Papers on Poets and Poems
Shakespeare's Sonnet Number 126: Critique
Words: 598 - Pages: 3.... just said seems unnecessary but one must assume
that one's audience is completely stupid, thus the elaboration. In the first
line the poet speaks of himself as being out of luck, and/or money and not well
received by his fellow man. He has taken to crying about his social ostracism
in line two. In an attempt to clarify for himself why he is in such a state he “
troubles” heaven with his “bootless” or useless cries. But as the poet has made
clear heaven turns a deaf ear and no response is forthcoming. Again he becomes
introspective and curses his fate. This first quatrain has given us an image of
a grown man “down and out .....
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Birches: Poetry Review
Words: 417 - Pages: 2.... response “I should prefer to have some boy bend them” (23) tells the reader he is fantasizing again. The man begins to remember “some boy too far from town to play baseball, /Whose only play was what he found himself” (25-26). The man is thinking about his own childhood where he was secluded but still content because he was creating his own happiness.
Soon into his pleasant fantasy, reality takes over. What has he accomplished or become? Why does he not have the same feelings he once had? Because “They are dragged to the withered bracken by the load” of his harsh life (14). His life of hard ships has erased all happiness .....
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The Real Me
Words: 325 - Pages: 2.... office, Armani suits
high tax bracket and power to-boot
well versed from the best schools
trained in perfection, the number one rule.
Independence, autonomy and winning is just
elitus and best characteristics that must
always be shown never weak or unsure
always believing you’re superior
With all that you have, you still deserve more
Denying others-what wasn’t worked for.
You planned so well, I should have planned more
to make one mistake I could not afford.
How can you assume this is all true.
I’ve never seen your foot even near my shoe.
Until you’ve walked, a mile in my stead
How can you know-What pleasure would you tak .....
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Dante's Inferno
Words: 1867 - Pages: 7.... to keep things as they were, unlike the Ghibellines.
The Ghibellines were mostly supporters of the German emperor and at the
time Dante was born, were relieved of their power. When this change took
place, the Guelphs for whom Dante's family was associated took power.
Although born into a Guelph family, Dante became more neutral later in life
realizing that the church was corrupt, believing it should only be involved
in spiritual affairs.
At the turn of the century, Dante rose from city councilman to
ambassador of Florence. His career ended in 1301 when the Black Guelph and
their French allies seized control of the city. They took Dante' .....
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Poetry: Always And Forever
Words: 393 - Pages: 2.... you and the essence of love,
In its pure and simple form.
All I have to offer you is me and my love,
Though both are simple I promise they are true.
Even as I write this,
I think of how to describe to you.
Something I hardly understand,
But I must tell you how I feel.
So I close my eyes,
And let my heart guide my hand.
Perhaps the tears that falls from my eyes,
Will show you my love and how much it means to me.
To me our love is everything.
I believe love will find it's way and show us the answers
To the questions being revealed .....
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Analysis Of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's Poetry
Words: 1846 - Pages: 7.... him as a mere satellite of Wordsworth, or at least as
Wordsworth's weaker brother. These are his Poems of Friendship. They
cannot be even vaguely understood unless the reader knows what persons
Coleridge has in mind. They are, for the most part, poems in which
reference is made with fine particularity to certain places. They were
composed as the expression of feelings which were occasioned by quite
definite events. Between the lines, when we know their meaning, we catch
glimpses of those delightful people who formed the golden inner circle of
his friends in the days of his young manhood. They may all be termed, as
Coleridge himsel .....
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Housman's "To An Athlete Dying Young"
Words: 1631 - Pages: 6.... his friends after a winning race" (54). In Housman's words:
The time you won your town the race
We chaired you through the market place;
Man and boy stood cheering by,
And home we brought you shoulder-high. (Housman 967).
Stanza two describes a much more somber procession. The athlete is being
carried to his grave. In Leggett's opinion, "The parallels between this
procession and the former triumph are carefully drawn" (54). The reader
should see that Housman makes another reference to "shoulders" as an
allusion to connect the first two stanzas:
Today, the road all runners come, .....
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"Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night": Death Through Repetition And Diction
Words: 563 - Pages: 3.... combines the last lines from the odd and even-numbered stanzas for an additional line. This portrays the ongoing war between life and death. The old man went back and forth between life and death as the stanzas' last lines switched back and forth. In the end, the two last lines join together as the old man and his son accept that death is a part of life.
Next, the references to "good men," "wild men," and "grave men" display the three basic stages of life: birth, life, and death. In stanza three, the stanza pertaining to "good men," the portion "the last wave by" depicts the old man's generation as fewer and fewer still live. The color .....
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Sonnet 18
Words: 612 - Pages: 3.... thee to a summer's day?"(ll.1); but decides against it in his second line because he feels his love is "more lovely and more temperate"(ll. 2) during that day. He then proceeds to bombard us with images of natural nuisances such as windy days that "…shake the darling buds of May"(ll. 3); which hot weather magnified because it is coming from heaven and the seasons are changing. Shakespeare has taken the idea of a warm breezy summer day and twisted it into a sweltering day with the sun beating down on us.
However, in the lines after the destruction of a nice day, he twists things back by the comments he showers on his love. He tells u .....
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Thanatopsis: An Analysis
Words: 318 - Pages: 2.... oak shall send its roots abroad and pierce thy mold"(29-30).
In the third and final section of this poem, Bryant writes that you
will die along with kings and others. The reader should get the most out
of living he/she can possibly get because it is good, and do not be afraid
to die but go pleasantly. This is described in lines thirty-one through
eighty. The best example of this is when Bryants writes: ..."approach thy
grave like one who wraps the drapery of his coach about him and lies down
to pleasant dreams"(79-80)
This poem has taught the reader that death is not a bad thing. It
is just a ticket to a pleasant life after death. So .....
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