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Search results 4841 - 4850 of 8374 matching essays
- 4841: Robert Frost's "Two Tramps In Mud Time"
- ... them put me off my aim". This statement, along with many others, seems to focus on "me" or "my", indicating the apparrent selfishness and arrogance of the narrator: "The blows that a life of self-control/Spares to strike for the common good/That day, giving a loose to my soul,/I spent on the unimportant wood." The narrator refers to releasing his suppressed anger not upon evils that threaten "the ...
- 4842: ADHD On Child Intelligence
- ... of boys and those with low intelligence diagnosed, others with ADHD are impaired as well. Results have found that girls with this disorder face greater intellectual impairment, especially with picture vocabulary tasks, than boys or control girls (Seidman et al., 1997). There is also significant findings that the level of intelligence affects ADHD children in different ways. More specifically, those with both ADHD and normal to high intelligence are more prone ...
- 4843: Wagoner's Tumbleweed: An Analysis
- ... have been lost on his harrowing journey through life, and he knows that they are lost forever. This gives us the powerful image of a lost and hopeless person yet often he tries to take control of his life to combat the external forces. We can feel the poet's pain. It is sad that an independent person can feel lost and helpless. But his independent maverick nature will enable him ...
- 4844: Tumbleweed: Central Theme
- ... have been lost on his harrowing journey through life, and he knows that they are lost forever. This gives us the powerful image of a lost and hopeless person yet often he tries to take control of his life to combat the external forces. We can feel the poet's pain. It is sad that an independent person can feel lost and helpless. But his independent maverick nature will enable him ...
- 4845: Not So Hidden Agendas: Wilfred Owen and His Early Editors
- ... examine the different editions of Owen=s poems and the agendas of each editor. The first edition of his poems, co-edited by Sassoon and Sitwell, created problems immediately, as Sitwell and Sassoon argued over control of the project. After the war, Edith Sitwell had begun to prepare the poems for publication; she had even published seven of the poems in Wheels, the magazine she edited, and was preparing to publish ...
- 4846: Analysis of Jarrell's "The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner"
- ... poem is told from the point of view of a young fighter aboard a bomber during World War II. The fighter is positioned in the ball turret which was an enclosed bubble with a swivel gun in the belly of the plane. This poem reads like a nightmare or dream being told by a soldier who has been taken from his childhood and thrown into war. The soldier describes the fear ...
- 4847: Dante's Inferno
- ... only be involved in spiritual affairs. At the turn of the century, Dante rose from city councilman to ambassador of Florence. His career ended in 1301 when the Black Guelph and their French allies seized control of the city. They took Dante's possessions and sentenced him to be permanently banished from Florence, threatening the death penalty upon him if he returned. Dante spent most of his time in exile writing ...
- 4848: Ozymandias (1818): An Analysis
- ... c e d /e f /e f (the second "/e" is a slant of "e," not of the first "/e"). This "boundless" style seems to represent the way Ozymandias saw himself -- as one in complete control, bowing to no one. As this rhyme scheme does not rely on preconceived forms, neither does the "king of kings" believe he will have to capitulate to any other power (including time). The seemingly scattered ...
- 4849: A Comparison and Contrast of Love in Christopher Marlowe's "The Passionate Shepherd to his Love" and C. Day Lewis's "Song"
- ... women where by they can be manipulated with gifts and promises, and in turn shows a sign of his possible sexual intentions. The speaker is possibly trying to obscure his love long enough to take control and have his way with her. This idea is reinforced in the line "I will make thee a bed of roses" (9) , which contains underlying sexual connotations. These intentions are masked in the speaker's ...
- 4850: Ballad of Birmingham
- ... march(Hunter 55). Secondly, there is the tone of concern for her child's safety. Her mother tells her that there are dogs, clubs and hoses. These things were used on protesters and marchers to control the crowds when they grew too large and had gotten out of hand. Next, there is the tone of joy in the fifth stanza and in the first half of the sixth stanza. Her mother ...
Search results 4841 - 4850 of 8374 matching essays
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