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Home Burial: Analysis
... graveyard where my people are! ... There are three stones of slate and one of marble... We haven’t to mind those. But I understand: it is not the stones, But the child’s mound--- “
During this passage he is being so cruel. He is just sort of rubbing it in that they had lost so many children. It’s almost like it was his fault that all of this was happening. The husband seems to not be phased by the great loss that they have endured. Later on in the poem the husband begins to talk again, stating: “We could have some arrangement, By which I’d bind myself to keep hands off, Anything special you’re a-mind ...
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Millay Vs Cummings
... In "since Feeling Is First, Cumming's theme is just the
opposite. Cummings is saying we should enjoy life by acting like a fool and not
talin things seriously.
Millay stresses the unimportance of feelin. "life must go on,/ And the dead by
forgotten" (15-16). Cummmings attitude is totally different. He believes that
feelings are very important. Cummings streeses that being foolish is better
than being smart and serious: "and kisses are better fate/ than wisdom."(8-9)
Millay uses simple language, where as cummings uses more complete language. In
"Lament," Millay stresses her point by usingan unusual style of w ...
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'Sea Fever' - Analysis
... speech go beyond the meter and imagery to compare life to a sea voyage and portray a strong longing for the sea. The two main themes of "Sea Fever" bring the reader closer to the sea and help the reader understand why the speaker must return to the sea. "Sea Fever" not only depicts a strong longing for the sea through its theme, but also through use of complex figures of speech, imagery, and meter.
"Sea Fever" is an excellent example of varied meter which follows the actions of a tall ship through high seas and strong wind. Lines one and two contain the common iambic meter found throughout the poem. "Sea Fever" may b ...
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The Works Of Poet Carl Sandburg And His Effect On American Poetry
... and his successes in life. His own
life fascinated him.(Rogers 19) Therefore, he felt he wanted to share his
fascination with the people he enjoyed writing about.
Carl Sandburg is so greatly remembered because his writing was
considerably different from the writing of his contemporaries. He let his
mind travel, and be free. His works included the use of free verse,
colloquialisms, an original type of rhythm, and oddly structured, prosaic
poetry that emphasized key phrases and images.(clc 35, 338) Sandburg was
the first of a long line of poets and authors to use the words and phrases
that he created in ...
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"The Love Song Of J. Alfred Prufrock": Surrealism And T.S. Eliot
... contemporaries weren't
surrealists, but were rather the figures of St. John Perse and Paul
Verlaine, among others. This does not mean Eliot had nothing in common
with surrealist poetry, but the facts that both Eliot and the Surrealists
owed much to Charles Baudelaire's can perhaps best explain any similarity
"strangely evocative explorations of the symbolic suggestions of objects
and images." Its unusual, sometimes startling juxtapositions often
characterize surrealism, by which it tries to transcend logic and habitual
thinking, to reveal deeper levels of meaning and of unconscious
associations. Although sch ...
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Tempting Fruits: A Comparative Analysis Of Alicante And This Is Just To Say
... The orange remained on the table. It was not eaten. It was a present of the present. It was a present of the woman the persona had on his bed. The woman was the persona’s present. It is not clear if they already had sexual relations but the woman was naked and in his bed. The last two lines were contradictory. Coolness and warmth were mentioned together. The same object, the orange, was the coolness of the night yet was the warmth of the persona’s life.
On the other hand, in This is Just to Say, the plums were eaten already by the persona. It was not offered to the persona during that time. It was not supposed t ...
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My Interpretation Of Frost's "Birches"
... and the white are visible. Frost offers many suggestions for their appearance. It maybe due to the ice breaking that is burdened on the bark. The breeze causes the ice to move and crack certain parts of the bark, creating the crackling effect. "As the [ice] stir cracks and crazes their enamel." He also compares this image to that of breaking glass and compares it to the "dome of heaven" shattering. I enjoy how he offers such different interpretations for the appearance of the bark. My personal favorite is the shattering of the dome in heaven. I think this creates a vivid image for the reader. He goes on to say that ...
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Beowulf: Character Analysis
... while the results of his strength could.
Beowulf's strength allowed him dominance in battle, but it also
made him cocky. While his cockiness allowed Beowulf to be sure of himself
in battle, some of his peers found it to be a character flaw. Ecglaf, in
particular, saw Beowulf as cocky and vain, questioning, "Are you the
Beowulf who competed with Breca...swollen with vanity..." So, while his
cockiness was a flaw in the eyes of others, Beowulf saw it as self
assurance and used it to his advantage.
Beowulf also had a strong spirit of adventure. His spirit of
adventure was part of the reason that Beowulf went t ...
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A Critical Analysis Of Tension's In Memorial A. H. H.
... were extending humanity's
knowledge of stellar distances, and Natural Historians such as Charles
Darwin were swiftly building theories of evolution that defied the Old
Testament version of creation (Ford & Christ 897). God seemed to be
dissolving before a panicked England's very eyes, replaced by the vision of
a cold, mechanistic universe that cared little for our existence.
Alfred, Lord Tennyson was painfully aware of the implications of
such a universe, and he struggled with his own doubts about the existence
of God. We glimpse much of his struggles in the poem In Memorial A. H. H.,
written in memory of his dece ...
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Shakespeare's Sonnet 18
... His writings include plays, narrative poems and
sonnets, all carrying different styles like historic, tragedy, and comic.
All of his writings include different subjects such as a young man that
Shakespeare was good friends with, a dark lady he was in love with, a rival
poet, advice, and his long absence from London (World Book Encyclopedia)
Sonnets are the most famous of Shakespeare’s works. Sonnets are
lyric poems made up of fourteen lines and sound more like a song without
musical instruments than a poem. Sonnet 18 is one of the most admired of
his collection. It is a beautiful romantic love poem written ...
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