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» Poems and Poets Essays and Papers
Lawrence Ferlinghetti's Politics
<view this essay>.... has had an anti-government attitude since the 1950's. His
beliefs strengthened when he was put on trial for publishing a highly
controversial collection of poems written by Allen Ginsberg. Lawrence
Ferlinghetti has chosen to express his political views through his poetry.
Additionally, Ferlinghetti became more vocal with the use of protests and
further publication of controversial and/or anti-government materials through
his publishing house, New Directions. By using poetry, Ferlinghetti was able to
reach a vast audience including those whom he was criticizing. Through his
poetry, Lawrence Ferlinghetti blatantly and subtly criticized the American
dem .....
Number of words: 1659 | Number of pages: 7 |
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The Road Not Taken - An Analyis
<view this essay>.... belief that it is the
road that one chooses that makes him the man who he is.
"And sorry I could not travel both..." It is always difficult to make a
decision because it is impossible not to wonder about the opportunity cost,
what will be missed out on. There is a strong sense of regret before the
choice is even made and it lies in the knowledge that in one lifetime, it
is impossible to travel down every path. In an attempt to make a decision,
the traveler "looks down one as far as I could". The road that will be
chosen leads to the unknown, as does any choice in life. As much he may
strain his eyes to see as far the road stretches, eventually it surpasse .....
Number of words: 787 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Romanticism, Poe, And "The Raven"
<view this essay>.... “To escape from society, the Romantics turned their interests
to remote and faraway places; the medieval past; folklore and legends, and
nature and the common man.” Edgar Allen Poe is noted as one of the few
American “Romantic” poets. Poe's poem “The Raven” portrays Romanticism as
characterized by emotion, exotica, and imagination.
A friend of Edgar Allen Poe, R. H. Horne, wrote of “The Raven”, “the
poet intends to represent a very painful condition of the mind, as of an
imagination that was liable to topple over into some delirium or an abyss
of melancholy, from the continuity of one unvaried emotion.” Edgar Allen
Poe, author of “The Raven .....
Number of words: 490 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Shakespeare's Sonnet Number 126: Critique
<view this essay>.... contrasts that lot with other men's;
in the third, thinking of his beloved friend, he rises like the lark that “sings
hymns at heaven's gate”; and in the couplet his happiness is generalized in a
final contrast.
To elaborate on what I have 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 .....
Number of words: 598 | Number of pages: 3 |
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Essay Interpreting "One Art" By Elizabeth Bishop
<view this essay>.... then
in the last line, herself.
Language in "One Art" is simple, yet many literary devices are used. The
last line repeated, to the effect of "The art of losing isn't hard to
master" suggests that the speaker is trying to convince herself that losing
things is not hard and she should not worry. Also, the speaker uses
hyperboles when describing in the fifth tercet that she lost "two
cities...some realms I owned." Since she could not own, much less lose a
realm, the speaker seems to be comparing the realm to a large loss in her
life. Finally, the statement in the final quatrain "Even losing you" begins
the irony in that stanza. The speaker remarks that losing th .....
Number of words: 364 | Number of pages: 2 |
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Analysis Of The Poems Of William Wordsworth
<view this essay>.... and his sister, Dorothy, was sent to live with
cousins in Halifax. It was in the rural surroundings of Hawkeshead that
William learned his appreciation for nature and the outdoors.
Unfortunately, once again, the peacefulness of his life was disturbed by
his father's death in 1783. William was sent from relative to relative,
all of whom thought of him only as a burden. It has been pointed out by
biographers that Wordsworth's unhappy early life contrasts with the
idealized portrait of childhood that he presents in his writings
(Wordsworth, William DISCovering).
Wordsworth went to college at St. John's College in Cambridge and
later wrote that the highli .....
Number of words: 2657 | Number of pages: 10 |
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Songs Of Innocence And Experience: An Analysis
<view this essay>.... written to reflect the knowledge of injustices, evils and
confusion that comes with life experience. These poems focus on evil and
the importance of understanding the injustices of the world, in hope of
attaining a state of innocence. In Songs of Innocence Blake suggests that
by recapturing the imagination and wonderment of childhood, we could
achieve the goal of self-awareness... the poems are presented from the
views of the world as filtered through the eyes and mind of a child. It can
also be inferred that evil can bring forth the loss of innocence. Therefore,
one existing similarity is that they both concern the loss of innocence.
Of his most well kno .....
Number of words: 536 | Number of pages: 2 |
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In Poems "The Man He Killed", "Reconciliation", And "Dreamers", The Authors Show That Man Kills Because He Must
<view this essay>.... in their own ways in their poems: "The Man He Killed",
"Reconciliation", and "Dreamers".
In The Man He Killed, Hardy speaks about the absurdity of war. He gives
a narrative of how he kills a "foe", and that this "foe" could be a friend if
they met "by some old ancient inn", instead of the battlefield. Hardy says
"...quaint and curious war is...you shoot a fellow down you'd treat if met
where any bar is..." In this Hardy speaks how war twists the mind, and also
makes you kill people you have no personal vendetta against.
In Reconciliation, Whitman shows the devastation of war. In a war, you
kill someone and even if you win, you lose. Whi .....
Number of words: 548 | Number of pages: 2 |
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