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Poetry and Poets Term Papers and Reports |
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The Lost Trees
485 Words - 2 Pages.... will be
nothing left of their slow and innocent wisdom" (ll 49-50), demonstrates
the trees' awareness of how lengthy their recovery time can take. They
listen incredulously to mans' promises that he will not make this deadly
mistake again, but worry he is too weak to honor their promises.
Levertov is implying there should be harmony between man and nature
and the nature of how mankind conducts itself can have long-range effects
on the course of nature. For example, we now know how the destruction of
the rain forest in South America is affecting the percentage of oxygen
available around the globe. Man's wholesale destruction of these areas for
financial gain, despite t ....
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Coleridge's "The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner
864 Words - 4 Pages.... poem is written in such a way
that the reader is expected to willingly decide to temporarily believe the
almost unbelievable story. The reason a person is to make sure that he or she
believes it temporarily to be true is because the Mariner in the story is trying
to get the point of forgiveness from God across to the reader and if the reader
chooses not to believe the story behind the poem then they will not understand
the effect of the point of the tale. Coleridge's main point in writing the
story was to get people to understand forgiveness by understanding the poem.
The Mariner in the poem is telling his tale to a "Wedding Guest" who has
no choice but to listen and to be ....
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Comparing "The Chimney Sweeper" And "Songs Of Innocence And Of Experience"
525 Words - 2 Pages.... they can be kids again. Finally, the Angel tells Tom “if he’d be a good boy, He’d have God for his father & never want joy”(p31 L 19-20). So after that he wakes up and forgets about his horrible duties to be fullfilled for that the Angel told him that it would be alright when the time comes. In the second poem from “Songs of Experience”, the boys viewpoint on religion changes. His optimistic view has changed into a dissapointed grudge towards God and the heavens. He has come to the harsh reality that being a child in a profession where help is needed, because the child can not help himself, God has let him down since he has not released him and the other boys fro ....
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Analysis Of "Because I Could Not Stop For Death"
1954 Words - 8 Pages.... form that Dickinson uses throughout "Because" helps
convey her message to the reader. The poem is written in five quatrains.
The way in which each stanza is written in a quatrain gives the poem unity
and makes it easy to read. "I Could Not Stop for Death" gives the reader a
feeling of forward movement through the second and third quatrain. For
example, in line 5, Dickinson begins death's journey with a slow, forward
movement, which can be seen as she writes, "We slowly drove-He knew no
haste." The third quatrain seems to speed up as the trinity of death,
immortality, and the speaker pass the children playing, the fields of grain,
and the setting sun one after anoth ....
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Poe's Literary Vengence
1277 Words - 5 Pages.... in the first line of the story. "The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could, but when he ventured upon insult I vowed revenge" (149). This line reflects Poe's despise of his estranging stepfather John Allan. This estrangement forced Poe to make decisions about his life that he would not have had to consider at such and early age.
Fortunato was a wealthy man who was admired in his community. I feel that is how Poe relates Forutnato to his step- father. Martha Womack quotes from Kenneth Silverman's book Edgar A. Poe: A Never-Ending Remembrance. "Allan much resembled Fortunato being a rich man, respected, admired, beloved, interested in the win ....
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Criticism Of Keats' Melancholy
1902 Words - 7 Pages.... a different aspect of Keats’s “Melancholy.” The first article by Gaillard focused mainly on the structure of the poem and the deleted first stanza, whereas, the article by Anselm Haverkamp mainly discussed the meaning of the poem and the feeling of melancholy. Both articles helped me to understand “Melancholy” better. They also convinced me that Robert Burton had an influence on Keats’s poem.
In Keats’s Ode on Melancholy, Gaillard explains that the original “Melancholy” was composed of four stanzas, the first of which Keats’s decided to remove before the poem was published. According to Gaillard, the original “stanza did survive in Brown’s trans ....
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The Power Of Images In Langston Hughes' Poems
592 Words - 3 Pages.... The time frame in which this poem was written is another indication of his mind state. The second verse asks does it dry up like a raisin in the sun? If anyone has ever seen anything dry up whether in the sun or not you can understand the gist of what he is saying. Drying up like a raisin in the sun would suggest losing hope after trying so hard.
Another example Langston used was the festering of a sore. Of course, it is painful to get a sore. Such an act or thought could equate to the struggle the blacks in-lets say the sixties went through during all those marches across the country. The pain and suffering they endured trying to become a part of the so-called "Ame ....
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Confessions In Rhyme: Poetry Analysis
1834 Words - 7 Pages.... sailor a country was overpowered,
for each and every sailor a kingdom was conquered.
Pain was planted into their hearts and minds.
A plan for revenge has just been born.
Captain Jaggery has made his last wish.
His death wish...
This relates to what happened after the Rebellion, all reactions that became one. Everyone wants revenge!
Rebellion
The captain worked them day and night
for he had no mercy,
because of this they had a fight
though hungry and very thirsty.
In that fight two men had died
or at least it was thought to be
when they found out one was alive
they went on happily.
They tricked the captain and two of the crew
into thinking that Zachariah was dea ....
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