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T.S Eliot's "The Waste Land"
... an upcoming
storm. Different images can be seen from the decayed hole in the moonlight,
the empty chapel without windows, and the rooster's crows as the lightning
and black clouds arrive.
In line 386, “In this decayed hole among the mountains,” probably
refers to an empty grave that brings images of death and the end of life,
or possibly the beginning of a new life to mind. The grave is lit by
moonlight, possibly referring to the white light many people see when they
have near-death experiences. You get a creepy feeling when the wind blows
and makes the “grass sing” in line 387. In these first three lines it
talks of tumbled graves, possibly disturbed by natur ...
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Contrasting Poets Lawrence And Shapiro In Their Views Of Nature
... the dawn
of the new century and in England, is set by the death of Queen Victoria.
Reading attracted a large audience because of the tremendous growth in
education opportunities (Granner, 616). One major downfall and factor of
the twentieth century was World War I. This was had pulled up new roots
that were "buried in the past," causing multiple conflicts between nations
(Granner, 611). The war reflects the bitterness and troubles put on
twentieth century poetry. The poets wrote of science fiction, anti-war
protagonists, and ridicule of authority. Leading poets in the twentieth
century are D.H. Lawrence, James Joyce, Joseph Conrad, Dylan Thomas, and
H.G. Wells. ...
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Byron's Don Juan
... soon followed, but it
wouldn't be long before he would disappear to France and end up dying in 1791.
It was just as well because his parents never got along very well.
In Lord Byron's early years he experienced poverty, the ill-temper of
his mother, and the absence of his father. By 1798 he had inherited the title
of 6th Baron Byron and the estate of Newstead Abbey. Once hearing this news, he
and his mother quickly removed to England.
All of Byron's passions developed early. In 1803 he had his first
serious and abortive romance with Mary Chaworth. At the age of15 he fell
platonically but violently in love with a young distant cousin, Mary Duff
(Parker 10). He ...
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Andrea Del Sarto: A Statement Worthy Of Examination
... it, cannot,.
. .” These lines represent the struggles of most poets and writers we’ve
read this past semester, in particular Byron, Shelley and Hardy.
Before the lines can be used to generalize a broad range of artists,
first the lines must be thoroughly understood. Several themes can be
inferred from these relatively simple lines. They seem straightforward
enough, yet contain deeper, more specific meaning. First of course, the
pessimistic mood of the statement must be identified. For to understand
the implications of the quote, the pessimism needs to be understood.
Browning is writing from the point of view of del Sarto, a severely
depressed painter, yet com ...
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Beowulf - A Noble
... wait for Grendel to
strike. This part of the story shows that Beowolf is not completly moral
because he lets some knights be killed by Grendel before he attacks.
Beowulf and Grendel fight and the monster's arm is ripped off causing a
slow and painful death.Even though Beowolf didn't do this heroic and noble
act for the reward ing Hrothgar gave him a sword and eight horses with
golden cheek plates.
The second act of Beowolf's conflict with grendel showing his
nobility is not with Gredel himself but with Grendels mother. After Grendel
was killed his mother was very angry and killed a knight in king Hrothgar's
court the same way her son had. King Hrothgar was very d ...
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Critical Analysis Of "The Indifferent" By John Donne
... anti-morality which argues that constancy is a 'heresy'
and that 'Love's sweetest part' is 'variety'" (Cruttwell 153). The first two
stanzas of the poem seem to be the speaker talking to an audience of people, w
hile the last one looks back and refers to the first two stanzas as a "song."
The audience to which this poem was intended is very important because it can
drastically change the meaning of the poem, and has therefore been debated among
the critics. While most critics believe that the audience changes from men, to
women, then to a single woman, or something along those lines, Gregory Machacek
believes that the audience remains throughout the poem as "two ...
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A Prose Analysis On Milton's "Sonnet XIX"
... of
experience have been deferred when he became blind. The words, "dark",
"death", and "useless" (lines 2-4) describe the emotional state of Milton.
His blindness created a shrouded clarity within his mind. Line three, "And
that one talent which is death to hide" is an allusion to the biblical
context of the bible. Line three refers to the story of Matthew XXV, 14-30
where a servant of the lord buried his single talent instead of investing
it. At the lord's return, he cast the servant into the "outer darkness"
and deprived all he had. Hence, Milton devoted his life in writing;
however, his blindness raped his God's gift away. A tremendous cloud
casted over h ...
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"My Papa's Waltz" By Theodor Roethke
... 'reality', fearing it can and will be worse.
The poem is built of four stanzas( quatrain ), each consisting of
four lines. The rhyme scheme is, in the first stanza - abab, in the second
- cdcd, in the third - efef, and in the fourth - ghgh. The meter is trecet
iamb ( stressed unstressed - three times per line ).
The central image in the poem is the metaphor in which the beatings
are described as a waltz. The poet is led around the house, dancing - not
beaten around. Which is also brought throu by the meter - trecet iamb - the
beat of the waltz, thus the main image is shown through the meter as well,
giving the reader more of the feeling of a dance i ...
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For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/ When The Rainbow Is Enuf: Style And Theme
... is Enuf.
First of all, Shange writes in the form a choreopoem. A choreopoem is a
piece of work that is written as a poem but is intended to be acted out on stage
sort of like an opera. It is constructed in such a way that it flows just as
well on paper as it does on stage. She either writes in all capital letters or
all lower case letters and never mixes them. This creates a style that she is
personally known for. It sets her apart from other writers and makes her work
original. None of the characters have names or any type of identity except for
the color of their clothes. When the piece is done on stage the characters are
never introduced they are just eve ...
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Lesbian Poetry
... times have risked their careers as writers because they
or their material were lesbian.
Sappho was a pioneer in many aspects of Greek culture. One of the
great Greek lyrists and little known female poets of the ancient world,
Sappho was born soon after 630BC. Aristocratic herself, she married a
merchant and had a daughter named Cleis (Robinson 24). Her wealth gave her
the chance to live however she chose, and she chose to spend her life
studying the arts on the isle of Lesbos which was a cultural center in the
seventh century BC. Sappho spent a majority of her time here, but she also
traveled extensively through Greece (Robinson 35). She spent time in
Sicily ...
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