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Dulce Et Decorum Est: Analysis
... the battle front when a gas shell was fired at them, and as a result of this, one of the platoon was fatally gassed.
Owen has arranged the poem in three sections, each dealing with a different stage of this experience. He makes use of a simple, regular rhyme scheme, which makes the poem sound almost like a child's poem or nursery rhyme. This technique serves to emphasise the solemn and serious content, and the irony of “the old lie,” of the title.
In stanza one, Owen describes the soldiers as they set off towards the army base camp after a spell at the battle front. His use of similes such as “Bent double, like old beggars,” and “coughing like hags,” help me to d ...
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"I Wandered Lonely As A Cloud"
... wonderful it would be, as a human, to look over this world and not have to be in the violence and unhappiness of it.
The speaker came upon a cure for his loneliness, solitude, and isolation when a host of golden daffodils came into sight. They were a strong contrast to the speaker. These golden flowers, with golden meaning valuable and precious, brought care and concern into the poem. The bright daffodils were crowded, cheerful, and energetic. When the speaker mentioned the daffodils dancing in the breeze, the poem became more lively and active. Throughout the poem, the daffodils were in such harmony with nature, being accompanied by the breeze, the stars ...
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Nature Imagery In Adrienne Rich's "Twenty-One Love Poems"
... images of nature by looking at Rich's belief of what poetry is supposed to do? She suggests that
A poem can't free us from the struggle for existence, but it can uncover desires and appetites buried under the accumulating emergencies of our lives, the fabricated wants and needs we have had urged on us, have accepted as our own. It's not a philosophical or psychological blueprint; it's an instrument for embodied experience. But we seek that experience, or recognize it when it is offered to us, because it reminds us in some way of our need. After that rearousal of desire, the task of acting on that truth, or making love, or meeting other needs, is ours. (Smi ...
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Maxine Kumin And Her Poetry
... “How It is”, she puts on a blue jacket that belonged
to her recently deceased friend, whom played a major role in her life. By
putting on the jacket, she tries to relive the past by, “...unwind(ing) it,
paste it together in a different collage...”. In this poem, Maxine Kumin, uses
plants to describe her feelings, as in; “scatter like milkweed” and “pods of the
soul”. These similes show what she sees and feels.
“The Longing to be Saved”, is a dream, where her barn catches fire. “In
and out of dreams as thin as acetate.” She visualizes herself getting the
horses out, but they “wrench free, wheel, dash back”.
In, “Family Reunion”, she writes that “nothing is cost e ...
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Imagery In Mathers' "Black Marigolds"
... A single touch from
her "flower soft fingers" makes him feel alive, and whole. She was torn
from his life, but he feels blessed for even experiencing that love. The
poet refers to her as "The whitest pouring of eternal light." She was like
a small shaft of light pouring into the dark room of his life.
A reoccurring image is found quite often throughout the poem which
adds a crisp flavor to the piece. The word "gold" is used frequently.
This image refers to the princess. It reflects and portrays everything
about her. She is gold; a rich, precious gem, unavailable to the poet.
The continued reference to this image symbolizes everything he lacks, bu ...
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Beowulf: First Literary Superhero
... unusual way. Rather than attacking him with a sword like every other
Geat, he grabs onto Grendel's arm and squeezes until the torture is
unbearable. Grendel loses his strength, his body parts, and his blood in
this violent scene. He later bleeds to death. “Saw that his strength was
deserting him, his claws Bound fast, Higlac's brave follower tearing at his
hands.”(line 464-466)
Beowulf's unusual and courageous method of killing Grendel
demonstrates his bravery and physical strength. Before, Unferth had taunted
Beowulf about his foolish bravery but when he and all the rest of the Geats
saw that Beowulf's strength and power were worth boasting about, they were
h ...
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A Review Of A Shakespearean Sonnet
... 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 how the subject is
like a summer's day, for example: "Thou art more lovely and more
temperate:" (line 2) and after line eight, Shakespeare concludes ...
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A Critical Analysis Of Tension's In Memorial A. H. H.
... 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 deceased friend, Arthur Hallam. The poem seemed
to be cathartic for Tennyson, for through its writing he not only found an
outlet for his grief over Hallam's ...
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A Study Of Wordsworth's Poetry
... seem asleep;' (13:WB)
Just as Wordsworth finds fulfillment in nature, he also finds
disgust in the world's neglect of nature. His sonnet, 'The World Is Too
Much with Us' deals primarily with his dissatisfaction with the
world.Wordsworth criticizes mankind for misdirecting its abilities.
'Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers' (2:TW) Wordsworth also
hopes that the world would find more of itself in nature, similar to his
desire for his sister in his poem, 'Lines Composed a Few Miles Above
Tintern Abbey', to gain an interest in nature. 'For this, for everything,
we are out of tune;' (8:TW) Wordsworth also makes reference to the Greek
gods of the sea in ...
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Maya Angelou's “No Loser No Weeper”
... constitutes much of the contents in her poems including “No Loser No Weeper”.
In, this poem Angelou describes how she “just hate[s] to lose some-thing”(Angelou 12). Moreover,this poem is directed towards a female; whom Angelou wanted to make clear to her to avoid touching her “lover-boy”(Angelou 12).Furthermore, when she states, “I hate to lose something…….even a dime, I wish I was dead”(Angelou 12), we gather that something as small and worthless as a dime would make Angelou wish that she was dead. This remark signifies that the trauma in her life just bought thoughts of suicide. According to Compton’s Interactive Encyclopedia most suicides oc-cur when the bonds b ...
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