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Analysis Of Frost's "Desert Places" And "Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening"

... made up of simple stanzas and diction but they are not simple poems. In the poem "Desert Places" the speaker is a man who is traveling through the countryside on a beautiful winter eventing. He is completely surrounded with feelings of loneliness. The speaker views a snow covered field as a deserted place. "A blanker whiteness of benighted snow/ With no expression, nothing to express". Whiteness and blankness are two key ideas in this poem. The white sybolizes open and empty spaces. The snow is a white blanket that covers up everything ...

Number of words: 1047 | Number of pages: 4

Comparing Ode To The West Wind And Tintern Abbey

... “sister of Spring” and a “Maenad,” shows how the wind is like a woman, spontaneous and free, with the liberty to be a gentle soul or a vicious amazon. He sees the wind with wonderment, and at the same time respects it and or even fears it. Shelly not only uses tone to depict his conception of nature, but he goes on to use personification to characterize the strength and vigor the wind possesses. He gives the wind human characteristics by referring to the wind as “her” and “she.” For example, “Her clarion over the dreaming ...

Number of words: 688 | Number of pages: 3

Analysis Of WH Auden's Poem: Eternal Love

... before his love shall be extinguished show the man's belief in the overwhelming power and durability of love. The attitude of the clocks however, is of pessimistic warning. For no matter how strong a man's love may be, time winds inexorably along. One cannot halt nor reverse the march of time, it is unconquerable, the unrenewable commodity. The tone of the poem turns reproachful, dark, as the clocks' chime tells of the world that is powerless before time. To say that " vaguely life leaks away," the author is possibly attempting to ...

Number of words: 395 | Number of pages: 2

Edgar Allan Poe's "The Bells": Analysis

... jolly type of mood for the reader. It starts the poem out in a warn and happy manner. The second stanza has wedding bells in it. These bells also bring about feelings of happiness, but in a different way. Although they have the same meaning of joy they clearly have different sounds. He also describes how they bring a sense of joy, and some what of a fortune, for the future. In stanza three there are sounds and descriptions of alarm bells. He uses the words clanging, clashing, and roaring to give a sense of alarm. He describes how the b ...

Number of words: 379 | Number of pages: 2

Samuel Coleridge's "Frost At Midnight"

... "inaudible as dreams", "Tis calm indeed", and "my low-burnt fire." In this first paragraph, Coleridge is talking about winter and how everything is peaceful and there is "extreme silentness." In the second paragraph, Coleridge begins reminiscing about a certain day in school, when he was fairly young, "How oft, at school, with most believing mind…have I gazed upon the bars." At first, it appears he was very happy, "So sweetly, that they stirred and haunted me with a wild pleasure…" But as this paragraph progresses, he begins ...

Number of words: 356 | Number of pages: 2

In Poems "The Man He Killed", "Reconciliation", And "Dreamers", The Authors Show That Man Kills Because He Must

... for death. These three authors express this viewpoint in their own ways in their poems: "The Man He Killed", "Reconciliation", and "Dreamers". In The Man He Killed, Hardy speaks about the absurdity of war. He gives a narrative of how he kills a "foe", and that this "foe" could be a friend if they met "by some old ancient inn", instead of the battlefield. Hardy says "...quaint and curious war is...you shoot a fellow down you'd treat if met where any bar is..." In this Hardy speaks how war twists the mind, and also makes you kill pe ...

Number of words: 548 | Number of pages: 2

Compare And Contrast: "Strange Fruit" And "Telephone Conservation": Theme Of Racial Prejudice

... that the most effective words of the poem are in the title because you have to read the whole of the poem to understand what it means. Lewis Allen the author tries to put the point across by making it different from the usual news reports and broadcasts. He does this by comparing it to the natural land and emphasising how bad it is "Scent of magnolia sweet and fresh, And the sudden smell of burning flesh" The poem itself has rhyming couplets in every two sentences just like a simple poem. The title suggests that the fr ...

Number of words: 699 | Number of pages: 3

Robert Frost's "Two Tramps In Mud Time"

... of words. At the outset of the poem, the narrator gives a very superficial view of himself, almost seeming angered when one of the tramps interferes with his wood chopping: "one of 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 ange ...

Number of words: 491 | Number of pages: 2

Analysis Of Frost's "Desert Places" And "Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening"

... person depending on their mindset at the time. These poems are both made up of simple stanzas and diction but they are not simple poems. In the poem "Desert Places" the speaker is a man who is traveling through the countryside on a beautiful winter eventing. He is completely surrounded with feelings of loneliness. The speaker views a snow covered field as a deserted place. "A blanker whiteness of benighted snow/ With no expression, nothing to express". Whiteness and blankness are two key ideas in this poem. The white sybolizes open and ...

Number of words: 1060 | Number of pages: 4

A Couple Of Frosted Poems

... with Elinor White, whom he married just three years later. After graduation, Frost attended Dartmouth College, taught in a grade school, worked in a mill, and served as a newspaper report. He published a book of poetry at his own expense. In 1897 Frost entered Harvard University as a special student, but left before receiving a degree because of a bout with tuberculosis and the birth of his second child. Three years later his eldest child died, which he later addressed in his poetry ("Robert Frost"). In 1912, having been unable to i ...

Number of words: 887 | Number of pages: 4

Lawrence's "Snake": An Analysis

... when the speaker knows that he should kill the snake. This is stated in the poem when it says, "The voice of my education said to me He must be killed." This line from the poem says that the speaker knows that he should kill the snake because his education told him that he should, but his feelings for the snake told him that if he killed the snake that would be wrong. The second time that he expresses this theme is when the speaker questions his own manliness. This is stated in the poem when it says, "Was it cowardice, that I dared not ki ...

Number of words: 502 | Number of pages: 2

Beginnings--The Idea

... "simile ," "personification," for instance) into plain English--noticing what is stated in the poem, as well as seeing the "connotations " or what is implied by the image. For example, when Robert Burns describes his beloved in these words, does he mean that she's "thorny"? O my Luve's like the red, red rose, That's newly sprung in June Probably not! At least, if he's smart. So how is his beloved like a flower? The rose is relatively rare and delicate; it needs to be treated with care. Being "newly sprung" implies that, as a fresh b ...

Number of words: 824 | Number of pages: 3

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