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Poetry and Poets Term Papers and Reports |
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Lesbian Poetry
2459 Words - 9 Pages.... their life, while others of
them in more recent times have risked their careers as writers because they
or their material were lesbian.
Sappho was a pioneer in many aspects of Greek culture. One of the
great Greek lyrists and little known female poets of the ancient world,
Sappho was born soon after 630BC. Aristocratic herself, she married a
merchant and had a daughter named Cleis (Robinson 24). Her wealth gave her
the chance to live however she chose, and she chose to spend her life
studying the arts on the isle of Lesbos which was a cultural center in the
seventh century BC. Sappho spent a majority of her time here, but she also
traveled extensively through Greece ....
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You Should Really Read This Poem
1115 Words - 5 Pages.... As you are not familiar with the way things are then, you would enjoy reading about it. This is because you do not know about it yet and you are probably curious about it. An example of the difference in time is that they had celebrations, feasts, and entertainment by way of scops in meadhalls. The meadhall of the story is Heorot and they describe it saying, "The great hall rose / high and horn-gabled" (l. 55-56). The phrase ‘horn-gabled' is referring to the group called the Scyldings which were always associated with the stag. They also probably decorated the hall with horns. Some further elements of the setting are the geographical features. The story mentions m ....
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The Real Me
325 Words - 2 Pages.... in fairytales love at first sight
and all ends well
Tried to make a dollar the only way I knew how
I seem to forget You’re holier than thou.
Executive office, Armani suits
high tax bracket and power to-boot
well versed from the best schools
trained in perfection, the number one rule.
Independence, autonomy and winning is just
elitus and best 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 ....
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"A Small Elegy"
713 Words - 3 Pages.... Against the pitch-black darkness he starts saying things to himself, using white words, which I take to mean words that have a kind of unselfconscious purity about them. He daydreams about his mother ,an "autumnal recollection", and that in turn moves him back toward his childhood home where his mother seems still to preside--diminished now over an outmoded world. She is smaller, more vulnerable, someone to be protected. "Matku," he says tenderly in Czech, "Mon maminku," my little mommy, which the translator has rendered as "my diminutive mom." He imagines that after all these years she's still sitting back there, quietly uncomplaining, thinking about his father who die ....
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Beginnings
725 Words - 3 Pages.... sets her goals high, allows others to help prepare her for the
future, then she can use that base for support as she goes through life.
This poem is speaking to a beginner. The beginner could be any age and
starting anything, such as a baby beginning life, an athlete beginning a
season, or a student beginning a course of study. The poet is telling the
novice to build on what she has learned in the past, to continue to set
her goals high and to open herself up to help from a higher being, which
may be herself, her father, a mentor, or God, to help her achieve her
goals.
Booth is saying in this poem that the first lesson one needs to learn in
life is that we must prepare ou ....
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A Culture Destroyed
895 Words - 4 Pages.... and my blood to ripen not be ripped from my bones”(569). When I read this I immediately thought that she was implying that she expected to die of old age and not die from a gunshot. She did not expect for someone to come and rip her clothing from her frozen body like she was a dead animal on the side of the side of the beach. The Native Americans were already here and the whites treated them like they were intruders on the whites’ land. This, in some ways, was like slavery. Slaves were not respected. They were treated like animals and they had no way to defend themselves. Their culture was not respected and if they even spoke one word of being treated like a citizen ....
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Frost's “Desert Places”: Inner Darkness
818 Words - 3 Pages.... that darkness has fallen quickly and unexpectedly upon him. As the speaker ponders “going past” into the field, the reader is able to see the landscape darkening around “the ground that is almost smoothed in snow” (line 3), and picture the inky blackness as it covers everything except for a “few weeds and stubble showing last” (line 4). The image of him standing alone on the barren snowy landscape with weeds as his only companions, creates a lasting picture in the mind of the reader, of a man just beginning to reveal his inner “darkness”.
As the second stanza begins, the speaker has reached the borderline of the quickly darkening woods, and it seem ....
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In Poems "The Man He Killed", "Reconciliation", And "Dreamers", The Authors Show That Man Kills Because He Must
548 Words - 2 Pages.... In The Man He Killed, Hardy speaks about the absurdity of war. He gives
a narrative of how he kills a "foe", and that this "foe" could be a friend if
they met "by some old ancient inn", instead of the battlefield. Hardy says
"...quaint and curious war is...you shoot a fellow down you'd treat if met
where any bar is..." In this Hardy speaks how war twists the mind, and also
makes you kill people you have no personal vendetta against.
In Reconciliation, Whitman shows the devastation of war. In a war, you
kill someone and even if you win, you lose. Whitman describes a man mourning
over the death of his foe. He rejoices over the ultimate death of war
"Beautiful that ....
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