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Term Papers on Poetry and Poets
Tumbleweed: Central Theme
Number of words: 758 - Number of pages: 3.... was thrown against a fence, a kind of prison
from which it is difficult to escape. So the tumbleweed and the poet are
both thrust against the barbed wire of life. This is another metaphor for
the poet's difficult life. The poet and the tumbleweed are stuck in a
painful, difficult situation. They are prisoners of their surroundings,
helpless. “Like a riddled prisoner.” The words riddled prisoner are used to
give us a powerful, painful, picture of the lost and hopeless feeling of
the poet. He feels great pain at his situation, feels that there is no way
out. He i .....
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A Critical Analysis Of "The Parting" By Michael Drayton
Number of words: 861 - Number of pages: 4.... "Shake hands forever, cancle
all our vows" sums up very concisely the idea of the break being forever,
with no possibility of a reconciliation, whilst also adding to the ease of
understanding and therefore also to the meaning of the poem.
Another constraint of the sonnet is the length of the lines
themselves. In a sonnet, the rythem is always iambic pentameter, which
means that there must always be ten syllables per line, with each second
syllable being stressed. Where the author breaks this pattern, it must
obviously be for a good reason, when the author wan .....
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Shelley's "Ode To The West Wind": Analysis
Number of words: 1450 - Number of pages: 6.... aware that Shelley is addressing more than a pile of leaves. His
claustrophobic mood becomes evident when he talks of the "wintry bed" (6)
and "The winged seeds, where they lie cold and low/ Each like a corpse
within its grave, until/ Thine azure sister of the Spring shall blow" (7-
9). In the first line, Shelley use the phrase "winged seeds" which
presents images of flying and freedom. The only problem is that they lay
"cold and low" or unnourished or not elevated. He likens this with a
feeling of being trapped. The important word is "seeds" for i .....
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Critisism On Robert Burns (1759-1796)
Number of words: 670 - Number of pages: 3.... 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 is not less admirabl .....
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Love Is Forever
Number of words: 431 - Number of pages: 2.... 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". Every words has something rhyming with it except the first and third line. Most of the rhyming is .....
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Analysis Of Blake's "London"
Number of words: 989 - Number of pages: 4.... 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 misery and entrapment. .....
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How Does Coleridge In 'The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner' And 'Kubla Khan' Show The Interrelatedness Between Mankind, Nature And The Poetic Experience?
Number of words: 809 - Number of pages: 3.... has unknowingly taken on a huge burden, and
the quest begins to extract all the rash impulsiveness of mankind. The mariner
now must search for moral, spiritual and internal rationality, and this goal is
expressed in the poem as a type of blessing or relief which he must earn. In
'Kubla Khan', Coleridge expresses man's social instinct to conform and belong to
a group. This also relates to the creation of rituals and rules by the human-
being and the obeying of the cycle of life to death, again and again. The
running theme of freedom and release for man is emphasis .....
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Poe's "The Conqueror Worm": Deeper Meaning To The Poem
Number of words: 760 - Number of pages: 3.... of the poem are also some very meaningful keys in showing
the hidden meaning. The first stanza describes the crowd that has gathered to
watch the enactment of our human lives. Lines three and four states "an angel
throng, bewinged, and bedight in veils, and drowned in tears." Poe is stating
that a group of angels is going to watch the spectacle put on for them, although
they are already drowning in the tears from plays before. The orchestra that
plays for them is another set of characters that have meaning. They represent
the background in everyone's l .....
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