Papers on Poets and Poems
The Works Of Edwin Robinson And Paul Simon
Words: 490 - Pages: 2.... lines read as follows: "...Miniver sighed for what was not and dreamed, and rested from his labors...Miniver scorned the gold he sought but sore annoyed was he without it..." Simon expresses the same idea in lines 4, 8, and 9, "He had everything a man could want: power, grace, and style...And I wish I could be Richard Cory..."
Robinson and Simon dealt with subjects that were close to their hearts. What they wrote about were their uncontrollable feelings. For Robinson the feeling was described, in lines 5, 6, 7, and 8, as ,"Minniver loved the days of old when swords were bright and steeds were prancing. The vision of a warrior bold wo .....
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Beowulf
Words: 434 - Pages: 2.... fair hand-to-hand fight with Grendel. When one of
Hroathgars' coast guards set eyes upon Beowulf he said ,"I have never set eyes
on a more noble man , you are no mere retainer."
Although the action in Beowulf consists of great deeds , the setting of
the story is vast scope covering great lands and far off places. Beowulf said
that his father was favored far and wide because he was a very noble lord. "The
swift current , the surging water carried me to the far off Land of the Lapps ,"
said Beowulf as he told a story to one of Hroathgars' retainers. When Beowulf
talked of where Grendel lived he said ,"These two live in a little known .....
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Sonnet 71: Forget Me When I’m Gone?
Words: 446 - Pages: 2.... However, the poem has a sarcastic tone to it. In reality, the poet “says” he/she wants to be forgotten, but really he/she wants to be mourned for and remembered.. It’s almost like the poem is guilt ridden. The entire thing talks about forgetting the poet after he/she is dead and to not even speak the poet’s name. This repetiveness of forgetting the poet would really make the audience feel guilty, and make the audience feel obligated to mourn, which is the poet’s true intentions in writing this particular poem.
This poem does contain some imagery reinforced by alliteration. The words, “surely sullen bell”. The sullen b .....
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Churchgoing: Poetry Analysis
Words: 536 - Pages: 2.... church has left. The young people are there only because their parents taught them that this was the right thing to do. And, the older people are there out of a sense of duty. Belief is not a factor or consideration. The title is trying to portray going to church as a perfunctory task programmed into the train of thought.
To the people in this poem going to church is like grocery shopping. It is something that must be done. Everyone knows it is the right thing to do, except in this case many people do not understand the concept behind it. Religion does not make a difference. If their parents shop at the Piggly Wiggly then they may .....
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Poet's Use Of Mockery As Diction In Poem
Words: 382 - Pages: 2.... "Reading the Roll of Honor. `Poor young chap, ' I'd say - ` I used to
know his father well; Yes, we've lost heavily in this last scrap.' " of casual
language attempts to make the war seem carefree and nonchalant. The word "chap"
conveys an casual attitude towards the heroes as people. It seems to elevate
the status of the majors to a false superior position. "Scrap" makes it seems as
if the soldier's death occurred on a playground, not a battlefield. It seems to
trivialize war in general.
"And when the war is done and the youth stone dead,
I'd toddle safely home and die - in bed."
The poet's last lines give the reader .....
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Analysis Of Plath's "Daddy"
Words: 568 - Pages: 3.... stanzas of the poem, especially, portray a dismal picture of life for women who find themselves under a dominating male figure. The passage seems to show that the speaker has reached a resolution after being kept under a man’s thumb all her life.
In lines 71-80 the speaker compares her father and her husband to vampires saying how they betrayed her and drank her blood--sucking her dry of life. She tells her father to give up and be done, to lie back" (line 75) and in line 80, she says, "Daddy, daddy, you bastard,
Plath’s attitude towards men is expressed in this passage through her imagery of the villagers stamping and dancing on the .....
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Interpreting Poetry
Words: 688 - Pages: 3.... 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 beauty demonstrates that Shakespeare loves the woman he is addressi .....
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Element Of God In Poetry
Words: 1961 - Pages: 8.... man in His own image; in the image of God he created him; male and
female, He created them. Genesis 1:27 Anyone who has seen a lamb knows that
it is a weak creature; unable to protect it's self from the strength of an
evil predator. If we are the Lamb, then we must rely on the protection of
our Shepherd, God. Why would Blake call us a Lamb then? Aren't we stronger
than any other animal upon this earth? I think that God would tell us "No,"
for it is He who gives us life strength, as Blake says in the next few
lines… Gave thee life & bid thee feed, By the stream & o're the mead; Gave
thee clothing of delight, Softest clothing wooly bright, .....
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Sylvia Plath's Poetry: Feminine Perfection
Words: 885 - Pages: 4.... as failures, in 1932 according to Bill Gilson in her biography Sylvia Plath was born in to middle class parents in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. She published her first poem when she was eight. Her father's death in 1940 from gangrene ( the consequence of a diabetic condition that he refused to treat), Plath was only eight years old, this was the crucial event of her childhood. In her poem "Daddy" we see Plath's imaginative transformations of experience into myths where the figure of her Prussian father is transformed into an emblem for masculine authority.
"Every woman adores a fascist,
The boot in the face the brute
Brute heart .....
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Analysis Of William Blake's Poetry
Words: 2018 - Pages: 8.... girls parents react to the new knowledge that
their daughter is missing. The parents are fearful because they know the
dangers of the jungle their daughter is lost in. The parents, caretakers,
of the young girl can not conceive the possibility that the jungle may have
a soft and caring side.
We then find out the age of young Lyca, "seven summers old." At
the age of seven, a young girl must be very scared alone in the wood with
out her mother and father. William Blake also in this stanza tells how
Lyca became lost in this wilderness. Lyca, being a young and playful girl
had saw beautiful birds singing and had followed them into the jung .....
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