Papers on Poets and Poems
The Test Of Honor In Sir Gawain And The Green Knight
Words: 573 - Pages: 3.... the grace,' said Gawain to the King, 'To be gone from this bench and stand by you there." (Gawain, lines 343-344) "I am the weakest, well I know, and of wit feeblest; And the loss of my life would be least of any;" (Gawain, 355-356).
The poem is full of instances in which Gawain was forced to face difficult decisions. Gawain could have simply left Camelot never to return. He instead chose the option of keeping his word and searching for the Green Knight, even
though he knew he had to take what was coming to him. "Now, liege lord of my life, my leave I take; / The terms of this task too well you know / to count the cost over concern .....
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Emily Dickenson And The Theme Of Death
Words: 621 - Pages: 3.... reader's
perception of the poem. The following passage conveys a resplendent physical
sense of coldness as someone is frozen to death:
"This is the Hour of Lead--
Remembered, if outlived,
As Freezing persons, recollect the Snow--
First--Chill--then Stupor--then the letting go--"
The innovative diction in this passage creates an eerie atmosphere all by itself.
The effect of this passage is reminiscent of the famous macabre monologue at
the end of Michael Jackson's Thriller. Dickenson also excellently portrays the
restlessness of the mourners in this following passage:
"The Feet, mechanical, go round--
Of Ground, or Air, or Ought .....
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A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning
Words: 747 - Pages: 3.... question: Why is "laity" the one that we tell our love to? Why can't we share it with a clergyman? Strong love is not evil at all ~
The third stanza is interesting, but contains a deep meaning. The earthquake causes damage and people regard it serious. The movement of the heavenly spheres is far greater, fiercer, 'cause it is harmless, people consider it innocent. I think (I do not know if I was right?) the author intended to indicate that death is just like the earthquake-brings harms and sorrow. Earthquake is not so common, when it happens, people are scared of it. On the other hand, when facing the death, human always feel nervous and sad .....
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Harlem By Langston Hughs: Analysis
Words: 442 - Pages: 2.... he used “we’re”, and in line fourteen Hughs used “can’t”.
The tone Hughs expressed in writing “Harlem” can be confusing to the reader. The tone seems to be of anger and then almost threatening or hostile. Hughs is expressing the frustration he and many other black people had to put up with. He talks about how prices of food are going up, tax increases, and jobs black could never get just because they are colored. In the first and second stanza the tone is one of anger and frustration, but in the last stanza however, it seems to be a threat or a warning to white society. The last several lines state, “ And wonde .....
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Critisism On Robert Burns (1759-1796)
Words: 670 - Pages: 3.... excite our wonder at his productions; but his poetry, considered abstractly, and without the apologies arising from his situation, seems to him fully entitled to command our feelings, and to obtain our applause. One bar, indeed, his birth and education have opposed to his fame, the language in which most of his poems are writtin.
Even is Scotland, the provincial dialect which Ramsay and he have used is now read with a difficulty which greatly damps the pleasure of the reader: in England it cannot be read at all, without such a constant reference to a glossary, as nearly to destroy that pleasure. As Mackenzie states: "The power of genius .....
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The Lives And Works Of Elizabeth Barrett And Robert Browning
Words: 1375 - Pages: 5.... a fierce reader. He learned Latin, Greek, French, and Italian by the time he was fourteen. He attended the University of London in 1928, but left discontent to pursue an education at his own pace.
The young Browning had before him the influences of Burns, Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, and Keats. He began to prepare himself to soon be in their company. Byron was the first influence and inspiration to Browning’s first boyish attempts as a poet. Later after coming upon a copy of Shelly’s Queen Mab he fell under the fascination of this new poet. It was then that he started his formal career in poetry. In the 1930’s he met the acto .....
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Andrea Del Sarto: A Statement Worthy Of Examination
Words: 1814 - Pages: 7.... 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 comments like these come from the mind of Browning.
How is Br .....
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Lawrence's "Snake": An Analysis
Words: 502 - Pages: 2.... for the snake told
him that if he killed the snake that would be wrong.
The second time that he expresses this theme is when the speaker
questions his own manliness. This is stated in the poem when it says, "Was
it cowardice, that I dared not kill it?" This line from the poem says that
the speaker is worried that he will not be called a man because he did not
kill the snake. The speaker does not want to feel less than a man because
he did not kill the snake, like all men are supposed to do.
The third time he expresses this theme is when the speaker tries to
hit the snake with a log. This is stated in the poem when it says, "I
picked .....
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Analysis Of Blake's "London"
Words: 989 - Pages: 4.... of his poem as Blake speaks of how he is wandering through the "charter'd" streets, he is commenting on this commercial aspect of London. As he moves on in his poem he also refers to the "charter'd" Thames, he is telling us in this second line that even a river which is a force of nature, is owned in London. When Blake says that he sees "marks of weakness, marks of woe" in "every face" he meets, he means that he can see how this commercialism is affecting everyone rich and poor.
Yet, despite the divisions that the word charter'd suggests, the speaker contends that no one in London, neither rich or poor, escapes a pervasive sense of mis .....
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Beowulf: Character Analysis
Words: 587 - Pages: 3.... of his peers found it to be a character flaw. Ecglaf, in
particular, saw Beowulf as cocky and vain, questioning, "Are you the
Beowulf who competed with Breca...swollen with vanity..." So, while his
cockiness was a flaw in the eyes of others, Beowulf saw it as self
assurance and used it to his advantage.
Beowulf also had a strong spirit of adventure. His spirit of
adventure was part of the reason that Beowulf went to fight Grendel.
Beowulf's strength and spirit of adventure had also led him to glory in
many battles, including that with Grendel. Beowulf used his glory in
previous battles to justify himself when coming to help Hrothgar. .....
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