Stanza Of The Poem essay topics
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Spender's Epilogue And Sankichi's Dying
1,797 wordsStephen Spender's 'Epilogue to a Human Drama' and Toge Sankichi's 'Dying' are poems detailing the destruction of two cities, London and Hiroshima, respectively, during or after World War II bombings. Spender wrote 'Epilogue to a Human Drama,' hereafter referred to as 'Epilogue,' after a December air raid of London during the Battle of Britain, which ravaged and razed much of England from Summer 1940 until Spring 1941. Sankichi wrote 'Dying' from his vivid recollections of the surprise atomic bom...
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Hardy's Use Of Figurative Devices
1,071 wordsAn examination of Thomas Hardy's "The Darkling Thrush " The Darkling Thrush' is a poem occasioned by the beginning of a new year and a new century. It is formally precise, comprised of four octaves with each stanza containing two quatrains in hymn measure. The movement of the first two stanzas is from observation of a winter landscape as perceived by an individual speaker to a terrible vision of the death of an era that the landscape seems to disclose. The action is in how the apprehension of th...
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Charles Baudelaire Flowers Of Evil Romanticism
1,747 wordsCharles Baudelaire: Romantic, Parnassian, and Symbolist Often compared to the American poet Edgar Allen Poe, the French poet Charles Baudelaire has become well-known for his fascination with death, melancholy, and evil and his otherwise eccentric yet contemplative style. These associations have deemed him as a "patron saint of modernist poetry" while at the same time closely tying his style in with the turbulent revolutionary movements in France and Europe during the 19th century (Haviland, scre...
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You By Emily Dickinson
1,106 wordsI cannot live with You-It would be Life-And Life is over there Behind the Shelf The Sexton keeps the Key to-Putting up Our life-His Porcelain-Like a Cup-Discarded of the Housewife-Quaint-or Broke-A newer Sevres pleases-Old Ones crack-I could not die-with You-For One must wait To shut the Other's Gaze down-You-could not-And I-Could I stand by And see You-freeze-Without my Right of Frost-Death's privilege? Nor could I rise-with You-Because Your Face Would put out Jesus'-That New Grace Glow plain-a...
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Dickinson's Poems On Death
10,229 wordsALLEN TATE One of the perfect poems in English is The Chariot, /13/ and it exemplifies better than anything else [Emily Dickinson] wrote the special quality of her mind... If the word great means anything in poetry, this poem is one of the greatest in the English language; it is flawless to the last detail. The rhythm charges with movement the pattern of suspended action back of the poem. Every image is precise and, moreover, not merely beautiful, but /14/ inextricably fused with the central ide...
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Rimbaud And Verlaine
2,837 wordsUnderstandably, a poets life and circumstances will affect his poetry, as poetry often speaks of experience or feelings generated by those experiences. The 19th Century, French poet Rimbaud, led a most unorthodox life. He was a homosexual, extremely antireligious and opinionated to say the least. His poetry is much like his life, that is, it is often unorthodox. ARTHUR RIMBAUD 1854-1891. BIOGRAPHY Jean Nicholas Arthur Rimbaud was born October 24, 1854 in Chareleville, France. His father, Frederi...
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Continuing Relationship Between Donne And His Lover
1,628 wordsWilliam Empson begins his critical essay on John Donne's "A Valediction: of Weeping" with this statement. Empson here plays the provocateur for the critic who wishes to disagree with the notion that Donne's intentions were perhaps less base than the sincere valediction of a weeping man. Indeed, "A Valediction" concerns a parting; Donne is going to sea and is leaving his nameless, loved other in England, and the "Valediction" is his emotive poesy describing the moment. There is little argument as...