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Help With Poetry Papers
A Word Is Worth A Thousand Pictures? - Shakespeare's Sonnet 18 And Keats' Grecian Urn
... of their poems by writing them down in verses for
people to read for generations to come. By doing so, both of the poets are
preserving the beauty of the subjects, which are the young friend of Shakespeare
and Keats' "Grecian Urn."
Beginning with Sonnet 18, and continuing here and there throughout the
first major grouping of sonnets, Shakespeare approaches the problem of
mutability and the effects of time upon his beloved friend in a different
fashion. Instead of addressing the problem of old age, he emphasises his
friend's attributes:
"Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
Thou art more lovely and more temp ...
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"Dover Beach" By Arnold: Irony, Images, And Illusions
... by
this man. Instead he turns to her and talks to her about Sophocles. She, not
understanding what exactly is going on, later realizes that he was getting to
the point of having each other and always being there for one another.
The poet uses visual and auditory images to mainly help the romantic,
fantasy-like place. “The sea is calm, the tide is full” and “Of pebbles which
the waves draw back, and fling,” is an example of images that appeal to the
visual sense. While “ Where the sea meets the moon-blanched land” and “With
tremulous cadence slow, and bring...” uses an auditory sense. “Come t ...
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Dickinson's "Because I Could Not Stop For Death" And "I Heard A Fly Buzz When I Died"
... first
indication that this poem believes in an afterlife. In most religions,
where there is a grim reaper like specter, this entity will deliver a
person's soul to another place, usually a heaven or a hell.
In the fifth stanza, Death and the woman pause before "...a House that
seemed A Swelling of the Ground- The Roof was scarcely visible- The
Cornice in the Ground-" (913). Although the poem does not directly say it,
it is highly probable that this grave is the woman's own. It is also
possible the woman's body already rests beneath the soil in a casket. If
this is at all accurate, then her spirit or soul may be th ...
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Poetry: Not Me
... of a weenie.
For sports is the easiest road to one's fame.
Well, easiest for some, though not for him.
Though he never gave up, and gave it his all.
He offered his best, and played always to win.
Yet the harder he worked, the harder he'd fall.
When his sports were done he had nothing to do.
He had all of the time in the world.
"Why not study?" said his mom, cooking the stew.
He thought of that during supper and hurled.
His mother soon tired of the grades he brought home.
She made him study each day after school.
He was gr ...
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Poem: I Guess It Was Not In Jane's Mind
... She said “Oh, you sweet thing!”
All that for just one crummy line!!
I guess it was not in Jane's mind,
That her figure was so well defined.
So she went to health clubs,
For health food and back rubs,
Now look; if you do, you'll go blind!!
I guess it was not in Jane's mind,
That her teeth were poorly aligned.
The boys did not go near,
For, her chops they did fear,
Till she had her mouth re-designed.
I guess it was not in Jane's mind,
That a job she needed to find.
When they cut her welfare ...
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Analysis Of The Poem: The Fly
... The end result,
however, is an entertaining and unusual perspective on a universal enemy
of mankind.
The opening stanza sets the stage for the depiction of the fly in the
rest of the poem. The first line, which begins describing the fly with "O
hideous little bat, the size of snot," immediately introduces the
atmosphere of what is to follow. The lines that follow describe a creature
that is lowly and parasitic, yet well suited to the world it lives in and
feeds off of.
The second stanza depicts the fly flying as a minute messenger of filth
and disease. It is described landing on the heap of dung, then
con ...
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Poem "Lucifer In The Starlight": New Meanings And Ideas
... Lucifer is the defiant angel that was banished from heaven,
and sent to the underworld of hell, where he known as Satan. The title refers
to the devil as "in starlight", so this means he has to rise to a place where
the stars are visible, not the fires of hell. This rising from the underworld is
summed up in the first line. It is later explained that he is doing so because
he is tired of his ‘dark dominion." Ironically, the first line refers to Lucifer
honorably, as a "Prince", while in the second line he is tagged as a fiend. This
leaves the reader feeling perplexed, yet still thinking of Lucifer as the enemy.
A ...
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A Review Of A Shakespearean Sonnet
... But thy eternal summer shall not fade" (lines 7-9)
This type of poetry suites the subject Shakespeare has chosen to write
about because each quatrain has a different means to compare the subject to
a summer's day and about half way through, Shakespeare changes and decides
that the subject is better than a summer's day.
The sonnet is essentially made up of two different parts, the first
being the problem and the second part being an answer. The theme that
Shakespeare has chosen is love and this theme works well with the sonnet
format. The first half of this sonnet is written about ho ...
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The Love Song Of J. Alfred Prufrock: The Pitiful Prufrock
... time, which creates a dreamlike quality throughout the poem.
This dreamlike quality is supported throughout the poem with the "yellow fog"
that contributes to the slowed-down-etherised feeling of the poem. Time and
perception are effectively "etherised" in this poem. It is almost as if the
poem is a suspended moment of realization of one man's life, "spread out against
the sky". The imagery of the patient represents Prufrock's self-examination.
Furthermore, the imagery of the "etherised patient" denotes a person waiting for
treatment. It seems this treatment will be Prufrock's examination of himself and
his life. P ...
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Robert Frost Used Many Elements Of Nature To Show Fear And Uncertainty
... indifference and negativity (Thompson 326-327). Thompson states “Frost created a parable based on the raw material of these old myths.” (327) That I suddenly heard – all I needed to hear:
It lasted me many and many a year.
The sound was behind me instead of before,
A sleepy sound, but mocking half,
As of one who utterly couldn’t care.
The Demon arose from his wallow to laugh,
Brushing the dirt from his eyes as he went;
And well I knew what the Demon meant.
“He represented himself as having conducted a search for the modern Demiurge named Evolution in hope of learning the secrets of life, but when f ...
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