Get Help Writing Your Paper Here
  home | faq | cancel
search papers :
Paper Topics
> American History
> Arts and Theater
> Biography
> Book Reports
> Computer
> Creative Writing
> Economics
> English
> Geography
> Health
> Legal Issues
> Miscellaneous
> Music
> Poetry
> Political
> Religion
> Science
> Social Issues
> World History
> Sign Up Today

We have been helping thousands of students with their term papers since 1998. We can help you with yours too.
> Register


Help With Poetry Papers



Marvell's "To His Coy Mistress": The Essence Of Time
[ view this term paper ]Words: 384 | Pages: 2

... Marvell gives examples of her aging and how she will go to the grave with her pride if she doesn't give in. Finally, the use of "optimum time" plays on her emotions of how sweet the opportunity to make love to her would be. Marvell tells his mistress that the act would be almost animalistic and intense. Throughout the poem, he uses the phases of time in an attempt to frighten her into having sex with him. All three stanza's in the poem represent a different time frame. The first gives his mistress a feeling of unconditional love. He leads her to believe he would give all he has to her as long as time w ...




Love Is Forever
[ view this term paper ]Words: 431 | Pages: 2

... just how far they are willing to go for there loved one. There love is one of a kind; even the loss of everything would occur in this person view of love towards their loved one. Final telling you that hell is the length that this person will go or has gone. Poems have many ways they can be written. This poems is like how most people think poems are, rhyming and love. This poems has rhyming, repetition, a very lovely mood, some good visual imagery, and of course lines something that every poem has. I thought that the first and second line was very good visual imagery "written with a pen sealed with a kiss". ...




Critical Analysis Of "The Eagle" By Lord Tennyson
[ view this term paper ]Words: 186 | Pages: 1

... word in each stanza rhyme's. Some of the imagery is with sight and sound. For sight they are “Close to the sun”, “Azure world”, azure mean the blue color in a clear daytime sky. “ Wrinkled sea beneath”, and “mountain walls”. The only one that was imagery of sight & sound was “like a thunderbolt he falls”. The figures of speech are “wrinkled sea”, which means the waves in the ocean. And one simile is “like a thunderbolt he falls”, it is saying how fast a eagle dives. The poems theme is how an eagle can fly so high and dive so fast. And how free an eagle is. I thought that thi ...




“I Had Been Hungry, All The Years”
[ view this term paper ]Words: 796 | Pages: 3

... for. Her “Trembling” gives a sense that she is excited. She is trembling with joy that she has finally been giving a chance to draw near the “Curious Wine”. I see the “Curious Wine” as wealth, in terms of money. This is due to many reasons, one being that wine as an intoxicating effect on people; as does money. Wine is also a drink of richer people, who would (in most cases) have more money then her. Also because wine is curious, in flavor as well as in its bubbly ways, as money is to those that do not have it. In the second stanza it seems she speaks of what she was thinking as she touched the “Cu ...




Poetry: Always And Forever
[ view this term paper ]Words: 393 | Pages: 2

... will ever know, If there was a word to describe my love, Surely it would only be spoken by God, For no other person could love you more than me. In my heart I carry you and the essence of love, In its pure and simple form. All I have to offer you is me and my love, Though both are simple I promise they are true. Even as I write this, I think of how to describe to you. Something I hardly understand, But I must tell you how I feel. So I close my eyes, And let my heart guide my hand. Perhaps the tears tha ...




"Babi Yar" By Yevgeny Yevtushenko: An Analysis
[ view this term paper ]Words: 983 | Pages: 4

... of Kiev. It was the site of the Nazi massacre of more than thirty thousand Russian Jews on September 29-30, 1941. There is no memorial to the thirty thousand, but fear pervades the area. Fear that such a thing could occur at the hands of other humans. The poet feels the persecution and pain and fear of the Jews who stood there in this place of horror. Yevtushenko makes himself an Israelite slave of Egypt and a martyr who died for the sake of his religion. In lines 7-8, he claims that he still bars the marks of the persecution of the past. There is still terrible persecution of the Jews in present times because ...




Churchgoing: Poetry Analysis
[ view this term paper ]Words: 536 | Pages: 2

... as a public place to worship. And going is a departure. By definition the title literally mean leaving the church. Or, the way I see it, it can mean the act of going to church. The meaning of church has left. The young people are there only because their parents taught them that this was the right thing to do. And, the older people are there out of a sense of duty. Belief is not a factor or consideration. The title is trying to portray going to church as a perfunctory task programmed into the train of thought. To the people in this poem going to church is like grocery shopping. It is something that mus ...




Exploring The Theme Of Premature Death In Three Poems
[ view this term paper ]Words: 1605 | Pages: 6

... attitude.” Death of a Young Son by Drowning” and “On My First Son” are both straight- forward titles. Looking at them, the reader discerns immediately the focus of the poem. Mid-term Break, conversely, is a title that leads the reader to believe that the poem most likely is about a normal carefree vacation and break from school. The author of this poem used this title ironically. He anticipated the reader’s expectations, and took the poem in a different direction. The character in the story is certainly not having a “normal” spring break at all, as he is spending it grief-stricken over the death ...




Sonnet 18
[ view this term paper ]Words: 612 | Pages: 3

... flashes in our head of children playing and the sun shining, basically a carefree day where everything is beautiful. He contemplates whether or not to compare his love to this ideal day, "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?"(ll.1); but decides against it in his second line because he feels his love is "more lovely and more temperate"(ll. 2) during that day. He then proceeds to bombard us with images of natural nuisances such as windy days that "…shake the darling buds of May"(ll. 3); which hot weather magnified because it is coming from heaven and the seasons are changing. Shakespeare has taken the idea of a ...




Analysis Of The Poems Of William Wordsworth
[ view this term paper ]Words: 2657 | Pages: 10

... in Halifax. It was in the rural surroundings of Hawkeshead that William learned his appreciation for nature and the outdoors. Unfortunately, once again, the peacefulness of his life was disturbed by his father's death in 1783. William was sent from relative to relative, all of whom thought of him only as a burden. It has been pointed out by biographers that Wordsworth's unhappy early life contrasts with the idealized portrait of childhood that he presents in his writings (Wordsworth, William DISCovering). Wordsworth went to college at St. John's College in Cambridge and later wrote that the highlight o ...




Browse: « prev  31  32  33  34  next »

Copyright 2024 PaperHelp. All rights reserved