Speaker Of The Poem essay topics

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  • Blake's Poem London
    1,017 words
    In Blake's 'London' the speaker connects various characters and socio / political institutions in order to critique the injustices perpetrated in England. The busy, commercial city of London functions as a space in which the speaker can imagine the inescapable interconnections of English institution and citizens. Although separated by differences of class and gender, the citizens of London brush up against each other so that the misery of the poor and dispossessed is a direct indictment of the c...
  • Seafarer's Suffering At The Sea
    1,862 words
    The Two Voices of The Seafarer There is much argument in the literary field as to whether there is more than one speaker in the Old English poem The Seafarer. In this brief essay we will look at some of the previous criticisms of the last two centuries, and through them attempt to prove that the speaker of the poem is the same one throughout. The author of The Seafarer is unknown. Its manuscript is untitled and unique, and is thought to have been inscribed around 975 AD. It survives on four page...
  • High Toned Old Christian Woman
    593 words
    Wallace Stevens and Religion This essay offers an explication of Wallace Stevens' poem "A High-Toned Old Christian Woman". Addressing A High-Toned Old Christian Woman, the speaker proposes poetry as the supreme fiction (line 1) rather than God or religion. Stevens considered religion as fictions, imaginative creations that made it possible for people to feel at home in a world that is not naturally homelike and hospitable. Thus the speaker's statement suggests that religious fictions have no gre...
  • Robert Frosts Poem The Tuft Of Flowers
    1,165 words
    The poetry of Robert Frost contains two major themes of nature: The exploration of beauty and nature, and the interaction between man and nature. The role of these themes will be discussed in The Tuft of Flowers, Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening, Once by the Pacific, and The Most of It. It has been said many times that all men have a common bond, or a thread that joins them together with nature. Robert Frosts poem The Tuft of Flowers explores the existence of such a bond, as experienced ...
  • One Of Langston Hughes Poems
    938 words
    Langston Hughes Throughout many of Langston Hughes' poetry, there seems to be a very strong theme of racism. Poems such as 'Ballad of the Landlord', 'I, Too', and 'Dinner Guest: Me' are some good examples of that theme. The 'Ballad of the Landlord' addresses the issue of prejudice in the sense of race as well as class. The lines 'My roof has sprung a leak. / Don't you 'member I told you about it / Way last week?' (Hughes 2/4) show the reader that the speaker, the tenant, is of a much lower class...
  • After Apple Picking
    927 words
    Subject: Write an explication of After Apple Picking. Robert Frost's poem, After Apple-Picking, describes the personal reflections of an elderly man who lives on an apple orchard. This old man has lived a good life, and now must contemplate its quality and meaning. By performing an honest assessment of his past, the old man is better able to accept his inevitable future. The first six lines of this poem develop the situation in which the speaker has found himself. He has led a long and successfu...
  • Next To The Dark Woods
    882 words
    The poem "Stopping by the Woods on a Snowy Evening", by Robert Frost, is a short, yet intricate poem. What appears to be simple is not simple at all. What appears to be innocent is really not. The woods seem pristine and unimposing, however, they are described as being "dark and deep", and it is the "darkest evening of the year". He speaks of isolation, "between the woods and frozen lake" and of duty "But I have promises to keep". And also, Frost's usage of "sleep" easily implies death. Though t...
  • Frequent References To Roses And Fragility
    1,290 words
    Edward Estlin Cummings was an American poet - the second most widely read poet in the United States, after Robert Frost - born in 1894. He was immensely popular, especially among younger readers for his work; he experimented radically with form, punctuation, spelling and syntax. The majority of his poems turn to the subjects of love, war, and sex, with such simplistic language, abandoning traditional techniques to create new means of poetic expression". Somewhere I have never travelled", is a ve...
  • Speaker In The Poem
    894 words
    Oh Contri ere There are several similarities and differences in William Shakespeare's My Mistress Eyes are Nothing Like the Sun, and John Donne's A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning. Theses two poems discuss and dissect relationships on two basic levels: one level deals with love, and the other level makes strong references to lust. Both possess merit in respect for the time they were written and the style of world that we live in today. In John Donne's A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning, it is o...
  • Impression Of The Fish Upon The Speaker
    1,308 words
    Paper on Poetry Mending Wall, by Robert Frost (1874-1963), is a poem which asks the question, Do fences make good neighbors Frost feels they do not; a wall isolates the people who built the wall, keeping them from their experiences with each other. Frost nonetheless excites the reader's curiosity to discover what that something might be. As well, the rhythmical impulse of the poem has been set in motion. In the opening line something refers to a third entity. In the next couple of lines the some...
  • Few A Bird
    496 words
    Dickinson Explication #130 This poem speaks of the final summer days of the year, possibly coming after the initial fall cool down. The speaker begins by saying "These are the days when Birds come back-A very few-a Bird or two-To take a backward look", referring to the few remaining birds in the last of the warm days of the year. She then describes these days as deceptive, comparing them to that of June, "A blue and gold mistake". In the third stanza she begins by saying "Oh fraud that cannot ch...
  • Here Frost The Speaker In The Poem
    1,560 words
    Critical Decisions In Crucial Times Poetry perceives the irrational mysteries and subtle truths, through rational words. Although it is not true to assume that poetry always emanates its messages from the arcane land of mysteries, but it is pretty safe to conjecture that poetry is one of the means, most often utilized, to virtually ground the invisible and get into the inscrutable. When I started prepping up for this assignment, I read several poems by different poets. But hardly anything talked...
  • Speakers Need For Porphyria In His Life
    784 words
    Porphyrias Lover is one of many poems by Robert Browning. In this poem a woman named Porphyria is killed by her lover. This mans obsession with Porphyria led him to murder. Through vocabulary, imagery and situation Browning shows the reader the mind of an obsessed man. Imagery in a poem helps the reader visualize the surroundings and helps the reader infer the main events in a poem. The opening lines in the poem show a dark dismal night. The rain set early in tonight, /The sullen wind was soon a...
  • Carriage With The Speaker And Death
    1,123 words
    Emily Dickinson was one of the greatest American poets of the 1800's. She was born in Amherst, Massachusetts, in 1830. While alive, she published only eleven of her nearly 2,000 poems. An accurate and complete edition of her poems appeared in 1955. Dickinson's fame and influence grew rapidly after the release of the book. Dickinson most often used iambic tetrameter and off-rhymes in her writing. In her earlier works, Dickinson used conventional poetic techniques. Later she arranged and broke lin...
  • Metaphor Of A Funeral
    591 words
    "I felt a Funeral in my brain" Almost unknown as a poet in her lifetime, Emily Dickinson is now recognized as one of the greatest poets who used many different devices to develop her poetry, which made her style quiet unique. A glance at one of her poems may lead one to believe that she was quiet and a simple poet. The poetry of Dickinson attempt to romanticize nature and speak of death and loneliness that is not only in her poems, but also in her life. "I felt a funeral in my brain". The use of...
  • Poem The Author
    786 words
    Analyzing Faith and Doubt in "High Holy Days" by Jane Shore The main idea that Jane Shore is making in "High Holy Days" is that the child or young teenager is a "Chosen One", (line 54) and she must free the Jews from Anti-Semitism and the Nazis just as Moses saved the Israelites from the Egyptians. She had no idea she was going to be the chosen one just as Moses did not. Moses was lost too just like she was before God helped him find his way. The author uses diction throughout the poem to help t...
  • Speaker In The Poem
    405 words
    The transition from girlhood to womanhood is commonly one of the hardest times in a girls life, but more often by society it is overlooked as being a minor change. In the poem "Quinceanera" by Judith Ortiz Cover, the speaker, who is a young girl, explains the changes she must go through at the age of fifteen. From simple things, such as giving up possessions to actually being accustomed to doing things in preparation for marriage, the speaker describes first hand the many difficulties of becomin...
  • Hayden's Poem
    583 words
    Robert Hayden's poem "Those Winter Sundays" presents an interesting view on life. The poem speaks of someone who seems to be haunted by bittersweet realization of his taking so many things for granted. It focuses on the emotions, more specifically, the feelings of pain and regret that seem to characterize the speaker. Hayden applies imagery, character, and tone to impart certain thoughts; however, he abstains from making any serious value judgements and leaves the interpretation of the poem to t...
  • Eros Agape And Philia Type Of Love
    1,362 words
    Eros, Agape, and Philia: Love Philia is a type of unconditional, brotherly love. The related Greek word "koinonia" is very close to philia, which means fellowship. This type of love is usually common in family and friendship relationships. The type of love that is present in a family has a lot to do with loyalty. "My Papa's Waltz", written by Theodore Roethke in 1948, is a poem that illustrates philia genuinely. In this poem, the speaker discusses how a certain type of behavior by a fatherly fig...
  • Proud Death
    615 words
    Attempts At Poetry Explication Attempts At Poetry Explication Essay, Research Paper Death, be not proud (P 596) Death, be not proud is the unusual portrayal of Death as a bringer of deliverance " rest and sleep, which but thy pictures be ' rather than a figure of hell, torment, and punishment, "Rest of their bones, and soul's delivery. ' through a fourteen-line sonnet (written in iambic pentameter). The speaker emphasizes the inevitability of death through its personification which allots death ...

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