|
Help With Poetry Papers
Poetry Analysis Of "No Loser, No Weeper"
... of negative things in her life. The Great Depression, her parents' death, racism, being sexually abused at an early age, becoming a single mother in her middle teenage years and bad marriages. This period in Maya's life constitutes much of the pain that is included in many other poems.
In the poem, "No Loser, No Weeper," Maya describes how she just hates to lose something, whether is small like a watch or a toy. Moreover this poem is directed towards another female trying to steal her lover. Maya wants to make it clear to the woman not touch her "lover-boy." She explains her warning by stating that she hates to ...
|
A Duke's Dominance Dooms Duchess
... permited to ride a mule instead of a thourough bred; however, she must go no further than the terrace out back.
The duke immediately draws attention to a fresco of his former wife. He has a new appreciation for the work since her passing. He likes her better this way; in his complete control. The designer was a monk who perfectly captured her heartfelt expression in but one day, showcasing her for all eternity. He directs his guest to look upon the painting. There is limited access to the art since the duke keeps it covered by a curtain, and only permits those to his liking to look at her. He states that ...
|
Ozymandias
... the greatest king the world has ever known is now reduced to rubble; and not just the physical aspect but the glory of the king is also long forgotten.
In Shelley's "",there are two speakers; the first speaker introduced the poem for the first line and then the second speaker carries the poem to realization. It is ironic that the words inscribed on the pedestal "Look on my works. . . and despair!" reflect the evidence of the next line, "Nothing beside remains," that is, there is nothing left of the reign of the greatest king on earth.One immediate image is found in the second line, "trunkless legs.". One good compa ...
|
Bryon's "Childe Harold's Pilgrimage": The Byronic Hero
... line shows that
Childe Harold is upset with the reputation that he has inherited from his family.
Just as Bruce Wayne d Üoes Childe Harold strives to break this mold and
become someone who isn't associated with the likes of his ancestors. In Childe
Harold's case he breaks this mold by running away from his father's castle and
exploring nature. Bruce Wayne on the other hand invents himself a new identity
that differs in every way from the preset mold into which he was born.
In the fourth stanza Harold tells us that Childe Harold is unhappy and
upset with the society around him. ÒThen loathed he in his na ...
|
William Blake's The Chimney Sweeper
... know exactly what the life of a chimney sweep entails is not told to induce pity; just a simple statement of fact that tells much more than is said, "So your chimneys I sweep & in soot I sleep."(4) The end-result, however, of this line is quite the opposite: the reader is quickly initiated into the dreadful life of being a chimney sweep and all that it entails. The tale goes on, describing "little Tom Dacre"(5) who cried when his blonde head of curls was shaved. The worldly wise narrator is very practical in his manner of comforting little Tom, "Hush Tom never mind it, for when your head's bare/ You know that th ...
|
T.S. Eliot's "The Wasted Land"
... who had the greatest influence on
Eliot is by far Jules Laforgue. Laforgue's influence is evident in many
of Eliot's poems, sometimes to the point of plagiarism. Like Laforgue,
Eliot uses dialogue between men and women that doesn't seem to communicate
a thing. Other author's had an influence on Eliot as well, like Henry
James and Joseph Conrad. All of these poet's had the common themes of
estrangement from people and the world, isolationism, and the feeling that
they were failing to articulate their thoughts (Bergonzi 7, 50, Cuddy 30,
Mack 1743, Martin 41, Unger 8) .
Henry James influence on Eliot's poe ...
|
Mr. Flood’s Party: A Cry For Help
... In the first stanza (lines 3-5) Robinson refers to a barren, isolated place where Flood could be alone with himself. This symbolizes Flood’s apparent isolation from friends and society. In the third stanza (line 1) Robinson’s reference to the harvest moon and the bird on the wing are both symbolic references to the passage of time. At this point Flood appears near the end of his rope. The jug Robinson refers to in line 14, “The jug that he had gone so far to fill,” is symbolic of Flood’s life accomplishments. Robinson also speaks of “A valiant armor of scarred hopes outworn,” stanza 4, line 18 symbolizi ...
|
The Poetry Of William Cullen Bryant And Emily Dickinson: The Theme Of Death
... what happens to you
after death is what is very dissimilar. In the poem when she says "We passed
the school where children played ,We passed the the fields of blazing grain,"
shows her use of Idealisation of Nature.Bryants whole poem is Idealisation of
nature, by choosing but one sentence would be cutting the poem short.By both
authors using the same romantic element is just another example of how they are
similar.
Thanatopsis and Because i could not stop for Death,are somewhat
dissimilar , for instance when in Dickinsons poem when she says "We slowly drove
he knew no haste," she is referring about death ...
|
A Pregenerative Soul’s Fear Of Life
... In this line, Thel first expresses her lack of understanding of the process of life. She sees it as a futile exercise, or what is worse, she sees it as a task in which she might fail. Thel would consider her eminent life a failure if “‘all shall say, “Without a use this shining woman liv’d, / Or did she only live to be at death the food of worms?”’” (ll. 69-70). As a result, she questions others as to how they cope with their mortality.
The responses of those she asks ubiquitously stress the importance of service. The Lilly tells Thel that she rejoices because God, who as the Clod of Clay says, “lov ...
|
The Effect Of Poetry
... to leave and that we can survive without them here.
Celine Dion understood this when she sang "Fly", a song that portrays the fear of those who are dying. They are often afraid of the unknown and of leaving others behind to live without them. "Fly" eases those fears and reassures everyone that everything will only be better.
Celine Dion sang this song in remembrance of her infant niece. She had no children of her own at the time and was very close to her niece, who died SIDS, and she expresses her feelings for the child very eloquently in the song.
In the song, she gives her niece permission to stop fighting and to ...
|
Browse:
« prev
11
12
13
14
15
next »
|
|