Paper University  
Search Papers:   
HOME INSTANT ACCESS MEMBERS LOGIN QUESTIONS CONTACT US
PAPER CATEGORIES
       Arts & Movies
       Book Reports
       Creative Writing
       English
       Finance & Money
       Geography & Places
       History
       Legal Issues
       Medicine & Nutrition
       Miscellaneous
       Music & Musicians
       People & Biographies
       Poetry & Poets
       Politics & Government
       Religion
       Science & Nature
       Society
       Technology
 
Poetry and Poets Term Papers and Reports
The Second Coming: Analysis
495 Words - 2 Pages

.... falcon represents a war and the falconer represents the military power that has unleashed it to the point where all control is lost and faith in God has been abandoned. The next line of the poem explains this process; “things fall apart” indicates that the runaway war has sparked disorder in the public. “The centre cannot hold,” signifies that the obedience to God has lost its value. Even though there may be more than one interpretation, the metaphor points up one socio-religious theme that society has lost order and in turn lost faith in God. The second metaphor conveys Yeats’ idea that anarchy has taken over. The metaphor begins with “The blood-dimmed tide ....


Analysis Of Lorca’s Lament For Ignacio Sanchez Mejias
2210 Words - 9 Pages

.... in a special way in that the words form patterns of verse, sound, and of thought that appeal strongly to the imagination. Federico Garcia Lorca demonstrated his greatness as a writer when he produced the poem Lament for Ignacio Sanchez Mejias. He made good use of many literary devices in order to make this poem flow properly. First, he utilized imagery, which is the use of words to create a mental picture. In fact, he has been compared to surrealist because he occasionally juxtaposed seemingly unrelated ideas and realistic and nonrealistic images causing an uncanny, dreamlike effect on the reader. In addition, he included numerous symbols in this poem to represent a cer ....


Thanatopsis: An Analysis
318 Words - 2 Pages

.... sun, but nature will reach out to you. This is described in lines eighteen through thirty. The best example of this is when Bryant writes: ..."the oak shall send its roots abroad and pierce thy mold"(29-30). In the third and final section of this poem, Bryant writes that you will die along with kings and others. The reader should get the most out of living he/she can possibly get because it is good, and do not be afraid to die but go pleasantly. This is described in lines thirty-one through eighty. The best example of this is when Bryants writes: ..."approach thy grave like one who wraps the drapery of his coach about him and lies down to pleasant dreams"(79-80) This ....


For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/ When The Rainbow Is Enuf: Style And Theme
746 Words - 3 Pages

.... Girls who Have Considered Suicide/ When the Rainbow is Enuf. First of all, Shange writes in the form a choreopoem. A choreopoem is a piece of work that is written as a poem but is intended to be acted out on stage sort of like an opera. It is constructed in such a way that it flows just as well on paper as it does on stage. She either writes in all capital letters or all lower case letters and never mixes them. This creates a style that she is personally known for. It sets her apart from other writers and makes her work original. None of the characters have names or any type of identity except for the color of their clothes. When the piece is done on stage the character ....


An Analysis Of "To A Friend Whose Work Has Come To Triumph"
424 Words - 2 Pages

.... poem. Sexton changed "Nothing" to "Triumph" in her title. Sexton's friend must have been a fellow poet to be able to catch the allusion to Yeats' poem. I believe she wanted her friend to know that what she did was the right thing. Perhaps she compared her friend to Yeats' friend. Sexton wrote "Think of the difference it made!" referring to Icarus' flight. She might have wanted her friend to realize a difference her defying her father made. The final line of the poem has a comparably different tone than the first 13 lines. The last line, "See him acclaiming the sun and come plunging down while his sensible daddy goes straight into town.", seems more mocking of Daeda ....


Dulce Et Decorum Est: Analysis
1155 Words - 5 Pages

.... making their way back to base after a harrowing time at the battle front when a gas shell was fired at them, and as a result of this, one of the platoon was fatally gassed. Owen has arranged the poem in three sections, each dealing with a different stage of this experience. He makes use of a simple, regular rhyme scheme, which makes the poem sound almost like a child's poem or nursery rhyme. This technique serves to emphasise the solemn and serious content, and the irony of “the old lie,” of the title. In stanza one, Owen describes the soldiers as they set off towards the army base camp after a spell at the battle front. His use of similes such as “Bent double, like ol ....


"Gunpowder Plot" By Vernon Scannell
582 Words - 3 Pages

.... and more sinister meaning is that if war, when explosions devastate and the children running around screaming are running for their lives. That in war time these beautiful fireworks kill and injure people. The man in the poem was in a war and being around the antics on a Guy Falkes night bring back evil, unpleasant memories of war with people dying. Later in the poem we learn that the man's brother had dies in the war as the line reads : "I hear a corpse's sons -- 'Who's scared of bangers!' 'Uncle, John's afraid!' In the story the author uses a lot of comparisons, the first one we come across is between fireworks and "Curious cardboard buds" where he de ....


Tumbleweed: Central Theme
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 gi ....



« prev  25  26  27  28  29  30  31  32  33  34  next »

 
HOME INSTANT ACCESS MEMBERS LOGIN QUESTIONS CANCEL MEMBERSHIP CONTACT US
Copyright © 2006 Paper University