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Search results 2561 - 2570 of 5332 matching essays
- 2561: A Comparison and Contrast of Love in Christopher Marlowe's "The Passionate Shepherd to his Love" and C. Day Lewis's "Song"
- ... content, and tone provide a deeper insight into the different ways love can be enticed. The poems contrast truth and promises while the speakers demonstrate the diminishing power of words and objects, and the increasing effect of truthfulness as the means to achieve true love. By contrasting the poems, the reader is convinced that truthfulness rather than spoken promises is the most effective means of achieving true love. C. Day Lewis ...
- 2562: Comparison of Shakespeare's Sonnet 73 and Sonnet 116
- ... and immovable nature of true love. According to Shakespeare, love is truly "till death do us part," and possibly beyond. Physical infirmity, the ravages of age, or even one's partner's inconstancy have no effect upon the affections of one who sincerely loves. His notion of love is not a romantic one in which an idealized vision of a lover is embraced. Instead he recognizes the weaknesses to which we ...
- 2563: Poet's Use of Mockery As Diction in Poem
- ... for the majors as they are not described in any positive manner. These terms cause the reader to feel disgust for the majors. The poets use of the words guzzling and gulping with their alliterative effect cause the reader to consider the majors as gluttons gathered at the table. When the reader completes his mental picture of the majors in the best hotel, the imagery of glory hogs is complete. The ...
- 2564: Coleridge's "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
- ... the story is trying to get the point of forgiveness from God across to the reader and if the reader chooses not to believe the story behind the poem then they will not understand the effect of the point of the tale. Coleridge's main point in writing the story was to get people to understand forgiveness by understanding the poem. The Mariner in the poem is telling his tale to ...
- 2565: Differences Between 18th Century Literature and Romantic Poetry Seen Through The Works From Alexander Pope and John Keats
- ... most of the emotional satisfaction from the reader. Hence, having observed these two magnificent artists for their personal adherence to the reader, it is necessary to delve into the emotional collaboration of imagery and its effect on the mind, body, and soul of the two sides involved in each reading. Imagery can sustain many possible contradictions on the writer's intentions. For instance, Keats hides his characters(Porphro and Madeline) in ...
- 2566: An Examination of Similes in the Iliad - and how Homer's Use of Them Affected the Story
- ... a Greek found laughing, more evidence that Homer has glamorized the Trojan lifestyle. The method I used for examining these examples is exceptionally difficult. First, I examined the way the similes were used and the effect they achieved, and at the same time, and the same space, attempted to prove that Homer tried to bring the Trojans a sense of honor they didn't receive in battle. Homer's similes proved ...
- 2567: The Poetry of William Cullen Bryant and Emily Dickinson: The Theme of Death
- ... poems there similarities have greatly shined and only by reading the deep inside of the poem can you notice that , by only skimming the surface of these poems you surely are not getting the full effect of the poems written by these eccentric authors.
- 2568: Physical Artifacts in Adrienne Rich's "Aunt Jennifer's Tigers" and Seamus Heaney's "The Harvest Bow"
- ... long as he finds happiness in the little things . "Blue smoke straight up, old beds and ploughs in hedges..." (Heaney 16). Although the use of physical artifacts are utilized in a number of ways, the effect they have on their their makers are alike. Aunt Jennifer goes on to be forever domineered by the limitations imposed by her male counterpart: when Aunt is dead, her terrified hands will lie... (Rich 11 ...
- 2569: Blake's "The Fly"
- ... stanza four the last word "death" is said with an accent giving it more emphasis over the other words. Same in stanza five the word "die" is said with an accent giving the same sad effect. This poem was taken from "Songs of Experience." During this phase Blake's writing was written from an adult viewpoint. This viewpoint was quite sad and depressing because Blake felt that once a man grew ...
- 2570: Sharpio's "Auto Wreck": The Theme of Death
- ... of death across to the reader. By bringing the scene of the accident to life and relaying the emotions of the spectators with language and several metaphors, the poem gains a realistic and sometimes transcendent effect. In some places in the poem, the words can easily be taken literally to convey scenery or an emotion, but they can also be taken so as to make the reader think about possible higher ...
Search results 2561 - 2570 of 5332 matching essays
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