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Search results 2151 - 2160 of 4688 matching essays
- 2151: Bryon's "Childe Harold's Pilgrimage": The Byronic Hero
- ... for whom he strives can never be his. In Bruce Wayne's case Michelle Pheifer is the woman whom he loves. Although he would do anything for her she never seems to show a great interest toward him. Every time he seems to have the chance to win her over something intervenes, and his chance is taken away. Out of his disgust and discontent with society Childe Harold leaves to find ...
- 2152: The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock: The Pitiful Prufrock
- ... the societal circle, and has shared the shallowness of living he finds repulsive in his peers.. Prufrock understands the his inability to "disturb the universe" when he considers how he will approach his intended romantic interest, but realizes his leisurely way of life has left him ill-prepared to deal with the responsibilities that accompany change: "I should have been a pair of ragged claws/ Scuttling across the floors of silent ...
- 2153: Education of ee cummings
- ... moving, one's motion causes the other to seem still (106). The d,' at the end of the poem is showing that after the poet has finally named the object he saw, he immediately loses interest and stops, as writing more to further organize his thoughts would be superfluous (106). The contrasting words in this poem are very important. against' contrasts with across', and signifies a halt. It seems that the ...
- 2154: Philip Larkin's "Sad Steps" and Sir Philip Sidney of Sonnet 31 from Astrophel and Stella: The Moon
- Philip Larkin's "Sad Steps" and Sir Philip Sidney of Sonnet 31 from Astrophel and Stella: The Moon An object can represent many different things to many different people. One object of interest is the moon. Philip Larkin, the speaker of Sad Steps, and Sir Philip Sidney, speaker of sonnet 31 from Astrophel and Stella, have different feelings and attitudes towards the moon. Each speaker uses various rhetorical ...
- 2155: Blakes's "London": Your Beauty, My Despair
- ... call it beautiful? Those that are chosen, no forced to lead our society in the past of our grandparents, are not getting the proper training to do so because of teen pregnancy and drop out rates. I am reminded of a dear friend of mine who birthed two children at the age of twelve and thirteen, how she struggled to regain her childhood but failed miserably. Now she just lives day ...
- 2156: Analysis of William Blake's Poetry
- Analysis of William Blake's Poetry William Blake's works include many of which relate to the role and interest of many figures of children and caretakers who appear in Songs of Innocence and Experience. The poems I will be discussing in this thesis are, from the Songs of Innocence: "The Little Girl Lost," "The ...
- 2157: Analysis of the Poems of William Wordsworth
- ... walking tour of France and Switzerland taken with his friend, Robert Jones (Watson 1421). He graduated in 1791 when the French revolution was in its third year, but, even though he had showed no prior interest, he quickly supported the Revolution's goals. After Wordsworth was forced to flee France he became involved with the studies of philosopher William Godwin; Godwin became one of the most inveterate influences on Wordsworth's ...
- 2158: Analysis of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's Poetry
- ... to account for them, to write footnotes about them, if it were hoped thereby to make them more powerful in their effect upon the imagination, would be ridiculous and pedantic, however fruitful of knowledge and interest the exercise might be. While the Philosopher has wandered away into a vague limbo of unfinished projects and the Poet of "Cristabel" and its companion stars can only gaze in mute wonder upon the constellation ...
- 2159: History in Langston Hughes's "Negro"
- ... I am a Negro"; Hughes is emphasizing to the reader the collective voice that he is using (1 and 17). He uses well recognized landmarks, that are familiar to us, to describe points of his interest such as building the "pyramids," "[making] mortar for the Woolworth Building," and "[making] ragtime" (5, 6, 13). With the structure of the sentence arrangements, Hughes tells us either what has happened to blacks or what ...
- 2160: The Works of Poet Carl Sandburg and His Effect on American Poetry
- ... is how they are all so strongly connected to each other. All of his poem's include an analysis on the common man in the commonplace. His study of people is out of his complex interest in them. "Mr. Sandburg loves people, I should say the 'people.' But I believe it is more than that. I think he has a real love for human beings....For Mr. Sandburg has a remarkable ...
Search results 2151 - 2160 of 4688 matching essays
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