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Term Papers on Poetry and Poets |
The Real Me
Number of words: 325 - Number of pages: 2.... characteristics that must
always be shown never weak or unsure
always believing you’re superior
With all that you have, you still deserve more
Denying others-what wasn’t worked for.
You planned so well, I should have planned more
to make one mistake I could not afford.
How can you assume this is all true.
I’ve never seen your foot even near my shoe.
Until you’ve walked, a mile in my stead
How can you know-What pleasure would you take
in walking my street for even a day.
The only reason, I could ever see
would be for you- to know
the real me.
K. Sablan 1999 .....
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Birches: Poetry Review
Number of words: 417 - Number of pages: 2.... was what he found himself” (25-26). The man is thinking about his own childhood where he was secluded but still content because he was creating his own happiness.
Soon into his pleasant fantasy, reality takes over. What has he accomplished or become? Why does he not have the same feelings he once had? Because “They are dragged to the withered bracken by the load” of his harsh life (14). His life of hard ships has erased all happiness in life. The line “From a twig’s having lashed across it open” (47) means something severely emotional has happened in the man’s life to caus .....
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Haughton: Am I A Gryphon Or A Queen?
Number of words: 700 - Number of pages: 3.... of the story ruins the effect thus dulling the whole thing. And let’s not forget Mr. Haughton's Queens, the type who like to sit down and analyze the complete meaning of a book, ripping it apart page by page until they come into this complete feeling of self-actualization. Anyway, there are so many more types of reading styles out there, so many combinations. So the answer to the question as whether I am a Gryphon or a Queen, I would say neither but I'll go with the nearest. I am a Gryphon of sorts I presume.
According to Haughton's definitions of readers I would have to say .....
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Allowing Evil To Triumph
Number of words: 716 - Number of pages: 3.... because he serves the Hangman best. The way in which the
good served the Hangman was by letting the evil triumph over the town. If
a group had attempted to stop the Hangman, he could have possibly been
stopped. Because only one person attempted to stop the evil, those who
kept quiet were killed for helping the Hangman without realizing it. If
the good men do nothing and make no attempt to halt the evil, then the evil
will triumph as a result of this lack of action.
In today's society, many people complain about all the political
corruption that occurs in government, but none .....
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Tumbleweed: Central Theme
Number of words: 758 - Number of pages: 3.... So the tumbleweed and the poet are
both thrust against the barbed wire of life. This is another metaphor for
the poet's difficult life. The poet and the tumbleweed are stuck in a
painful, difficult situation. They are prisoners of their surroundings,
helpless. “Like a riddled prisoner.” The words riddled prisoner are used to
give us a powerful, painful, picture of the lost and hopeless feeling of
the poet. He feels great pain at his situation, feels that there is no way
out. He is hanging there on the fence, exposed for everyone to see.
In the second stanza, the poet continues to use me .....
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William Blake's The Chimney Sweeper
Number of words: 1134 - Number of pages: 5.... Tom Dacre"(5) who cried when his blonde head of curls was shaved. The worldly wise narrator is very practical in his manner of comforting little Tom, "Hush Tom never mind it, for when your head's bare/ You know that the soot cannot spoil your white hair."(7-8) Tom is quieted, yet that same night he is visited by a dream wherein thousands of other chimney sweeps like him are all locked up in black coffins. An angel arrives and sets all the boys free to laugh and play and clean themselves, "Then naked and white, all their bags left behind,/ …/ the Angel told Tom if he'd be a good boy, .....
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Sharpio's "Auto Wreck": The Theme Of Death
Number of words: 1076 - Number of pages: 4.... by clearly stating what is being felt by the
speaker and the crowd around the accident. By stating clearly and vividly the
emotions of the scene, it is easy for the reader to identify the theme itself,
and also to identify with it.
In the first stanza, the speaker describes the ambulance arriving on the
scene more so than the actual scene itself. The ambulance is described using
words such as "wings", "dips", and "floating", giving the impression of the
hectic nature of its business at an accident. When the ambulance arrives and
breaks through the crowd, "the doors leap open" to fu .....
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Differences Between 18th Century Literature And Romantic Poetry Seen Through The Works From Alexander Pope And John Keats
Number of words: 1307 - Number of pages: 5.... has romantically
serenaded his reader with descriptive lust and desire, which can be compared
with popes' efforts by the difference in eighteenth century literature and
romantic poems, their descriptive natures and ideas they portray to the reader
through their writing.
Pope has written an eighteenth-century poem which he calls, "An Hero-
Comical Poem." This poem has exalted an over all sense of worthlessness for
common rules. The mentioning of Achilles and the ever-popular Aeneas, are
symbols of Pope's Gothic style. Pope speaks (almost) G-D like throughout, "The
Rape of Lock." Contrary .....
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Analysis Of Stephen Crane's "War Is Kind"
Number of words: 1323 - Number of pages: 5.... covered the Greco-Turkish War in 1897 and the Spanish-American War in 1898 as a war correspondent for The New York Journal newspaper. It was during these two conflicts that he perhaps drew the conclusion that war was not a glorious thing and only the purveyor of the slaughter of young men.
His graphic description of a soldier shot from his mount in the first stanza shows his contempt for the acts of war.
Do not weep, maiden, for war is kind
Because your lover threw wild hands toward the sky
And the affrighted steed ran on alone,
Do not weep.
War is kind.
I found it especially disturbin .....
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Catullus
Number of words: 1512 - Number of pages: 6.... brother, Lesbius. The name Pulcer is a pun on the real name of Clodia’s brother, P. Clodius Pulcer. Pulcer was known not only for being a violent politician, but was also rumored to have had incestuous relations with one or more of his three sisters. All three sisters, including Clodia, were known to not have strong moral characters and acted out of the class they were born into. Although there is no real proof of Lesbia being a pseudonym for Clodia, critics have agreed that this is the most likely of whom the woman had his affair with.
Even the name Lesbia has an interesting back .....
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