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Poetry and Poets Term Papers and Reports |
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Compare And Contrasting Two Robert Frost Poems Of Spiritual Views
919 Words - 4 Pages.... hung with laundry, an image which invokes visions of the spiritual soul floating in the breeze yet at the same time connected to the common world of laborers, thieves, and lovers. Both poems, therefore, see the need for man to be aware of both his earthly and spiritual worlds and to achieve a balance between the two that elevates and defines him as a creature of God.
Robert Frost and Wilbur Richard rely on good word choice to exemplify their common theme. Frost's "Take Something Like a Star" sticks with the word star to represent God. All of the adjectives that Frost uses to describe the star also go hand in hand with God. In the Poem "Love Calls Us to the Things ....
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Analysis Of Frost's "Desert Places" And "Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening"
1060 Words - 4 Pages.... "Desert Places" the speaker is a man who is traveling
through the countryside on a beautiful winter eventing. He is completely
surrounded with feelings of loneliness. The speaker views a snow covered
field as a deserted place. "A blanker whiteness of benighted snow/ With no
expression, nothing to express". Whiteness and blankness are two key ideas
in this poem. The white sybolizes open and empty spaces. The snow is a
white blanket that covers up everything living. The blankness sybolizes
the emptyness that the speaker feels. To him there is nothing else around
except for the unfeeling snow and his lonely thoughts.
The speaker in this poem is jealous of the woods. " ....
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Essay Interpreting "One Art" By Elizabeth Bishop
364 Words - 2 Pages.... The last
line repeated, to the effect of "The art of losing isn't hard to master"
suggests that the speaker is trying to convince herself that losing things is
not hard and she should not worry. Also, the speaker uses hyperboles when
describing in the fifth tercet that she lost "two cities...some realms I owned."
Since she could not own, much less 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 ....
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Andrea Del Sarto: A Statement Worthy Of Examination
1814 Words - 7 Pages.... this world, who can do a thing, will not;/ And who would do it, cannot,.
. .” These lines represent the struggles of most poets and writers we’ve
read this past semester, in particular Byron, Shelley and Hardy.
Before the lines can be used to generalize a broad range of artists,
first the lines must be thoroughly understood. Several themes 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 ....
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Upon The Burning Of Our House July 10th, 1666
578 Words - 3 Pages.... starts the poem out with a sad depressing tone and at her volta, “And did thy wealth on earth abide”(ln 38) switches to a tone full of hope and faith.
In Bradstreet’s first stanza she speaks of how she went to bed and regrets of not looking more clearly before “rest she took”(ln 1). She is awaken by shrieks of fire that is not aroused by any man. As she sees the light of the fire at the beginning of stanza two, she comes to a sharp realization about what is happening and says a quick prayer to God to save her comfort, and what, at the time, she considers her “life”. As she leaves her house in stanza three, taking one last look she realizes that all that wa ....
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Housman's "To An Athlete Dying Young"
1631 Words - 6 Pages.... through the town in which the crowd loves and cheers for him.
As Bobby Joe Leggett defines at this point, the athlete is "carried of the
shoulders of his friends after a winning race" (54). In Housman's words:
The time you won your town the race
We chaired you through the market place;
Man and boy stood cheering by,
And home we brought you shoulder-high. (Housman 967).
Stanza two describes a much more somber procession. The athlete is being
carried to his grave. In Leggett's opinion, "The parallels between this
procession and the former triumph are carefully drawn" (54). The reader
should see that Housman makes another reference ....
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Beowulf: The Ultimate Hero
1771 Words - 7 Pages.... A. Bloom) Not only is Beowulf a hero because of
his physical strength, but like Favre, gives the glory to God. Beowulf is
the ultimate hero who put his life on the line for an entire kingdom.
Beowulf's heroism can be seen when he takes 14 of the bravest in
his land to go help Hrothgar. Hrothgar was Beowulf's father's close friend
who had been plagued by attacks for twelve years that threatened an entire
kingdom. Beowulf did not have to offer Hrothgar's kingdom help, but does
so because he wants to uses his God given strength to the best of his
ability. As soon as Beowulf heard of the troubles in this land he set sail
immediately. Beowulf continues to show his thank ....
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"The Ruined Maid” By Thomas Hardy
511 Words - 2 Pages.... stage of the lady, and then the poor lady gets a chance to defend herself and explain that the situation has another perspective, which is a negative one; “We never do work when we’re ruined” (16).
The narrator life is not wealthy, it can be understood by “you left us in tatters” and so she looks up with jealousy to her friend who has managed to change and to become a part of a higher society “high compa-ny” (11). Far more, there is a reference to not-knowing melancholy, and yet she defends that with “one’s pretty lively when ruined” (20), which contradicts with the melancholy tone of the poem, to some extent.
The recall of the conversation between ....
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