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Analysis Of Lorca’s Lament For Ignacio Sanchez Mejias
... sound, and of thought that appeal strongly to the imagination. Federico Garcia Lorca demonstrated his greatness as a writer when he produced the poem Lament for Ignacio Sanchez Mejias. He made good use of many literary devices in order to make this poem flow properly. First, he utilized imagery, which is the use of words to create a mental picture. In fact, he has been compared to surrealist because he occasionally juxtaposed seemingly unrelated ideas and realistic and nonrealistic images causing an uncanny, dreamlike effect on the reader. In addition, he included numerous symbols in this poem to represent a certain idea or mood that he was trying to create ...
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Interpreting Poetry
... a date:
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
And often is his gold complexion dimmed;
And every fair from fair sometime declines,
By chance, or nature’s changing course,
Untrimmed:
But thy eternal summer shall not fade,
Nor lose possession of that fair thou owest;
Nor shall death brag thou wander’st in his
Shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou growest:
So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.
In the simplest terms possible, Shakespeare is saying that the woman of whom this poem speaks of is beautiful. But even more than that, the eloquence in which he expresses her beau ...
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Compare And Contrast The War Poems By Jessie Pope And Rupert Brooke To Those Of Wilfred Owen
... men’) to join the army, with the many recruitment devices such as posters and famously, the poems by Jessie Pope.
Pope wrote from the safety of her own home, as a civilian. She had not had any first hand experience of war. In fact, it seems that she had absolutely no idea about what war was like. It was poets like her who had a large influence over the public. Her amazing naiveté made her renowned amongst the British during war- time and in my opinion, her recruiting poem; “Who’s for the Game” is irresponsible. It gives young men, and their families who would want to persuade the men to join the army, a completely false image of war. However, it is an army recr ...
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Edgar Allan Poe's "The Black Cat"
... and she became determined, like many others, "to set the record straight." "This mission" has lead to ten years of research and the creation of her web site, Precisely Poe. Martha is proud and pleased to be a part of the Poe Decoder, a continual project to dispel the myth surrounding Poe, the man and his literature.
Summary of the story
Setting
Characters
Point of View
Style and Interpretation
Theme
Related Information
Works Cited
Complete Text Available
Other Viewpoints
Illustration is copyright © 1997 Christoffer Nilsson
Printed publishing rights retained by the author, copyright pending. Internet publishing rights ...
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Love Is Forever
... 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". It show how it really happened and was done. Through out the whole poems was a loved filled mood. Lines 13, 15, 16, and 19 all start with "I'll". Eve ...
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Whitman's Democracy
... freedom. The sun is
used as a metaphor for democracy in this poem, as it should shine upon all
equally.
When Whitman discusses the "shunn'd persons" in "Native Moments" he
once again mimics the concepts of democracy with his words. He lets all
know that he embraces the people that others have rejected, as democracy
should embrace all. These people are part of America also, and should be
accepted as such. as democracy should embrace all.
Whitman commends the many people of America in "I Hear America
Singing." He writes of the mothers, and the carpenters. He says that they
all sing their own song of what belongs to them. In this poem Whitman
brings these people ...
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Ozymandias (1818): An Analysis
... their mortality by
leaving something of themselves behind -- evidence of their existence. The
subject of Shelley's poem "Ozymandias" is an ancient king who shared this
common desire, but not in a common way. He not only wanted to leave behind
a record of himself for future generations, he wanted his memory exalted
above that of others, and even above the "Mighty" who would live after him.
He did not want to give up at death the power he had wielded in life.
The irony in this poem lies in the difference between what Ozymandias
intends -- to hold onto the glory of his works after time takes its course
with him -- and what actually happens. This great monument ...
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Understanding "Porphyria's Lover"
... the use of dramatic monologue. Perfected by Robert Browning in the mid
nineteenth century, dramatic monologue very closely mirrors modern
society's legal institution. In comparison, the reader is the jury, the
speaker of the poem is the lawyer, and, thinking more abstractly, the
author, Robert Browning in this case, represents the case as a whole. The
decision the jury must make between what is actually right and what the
lawyers imply to be right is the same one the reader of a dramatic
monologue must make. Browning's Dramatic Lyrics is a collection of poems
in which many are written in dramatic monologue. "Porphyria's Lover" is a
poem from Dramatic Lyrics ...
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The Personification And Criticism Of Death In John Donne's "Death Be Not Proud."
... foe. "With an impudence that is characteristically Donne's, he
deflates Death in the opening salvo. He discounts the power of death as a
mere fiction" (Dr. Gerald McDaniel, lecture).
Now that the image of his foe, death, has been created, Donne
denounces the power and fear associated with death, "for thou art not so. /
For those whom thou think'st thou dost overthrow/ Die not, poor Death, nor
yet canst thou kill me" (ll 2-4), Donne defies death's power. He is so bold
as to mock death, calling it "poor death" (l 4), giving death the sense and
personification of being deficient in that it cannot kill Donne.
In the second quatrain, Donne continues his c ...
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Beginnings
... for the
future, then she can use that base for support as she goes through life.
This poem is speaking to a beginner. The beginner could be any age and
starting anything, such as a baby beginning life, an athlete beginning a
season, or a student beginning a course of study. The poet is telling the
novice to build on what she has learned in the past, to continue to set
her goals high and to open herself up to help from a higher being, which
may be herself, her father, a mentor, or God, to help her achieve her
goals.
Booth is saying in this poem that the first lesson one needs to learn in
life is that we must prepare ourselves for the future. In doing so, we
mus ...
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