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Poetry and Poets Term Papers and Reports |
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Analysis Of The Poem "The Soldier" By Rupert Brooke
487 Words - 2 Pages.... in the poem reinforces the meaning because he truly
believes in his country. He describes England in his ninth line by saying,
"And think, this heart, all evil shed away." These are the words of a man who
truly believes that his land is the greatest of good.
Images in "The Soldier" are extremely strong and persuading. One image
is the 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 p ....
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Shakespeare's Sonnet 18
521 Words - 2 Pages.... all carrying different styles like historic, tragedy, and comic.
All of his writings include different subjects such as a young man that
Shakespeare was good friends with, a dark lady he was in love with, a rival
poet, advice, and his long absence from London (World Book Encyclopedia)
Sonnets are the most famous of Shakespeare’s works. Sonnets are
lyric poems made up of fourteen lines and sound more like a song without
musical instruments than a poem. Sonnet 18 is one of the most admired of
his collection. It is a beautiful romantic love poem written to compare
summer to his love’s beauty. A beautiful piece of imagery is used in
lines1-3: “Shall I compa ....
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Robert Frost's Themes Of Isolation, Extinction, And Limitations Of Man
1375 Words - 5 Pages.... is presented and assessed in the poem “The road not taken”.
“Mending Wall” questions the necessity for human isolation. Walls whether physical or psychological represent isolation and imprisonment. In “Mending Wall” we find the persona interrogating his neighbour as to whether a wall is necessary between them “If I could put a notion in his head”. Frost in this poem uses a simple rural activity, that is the mending of a wall, to conjure a much more universal theme that is isolation. The persona ponders at the fact why man can not live without walls, boundaries, limits and particularly self-limitations. “There where it is/ We do not need a wall”. Isolation ....
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Elements Of Romanticism In Wordsworth's "London, 1802" And Blake's "The Lamb"
1063 Words - 4 Pages.... This poem's origin is spontaneous in nature. The
basic images and metaphors of the sonnet make extensive use of nature,
realistic setting. The idea for the poem sprung from Wordsworth's initial
reaction to the state of London upon his return from France:
...(this was) written immediately after my return from
France to London, when I could not but be struck...with
the vanity and parade of our own country
From this account it can be deduced that the poem was spontaneous
in nature and originated from an internal response. The poem's use of a
realistic setting occurs in line 2 with the reference of England as a
"fen." This pa ....
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Wagoner's Tumbleweed: An Analysis
758 Words - 3 Pages.... them. The
circumstances around them have relegated them to being tossed about from
one place to another. “ To catch at the barbed wire and hang there, shaking,
like a riddled prisoner.” The poet tells us using strong images of pain and
injury that the tumbleweed was thrown against a fence, a kind of prison
from which it is difficult to escape. 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
g ....
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Whitman's Live Oak, With Moss
528 Words - 2 Pages.... with a sense of warmth and love. Before venturing on
to specifics, Whitman reveals the meaning of Live Oak, With Moss . Symbolic
of himself, he describes the Live Oak, With Moss as a rude, unbending, and
lusty creature, alone in a field, with only soft moss for comfort. The
significance of the description is overwhelming. Whitman see's himself as a
rude, closed-minded, and lusty person, who spends a considerable amount of
time alone. However, Whitman views himself as a different person when he is
in the company of his companion. With the live Oak representing Whitman,
and the tender green Moss representing Whitman's companion, these two
separate entities form one. Happy, ....
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Analysis Of William Blake's Poetry
2018 Words - 8 Pages.... stanza the author prophasizes the future, foretelling
of a serious situation. William Blake then goes on in the poem to
tell about how the young girls parents react to the new knowledge that
their daughter is missing. The parents are fearful because they know the
dangers of the jungle their daughter is lost in. The parents, caretakers,
of the young girl can not conceive the possibility that the jungle may have
a soft and caring side.
We then find out the age of young Lyca, "seven summers old." At
the age of seven, a young girl must be very scared alone in the wood with
out her mother and father. William Blake also in this stanza tells how
Lyca became lost in this wi ....
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Dylan Thomas's Use Of Language
1955 Words - 8 Pages.... Thomas' poems, "Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night," "Fern Hill," and "The Force that Through the Green Fuse Drives the Flower," he uses different techniques and language to make each poem more effective to the reader.
Thomas' poem "Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night" is addressed to Thomas' father, giving him advice on how he should die. The poem is a villanelle, which is a type of French pastoral lyric. It was not found in English literature until the late nineteenth century. It derives from peasant life, originally being a type of round sung. It progressed throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries to its present form. For Dylan Thomas, its strictly disc ....
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