Lines In The Poem essay topics
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If We Must Die By Claude McKay
1,079 wordsClearly provocative and even chilling, If We Must Die by Claude McKay stirs deep and powerful emotions in any who reads it. A poem inspired by violent race riots, it serves as a motivating anthem representative of an entire culture. Graphic and full of vengeance this poem is demanding action, not telling a story. McKay utilizes imagery to its fullest extent creating an end result which any man or woman, black or white, who has ever felt the hard and hateful hand of oppression can relate to. Writ...
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Thin Prufrock
842 wordsIn the poem 'The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock' by T.S. Elliot, Prufrock is a man that is pessimistic, has low self-esteem, and has much internal conflict. He believes that he isn't good enough for the women of his desire; this theme also becomes a motif. The epigraph of the poem is an excerpt from Dante's Inferno, in which that the perfect audience could only be someone who would never be allowed into the real world where that person (s) might reveal Prufrock's idiosyncrasies. This of course ...
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Type Of Narrative Poem
952 wordsThe Jealous Husband That's my last Duchess painted on the wall, Looking as if she were alive. I call That piece a wonder, now: Fr'a Pandolf's hands Worked busily a day, and there she stands. 5 Will't please you sit and look at her? I said Fr'a Pandolf'; by design, for never read Strangers like you that pictured countenance, The depth and passion of its earnest glance, But to myself they turned (since none puts by 10 The curtain I have drawn for you, but I) And seemed as they would ask me, if the...
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Back To The Stately Old Prufrock
1,524 wordsLove, Lust or Lackluster Lifestyle? "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" demonstrates the effects of social and economic pressure in the life of a Victorian man. T.S. Eliot shows us, in an ironic monologue, how the reality of age and social position paralyzes his character with fear. The poem opens with six lines from Dante's "Inferno". This particular stanza explains that the speaker is in hell and the message can only be told to someone else in hell. The speaker tells us that it is OK for the...
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Eliot's Poem
4,388 wordsT.S. Eliot changed the face of poetry. He has been regarded as the most celebrated poet of his era. This Nobel Prize winning poet is credited with viewing the world as it appears, without making any optimistic judgement's. Despite the ire of Mr. Eliot, it would be safe to regard him as a prophet of doom. His works reflected his frustration with mankind, and the seeming need to be released from this cold world. It was once said, "How unpleasant to meet Mr. Eliot". (Time 1) His rather cynical view...
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Criminal For Guidance
428 wordsOriginal What still alive at twenty-two, A clean, upstanding chap like you Sure, if your throat 'tis hard to slit, Slit your girl's, and swing for it. Like enough, you won't be glad When they come to hang you, lad: But bacon's not the only thing That's cured by hanging from a string. So, when the spilt ink of the night Spreads o'er the blotting-pad of light, Lads whose job is still to do Shall whet their knives, and think of you. (4) (8) (12) Paraphrase You " re twenty-two and not dead yet A dis...
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Vain Hope
353 wordsThe first metaphor I really liked was from "Tichbornes's Elegy". It was the line "All of my good is but vain hope of gain". The reason being it was so vivid and informative. That one minute line explains so much about the writer and about him. It says that the only good he does is for hope that some gain will occur in his life. I could picture him as being a posing Christian. A person who isn't really good natured but acts good to get to the pearly gates. He is vain and selfish. He isn't concern...
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Poems And Dickinson
8,065 wordsYV OR WINTERS The three poems which combine [Emily Dickinson's] greatest power with her finest execution are strangely on much the same theme, both as regards the idea embodied and as regards the allegorical embodiment /293/. They deal with the inexplicable fact of change, of the absolute cleavage between successive states of being, and it is not unnatural that in two of the poems this theme should be related to the theme of death. In each poem, seasonal change is employed as the concrete symbol...
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Five Centuries Of English Poetry
2,891 wordsBlazing canon English poetry begins whenever we decide to say the modern English language begins, and it extends as far as we decide to say that the English language extends. Some people think that English poetry begins with the Anglo-Saxons. I don't, because I can't accept that there is any continuity between the traditions of Anglo-Saxon poetry and those established in English poetry by the time of, say, Shakespeare. And anyway, Anglo-Saxon is a different language, which has to be learned. Ang...
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Use Like Poems
5,169 wordsHere is Tate's Full Essay from Reason in Madness, 1938 On this first occasion, which will probably be the last, of my writing about my own verse, I could plead in excuse the example of Edgar Allan Poe, who wrote about himself in an essay called "The Philosophy of Composition". But in our age the appeal to authority is weak, and I am of my age. What I happen to know about the poem that I shall discuss is limited. I remember merely my intention in writing it; I do not know whether the poem is good...
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Mankind For The Warpath And Destruction
1,112 wordsBy: Donald Goode Dramatic events in the world cause people to vent their frustrations in many ways. This can be done in a verbal speech, a written article, and act of violence, or a poem of thought. A poem of thought is what Richard Eberhart has done in, "The Fury of Aerial Bombardment". The theme of this poem is described with questions and angry emotion. Who is the poet angry at? Is it mankind, for the warpath and destruction it creates? Or is it God, who lets this destruction happen in its un...
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Harwood Sonnets
1,679 wordsShe practices a fugue, though it can matter to no one now if she plays well or not. Beside her on the floor two children chatter, then scream or fight. She hushes them. A pot boils over. As she rushes to the stove too late, a wave of nausea overpowers subject and counter-subject. Zest and love drain out with soapy water as she scours the crusted milk. Her veins ache. Once she played for Rubinstein, who yawned. The children caper round a sprung mousetrap where a mouse lies dead. When the soft cor...
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Feminism In Diving Into The Wreck
1,591 wordsDiving Into The Wreck: Feminism (Play "I'm Not a Service Station" by Margie Adams) An era of social and political upheaval, of transition and change, of protesting on the streets and through the arts; the 1970's represented a time when controversial and alternative opinions were not only expressed, but acted upon. Among many of the global movements which developed and gained momentum during this timeframe was the prominent faction which undisputed ly holds the most relevance and magnitude for th...
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Shakespeare's Last Line
1,274 wordsIn today's society it is very unfortunate that the appearance of women is so significant. Relationships strictly based on looks will most likely always exist, however, the hope that one is loved for who they are inside remains within most of us. Every individual finds being praised exceptionally flattering, whether it is for his or her appearance or for his or her personality. With a comical touch the poet ridicules the tradition of comparing one's beloved to all things beautiful under the sun, ...
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Lines Shamus Heaney
2,002 wordsThe Part of this poem that is to be looked at first is imagery in the title of the poem. Shamus Heaney starts us off by giving us this picture of the Strand at Lough Beg, which is the shore of a lake. Already the reader is given the starting point of this story; the Kind of person that Colum McCartney is. Shamus Heaney begins the poem with an image of isolation, confusion, and the loss of safety. Heaney describes what happen the night that his cousin was killed: Leaving the white glow of the fil...