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Search results 2541 - 2550 of 5329 matching essays
- 2541: Poetry: The Law Makes Me Go
- ... tock, click, click, you stupid clock!, There's the bell and I know what it for; It's the cue go head for the door; I go through in my house and let out a big sigh; I crash in my bed so tried I could die;
- 2542: Differences in "Ode On Grecian Urn" and "Sailing To Byzantium"
- ... in Keats "Ode on a Grecian Urn." "What leap-fringd Latin haults about they shap of deities or mortials or both." (5,6) As you can see through reading these lines life and death are big aspects in this poem. One the other side this poem is very different from Sailing to Byzantium." In "Ode on a Grecian Urn" there is just one aspect that is really representatives here. This aspect ...
- 2543: Elizabeth Bishop and Her Poem "Filling Station"
- ... the [oi] in doily and embroidered seems to particularly stand out. The oozing of the grease in the filling station moves to each new stanza with the mention of these words: In the fourth stanza, "big dim doily", to the second last stanza, "why, oh why, the doily? /Embroidered" to the last stanza, "somebody embroidered the doily". Whereas the [oi] sound created an oily sound of language throughout the poem, the ...
- 2544: Compare and Contrast: "Dead Man's Dump" by Rosenberg and "dulce et Decorum est" by Owen
- ... in that piece. The general picture that Rosenberg tries to get across to the reader is that of the bodies just lying around all over the ground. Carnage exists everywhere the reader can imagine. The big picture is death, but Owens places specific detail on the soldiers' wounds and the sounds of the poem. Bones crunching by the wagon looking for survivors. Wounded soldiers yelling for the wagon to come and ...
- 2545: Ballad of Birmingham
- ... uses the saying, "No, baby, no, you may not go", in stanza two and then again in stanza four. This saying expresses the worries and fear that the mother has for her little girl. Another big factor in this poem is the use of tone. First, there is a tone of innocence in the first stanza (Hunter 51). The young child tries to act nice and innocent to her mother, in ...
- 2546: Secret Lion: Analysis
- ... stuff on the table but the gasp from the audience makes it not matter. The passage was comparing going to junior high school to a tablecloth the magicians pull because junior high school was a big change to the boys. The gasp! from the audience meant the change did not matter because in the long run everything will be O.K. The fifth and last passage is a personification. It is ...
- 2547: Analysis of John Donne's Sonnet 10 and Meditation 17
- ... s almighty father. I chose this passage because it sums up the whole poem in saying that no man is alone because everyone is bound together by a common creator. Everyone is part of the big continent because we are all God's children.
- 2548: Analysis of "The Age of Anxiety" by W.H. Auden
- ... people of the city not on the basis of personality content, but on that of the surroundings of which he thinks so lowly (Nelson 122). The fifth stage is reached when the group sights "the big house" while riding on a trolley. Rosetta, with her false past as an outline, references the house to one in which she was imaginarily reared, and to which she shall return. During her visitation to ...
- 2549: Housman's "To An Athlete Dying Young"
- ... that early-laurelled head Will flock to gaze the strengthless dead, And find unwithered on its curls The garland briefer than a girls. (967) Any biography read on Housman should reveal that he was an big student of Latin, a very dense language in which much meaning can be condensed into a small word. F. W. Batesman states, "He edited volumes of poetry for the poets Juvenile and Lucan" (Ricks 144 ...
- 2550: Beowulf: The Ultimate Hero
- ... what he has done and what he plans to do to Grendel. Here Beowulf "puts on his running shoes" and runs through his battle plan mentally just as any great athlete would do before a big meet. As the Banquet continues, Hrothgar thanks Beowulf, and promises him great treasure if he succeeds in defeating Grendel. As an ultimate hero, Beowulf decides, to be far, he will not use weapons in his ...
Search results 2541 - 2550 of 5329 matching essays
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