Writing Poems essay topics
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Copyright 2005 By Paul Muldoon
1,034 wordsOxford and Princeton University professor Paul Muldoon was born in County Armagh, Northern Ireland in 1951 and has been touted as "the most significant English-language poet born since the second World War" by The Times Literary Supplement. He has also won numerous and prestigious national awards. Therefore, it may come as a surprise to learn that Muldoon grew up in a home with very few books. "Believe it or not", he writes, "the only reading material we had in the house was The Junior World Enc...
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Hughes 1's Poem
1,424 wordsLangston Hughes is considered by many readers to be the most significant black poet of the twentieth century. He is described as ^3... the beloved author of poems steeped in the richness of African American culture, poems that exude Hughes^1's affection for black Americans across all divisions of region, class, and gender. ^2 (Rampersad 3) His writing was both depressing and uplifting at times. His poetry, spanning five decades from 1926 to 1967, reflected the changing black experience in Americ...
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Most Common Fear Amongst Writers
1,457 wordsA student at Illinois Wesleyan University recently confessed to holding a morbid fear of parked cars. He said, "I'm terribly afraid one of them will roll right over me" (Hamel). The actual odds of a parked car suddenly rolling over him are extremely slim; however, that does not alleviate his fears. It takes this poor boy a great amount of personal will power just to walk across a street where there are parked cars. As senseless as a fear of parked cars may be, people constantly allow their lives...
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American E.E. Cummings
737 wordsE.E. Cummings is characteristically American. E.E. Cummings is characteristically American. He is a famous, well known American author. I found that his writing style is of a stereotypical American. What is it to be stereotypically American? Well I found that one of the main things is that you can say or write whatever you want and not feel threatened about if what your saying is the right thing or not. Also a lot of Americans will use sarcasm. Also you don't have to come right out and say whate...
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Red Wheelbarrow The Author
695 wordsSo much depends upon the red wheelbarrow, Glazed with rain-water Beside the white chickens. Poetry is art. It is written not for enjoyment or entertainment of the author or reader. It is written because the writer thinks it needs to be. Poetry is a written expression of complex human emotion, a way to sort things out and give your feelings physical form. Poetry is also intended to reach other people. To give them your message. To tell them what you think and feel, your ideology. You could just t...
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Ogden Nash
829 wordsOgden Nashs Trash Ogden Nash was born on August 19, 1902 in Rye, New York and was raised there and in Savannah, Georgia. He received his education from St. Georges School in Rhode Island and, a short while at Harvard University. His first published poem Spring Comes to Murray Hill was featured in the New Yorker Magazine in 1930. He subsequently joined the staff of the New Yorker Magazine in 1932. Throughout his career he published a total of nineteen books of poetry before his death on May 19, 1...
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Marvell And Herrick's Poems
776 wordsDuring the 17th century the style of writing was changing from poems about death to ones whose subject was about living life to it's fullest extent. This kind of writing was also known as care diem. Robert Herrick and Andrew Marvell were two of the first care diem poets. Although their styles were similar their subjects differed. Both Marvell and Herrick used metaphors in their writing. In To His Coy Mistress, Marvell writes, "Had we but world enough, and time, This coyness lady were no crime", ...
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Tennyson As A Victorian The Victorian Age
764 wordsTennyson as a Victorian The Victorian age was an age where many changes occurred socially, economically, and industrially. People began to explore into areas such as the earth, the human body, and how to benefit the daily lives of individuals. English literature was also something that was beginning to be developed. People's thoughts and ideas also changed with the development of the country. The peoples' ideas became more free and they accepted change more easily, yet not everybody wanted to ad...
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Literature Of Colonial America The Writings
1,458 wordsLiterature of Colonial America The writings of this period are accounts of European explorers, traders, and settlers describing their adventures. Various different things were going on in America at this time, and everyone's aspect of how things happened is what the writings are about. In order to understand and engulf these pieces of literature, the reader needs to understand how people were living, and what was going on in America. The English- speaking man and the Indians had widely differing...
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Mother's Countenance The Ability
407 wordsPoetry Report Molly Ruder English 102 "My Papa's Waltz" by Theodore Roethke A young boy is waltzing with his drunken father. His mother is unhappy about the commotion they " re making. They danced until the young boy was tired and put him to bed. The time that Theodore Roethke had spent in the greenhouse, owned by his father and uncle, influenced his ability to write. These childhood memories inspired many of his writings. One of these books called "Open House" took him ten years to write and wa...
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Dunbar's Poem
1,236 wordsPaul Laurence Dunbar Paul Laurence Dunbar was born June 27, 1872 in Dayton, OH. His mother Matilda, was a former slave and his father Joshua had escaped slavery and served in the 55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment and the 5th Massachusetts Colored Calvary Regiment during the Civil war (online). Joshua and Matilda separated in 1874. Dunbar came from a poor family. After his father left, his mother supported the family by working as a washerwoman. One of the families she worked for was the famil...
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Analysis Of The Poem
1,525 wordsReading Journal By: Vladimir MachulskiyWeek 7"Soldier's Home " The whole emphasis of this story lies in the life of a young solider who had served his purpose to his country and returned home only to find the closest place to his hart change dramatically before his eyes. The war has changed him and because of that change he has never completely recovered and event felt left out by everyone in the city except for his sister and his mom. His father was the man he feared and didn't like as the stor...
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Toomer Writings
343 wordsCarlo A. per. 4 Jean Toomer Jean Toomer was born into a upper-class African American family (being that his grandfather, Pinckney Benton Stewart Pinch back was a Union officer in the Civil War and became Acting Governor of Louisiana in the Days of Reconstruction) on 1896 in Washington D.C. He showed strength in his early years as - when faced with adversity, rather than wring his hands and retreat further into himself, Toomer searched for a plan of action, an intellectual scheme and method to co...
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First Start Writing Poems Levertov
2,344 wordsA Poet's Valediction by Nicholas O'Connell In a final interview, poet Denise Levertov discusses the egotism of modern poetry, the sacredness of writing, and the spiritual hunger of our technologically dependent society. Denise Levertov, who died on December 20, 1997, was much loved by her readers and an inspiration to several generations of poets. She forged a middle path in modern poetry, marrying the hard, dry objective style of the Imagist poets with the music and metaphysical yearnings of fi...
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Speaker In The Poem
894 wordsOh 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...
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Strand's Selected Poems
1,099 wordsJay Paring Strand was born in Canada on Prince Edward Island. He studied at Antioch College, where he took a BA. He also received a BFA from Yale, where he studied painting. At the University of Iowa, he worked closely with poet Donald Justice, completing an MA in 1962. He spent a year in Italy on a Fulbright scholarship, and later taught at Iowa for three years. In 1965 he spent a year as Fulbright Lecturer at the University of Brazil, where he was deeply influenced by contemporary Latin Americ...
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Book The Collected Poems Of Rupert Brooke
4,843 wordsRupert Chaw ner Brooke was an English poet whose career was cut short due to a tragic event while serving for his country during World War I. Rupert Brooke was a much loved English poet whose death spoke volumes to many and touched many people. His poetry was touching and beautiful and could be related to by many people. His life was short but had many events in that short time. Rupert Brooke was born at Rugby, Warwickshire on August 3, 1887. His father's name was William Brooke and was an assis...
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Sylvia Plath Poetry Response
1,085 wordsSylvia Plath (Sample paper) Write a personal response to the poetry of Sylvia Plath. Support the points you make by reference to the poetry of Plath you have studied. Sylvia Plath was a bright, intelligent and determined young woman with a burning desire to write. She wrote incessantly during her short life - poetry, short stories, essays, articles. She was an outstanding student but often experienced self-doubt and depression and her work clearly reflects a wide range of emotions. She always so...
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Later Tennyson's Poems In Two Volumes
1,028 wordsToday, Alfred Lord Tennyson's poetry is widely known and appreciated, though this was not always the case. In his early years of writing his poems were criticized for content and style of writing. This strongly impacted Tennyson and caused him once to cease writing for nine years. Tennyson's childhood influenced his writing and this is often seen in many of his poems. He was regarded as the chief representative of the Victorian age in poetry. He become Poet Laureate in 1850 and was appointed by ...
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Familiar To The Puritans
481 wordsAnne Bradstreet's poetry reflects Puritan thinking like sunlight softly shimmering on a quiet country pond. There is life and much activity just below the quiet surface, yet one must look below to discover its depth. As the first notable poet in American literature, it is fitting that this young woman, a product of an atypical upbringing, should use her extensive education to express thought and emotion well beyond the writings of her time. Still, her writings always reflected the natural values...