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Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening: An Analysis

... by the tranquility of the snowfall in the woods. As he watched the fill up the woods he knew that there was no chance of his friend seeing him that day. The easygoing snowfall occupied the speaker's attention even though he had a prior obligation to meet. In the poem, the speaker expressed his thoughts through his horse. An example of this was demonstrated in stanza 5. He was self-conscience about being lost; so his concern may have been why his thoughts were voiced through his horse. Yet, he made no attempt to leave the woods immedia ...

Number of words: 530 | Number of pages: 2

Whitman's Democracy

... excludes you do I exclude you." He has accepted the women as a prostitute, but this also conveys Whitman's ideas of democracy. The notion that all people should be covered under the cover of freedom. The sun is used as a metaphor for democracy in this poem, as it should shine upon all equally. When Whitman discusses the "shunn'd persons" in "Native Moments" he once again mimics the concepts of democracy with his words. He lets all know that he embraces the people that others have rejected, as democracy should embrace all. These pe ...

Number of words: 336 | Number of pages: 2

Analysis Of The Poems Of William Wordsworth

... William was sent to boarding school in Hawkeshead, and his sister, Dorothy, was sent to live with cousins in Halifax. It was in the rural surroundings of Hawkeshead that William learned his appreciation for nature and the outdoors. Unfortunately, once again, the peacefulness of his life was disturbed by his father's death in 1783. William was sent from relative to relative, all of whom thought of him only as a burden. It has been pointed out by biographers that Wordsworth's unhappy early life contrasts with the idealized portrait of chi ...

Number of words: 2657 | Number of pages: 10

Analysis Of "Because I Could Not Stop For Death"

... style of writing, effective use of literary elements, and vivid imagery, she creates a poem that can be interpreted in many different ways. The precise form that Dickinson uses throughout "Because" helps convey her message to the reader. The poem is written in five quatrains. The way in which each stanza is written in a quatrain gives the poem unity and makes it easy to read. "I Could Not Stop for Death" gives the reader a feeling of forward movement through the second and third quatrain. For example, in line 5, Dickinson begins death' ...

Number of words: 1954 | Number of pages: 8

Wasted Dreams

... ...

Number of words: 35 | Number of pages: 1

Blake's "The Fly"

... question of the poem. By relating himself to a fly and a fly to him, he asks "What are we?" If we are no better or worse then the fly then we are equal to the fly. If that is the case then life is terrible for a fly is a small and meager creature. Blake is suggested that we are so useless and so petty that we are like flies. This view upon humans is one of disgust and is very depressing for the reader. Blake also says that men are similar to the fly due to their position in life. "For I dance And drink and sing, Till some blind ...

Number of words: 946 | Number of pages: 4

Poe's Poetic Imagery In "The Raven"

... knowing the response illustrates the self-torture to which he exposes himself. Another obvious symbol is the bust of Pallas. Why did the raven perch on the bust of the goddess of wisdom? Perhaps it led the man to believe that the Raven spoke from wisdom; or perhaps it was to lead the audience to see the man as being intellectual. According to Poe himself, the reason for using "Pallas" in the poem was simply because of the "sonorousness of the word, Pallas, itself" (Poe, 1850). A less obvious symbol, might be the use of "midnight ...

Number of words: 571 | Number of pages: 3

In Depth Analysis Of Keats’ “Ode On A Grecian Urn”

... own troublesome health, and at the same time, was entirely too aware of the recent passing of his brother Tom. Despite such heartbreaking troubles, he composes “Ode on a Grecian Urn” in an attempt to find poetical existence beyond his too-short human lifetime. As Keats tries to find some sense of permanence in an ever more apparently impermanent and fleeting world, he turns to those objects which he regards to as outside of the temporality he, as a mortal man experiences: the perpetuating, generationless song of the nightingale and the ...

Number of words: 2071 | Number of pages: 8

Exploring The Theme Of Premature Death In Three Poems

... a poem gives the reader an immediate impression of not only the poem’s subject, but also the speaker’s attitude.” Death of a Young Son by Drowning” and “On My First Son” are both straight- forward titles. Looking at them, the reader discerns immediately the focus of the poem. Mid-term Break, conversely, is a title that leads the reader to believe that the poem most likely is about a normal carefree vacation and break from school. The author of this poem used this title ironically. He anticipated the reader’s expectations, and too ...

Number of words: 1605 | Number of pages: 6

Dante's Inferno

... was active in the political and military life of Florence. He entered the army as a youth and held several important positions in the Florence government during the 1290's. During his life, Florence was divided politically between Guelphs and Ghibellines. The Guelphs supported the church and liked to keep things as they were, unlike the Ghibellines. The Ghibellines were mostly supporters of the German emperor and at the time Dante was born, were relieved of their power. When this change took place, the Guelphs for whom Dante's family was as ...

Number of words: 1867 | Number of pages: 7

Wagoner's Tumbleweed: An Analysis

... suggests that the wind is carrying the tumbleweed along its course. It shows how the tumbleweed and the poet are victims of the environment around them. The circumstances around them have relegated them to being tossed about from one place to another. “ To catch at the barbed wire and hang there, shaking, like a riddled prisoner.” The poet tells us using strong images of pain and injury that the tumbleweed was thrown against a fence, a kind of prison from which it is difficult to escape. So the tumbleweed and the poet are both thrust ...

Number of words: 758 | Number of pages: 3

Creating The Melancholic Tone In “The Raven”

... sensitive to madness and the abyss of melancholy brought upon by the death of a beloved lady. The parallelism of Poe’s own personal problems, with those of the narrator in “The Raven,” his calculated use of symbolism, and the articulation of language through the use of the raven’s refrain, the reader becomes aware of Poe’s prominent tone of melancholy. A strong device for the melancholic tone in "The Raven" is Poe’s use of the first person. Poe used the first person by virtue of the situations in "The Raven" taking direct ...

Number of words: 1136 | Number of pages: 5

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