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Shakespeare's Sonnet Number 126: Critique
... thinking of his beloved friend, he rises like the lark that “sings
hymns at heaven's gate”; and in the couplet his happiness is generalized in a
final contrast.
To elaborate on what I have just said seems unnecessary but one must assume
that one's audience is completely stupid, thus the elaboration. In the first
line the poet speaks of himself as being out of luck, and/or money and not well
received by his fellow man. He has taken to crying about his social ostracism
in line two. In an attempt to clarify for himself why he is in such a state he “
troubles” heaven with his “bootless” or useles ...
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Whitman's Democracy
... Whitman's ideas of democracy. The notion that all people
should be covered under the cover of freedom. The sun is used as a metaphor for
democracy in this poem, as it should shine upon all equally.
When Whitman discusses the "shunn'd persons" in "Native Moments" he once
again mimics the concepts of democracy with his words. He lets all know that he
embraces the people that others have rejected, as democracy should embrace all.
These people are part of America also, and should be accepted as such. as
democracy should embrace all.
Whitman commends the many people of America in "I Hear America Singing."
He wri ...
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Rich's "Living In Sin": An Analysis
... The "dust[y]" atmosphere creates an aura of decay. The reality of
the woman's broken dreams is inescapable. The home, in disrepair, has
roaches coming out of their colonies in the moldings and grimy window panes.
Society dictates that she must take on the domestic drudgeries of life.
In the male dominant society, she alone must fulfill the role of
housekeeper. With the absence of her lover, the woman takes sole
responsibility for maintaining a pleasant household; she alone makes the
bed, dusts the tabletop, and sets the coffee on the stove. The portrait of
her miserable life contrasts sharply with that ...
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Sir Gawain And The Green Knight
... Gawain takes it. This is the first test that Gawain has to endure. After Gawain cuts off the head of the Green Knight, the knight tells him that he must meet him at his castle one-year and a day from now. He tells Gawain that if he does not show then he is a coward like he expected from King Arthur. After the Green Knight leaves all of the other members of the court cheer Gawain for his bravery. They see him as a hero and a savior of their leader King Arthur. Gawain only sees himself, as a normal everyday soldier that is only doing his duty by protecting faith in the monarchy that he is apart of. Gawain is a ver ...
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Not So Hidden Agendas: Wilfred Owen And His Early Editors
... by subsequent editions.
This means that in order to understand Wilfred Owen's position in English
literature, one must examine the different editions of Owen=s poems and the
agendas of each editor.
The first edition of his poems, co-edited by Sassoon and Sitwell,
created problems immediately, as Sitwell and Sassoon argued over control of
the project. After the war, Edith Sitwell had begun to prepare the poems
for publication; she had even published seven of the poems in Wheels, the
magazine she edited, and was preparing to publish more. It was then that
Sassoon became involved. Sitwell, in a letter ...
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The Lives And Works Of Elizabeth Barrett And Robert Browning
... greatest Victorian poets of all time. Born in London on May 7th, 1812 he derived from his parents a deep, religious sense and a love of books, music and painting. He was an extremely bright child and a fierce reader. He learned Latin, Greek, French, and Italian by the time he was fourteen. He attended the University of London in 1928, but left discontent to pursue an education at his own pace.
The young Browning had before him the influences of Burns, Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, and Keats. He began to prepare himself to soon be in their company. Byron was the first influence and inspiration to Browning’s fi ...
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The Influence Of Personal Experiences In Emily Dickinson's Poetry
... in
one way or another, on the same aspect of her upbringing, which was religion.
During her childhood, life in Amherst was based strongly upon religion and
Puritan values. The distinctive Puritan virtues of simplicity, austerity, hard
work, and denial of flesh, were ever-present disciplines in Emily's life (Sewall
22). Despite her stubborn denials to be labeled, she was very much of a “New
Englander”. Cynthia Griffen Wolff, author of Emily Dickinson, points out that
Emily “knew every line of the Bible intimately, quoted from it extensively, and
referred to it many more times than she referred to any other ...
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Beowulf - A Noble
... noble words and wished him luck.Beowolf
without hesitation laid down in the line of knights to wait for Grendel to
strike. This part of the story shows that Beowolf is not completly moral
because he lets some knights be killed by Grendel before he attacks.
Beowulf and Grendel fight and the monster's arm is ripped off causing a
slow and painful death.Even though Beowolf didn't do this heroic and noble
act for the reward ing Hrothgar gave him a sword and eight horses with
golden cheek plates.
The second act of Beowolf's conflict with grendel showing his
nobility is not with Gredel himself but with Grendels moth ...
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A Critical Analysis Of "The Parting" By Michael Drayton
... This distillation process
means that the waffle that would have filled up a piece of prose has to be
cut, and leaves a much clearer, less cluttered version of his feelings.
Often, he has to sum up in one line of the poem what he would normally have
written a paragraph or more on. For example, "Shake hands forever, cancle
all our vows" sums up very concisely the idea of the break being forever,
with no possibility of a reconciliation, whilst also adding to the ease of
understanding and therefore also to the meaning of the poem.
Another constraint of the sonnet is the length of the lines
themselves. In a sonn ...
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"Not Waving But Drowning" And "Aunt Jennifer's Tigers"
... more precise interpretation of its meaning. "Not Waving but Drowning," is referring to the man's struggle for help in his everyday existence. People perceive him, as being one who has everything desired in life; financial stability, strength, control, happiness, and independence. While in actuality, this man is emotionally bankrupt. But the front he has put on for so long prevents people from seeing the weakness and struggle he is enduring. In a sense, he is secretly drowning.
The line, "It must have been too cold for him his heart gave way," refers to the loneliness in this man's life. Perhaps he pushe ...
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