her beauty demonstrates that Shakespeare loves the woman he is addressing.
In what seems almost a response to Shakespeare’s sonnet, Elizabeth Barrett Browning wrote a poem titled, “If Thou Must Love Me, Let It Be For .....
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Analysis Of The Poem "The Soldier" By Rupert Brooke
Number of words: 487 - Number of pages: 2.... line "Gave, once, her flowers to love, her ways to roam."
This line evokes images of a beautiful woman cherishing and caressing the
man who stands at her side. Another line is "Washed by the rivers, blest
by suns of home." This line creates a feeling of tranquillity and a unity
with nature.
Another line that evokes a feeling of peace and happiness is, "Her
sights and sounds; dreams happy as her day." Without such strong images,
the poem would probably not have such a great effect on the reader. Lines
such as this one force the reader to see the land in the same light as the
poet.
Symbo .....
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Theme Presented In The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner
Number of words: 499 - Number of pages: 2.... universal cycle of life and love. Following his
execution of the albatross, his luck suddenly changes.
His luck indeed seems to change, and the Mariner experiences the
punishment that comes with the moral error of killing the Albatross--
isolation and alienation from everything but himself. Then, the
"Nightmare," the life in death, kills his crew. He is lost at sea, left
alone in the night to suffer, and he has detached from his natural cycle.
The Mariner proclaims his misery when he says: "Alone, alone, all, all
alone, Alone on a wide wide sea! And never a saint took pity on My .....
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A Critical Analysis Of "The Parting" By Michael Drayton
Number of words: 861 - Number of pages: 4.... with no possibility of a reconciliation, whilst also
adding to the ease of understanding and therefore also to the meaning of the
poem.
Another constraint of the sonnet is the length of the lines themselves.
In a sonnet, the rythem is always iambic pentameter, which means that there must
always be ten syllables per line, with each second syllable being stressed.
Where the author breaks this pattern, it must obviously be for a good reason,
when the author wants a certain word or syllable to be stressed. This in itself
will naturally add tot he meaning of the poem. This, in addition, to .....
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