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Robert Frost's Use Of Nature In His Poetry

... that the speaker comes upon in the woods. The speaker is faced with the decision of which path he will choose to travel. He has to choose only one path, therefore leaving one that he will not get to experience. The disappointment of the speaker is shown when he expresses that he is "sorry. . . [he] could not travel both" (line 2). He also shows his "hesitancy of the decision" (Barry 13) when it is stated "Though as for that, the passing there / Had worn them really about the same" (line 9-10). It seems as if he is expressing an "ina ...

Number of words: 423 | Number of pages: 2

Frost's “Desert Places”: Inner Darkness

... the reader a mental picture of what the speaker sees and feels. Frost begins the poem with “snow falling and night falling fast, oh, fast” indicating that darkness has fallen quickly and unexpectedly upon him. As the speaker ponders “going past” into the field, the reader is able to see the landscape darkening around “the ground that is almost smoothed in snow” (line 3), and picture the inky blackness as it covers everything except for a “few weeds and stubble showing last” (line 4). The image of him standing alone on the ...

Number of words: 818 | Number of pages: 3

Analysis Of Bryant's "Thanatopsis"

... that Bryant uses these words almost interchangeably. In the second stanza he writes, “All that tread the globe are but a handful to the tribes that slumber in its bosom.” Instead of referring to death he uses the word “slumber.” These connections continue in a number of places. Other examples include lines 57 and 66. In line 57 he writes, “In their last sleep the dead reign there alone,” and in line 66, referring to death and burial, Bryant writes, “And make their bed with thee.” This connection between death and sleep cr ...

Number of words: 570 | Number of pages: 3

Analysis Of William Blake's Poetry

... Girl Lost." This poem tells the story of a seven-year old child who becomes separated from her parents and is lost in a wild kingdom. In the first stanza the author prophasizes the future, foretelling of a serious situation. William Blake then goes on in the poem to tell about how the young girls parents react to the new knowledge that their daughter is missing. The parents are fearful because they know the dangers of the jungle their daughter is lost in. The parents, caretakers, of the young girl can not conceive the possibility tha ...

Number of words: 2018 | Number of pages: 8

"The Princess, The Knight, And The Dragon" By Malarkey - Poetry Analysis

... does what the code of nobility that she follows dictates her to do, ignore the threat of Faggon the Dragon. She ignores the natural, logical warning of fear that she has in order to strictly follow her code. It is because of this that she can is taken prisoner and eventually eaten, for if she had not been so eager to be courageous she would have run home and avoided being captured by Faggon. The princess is directly contrasted by the characters of the maid and the knight. Where the princess follows her code of noble action and is ...

Number of words: 347 | Number of pages: 2

The Real Me

... he know You reap what you sow? Isn’t that the way the blame is laid? Raised to be a macho man forced by my father with abusive hands Taught to believe in fairytales love at first sight and all ends well Tried to make a dollar the only way I knew how I seem to forget You’re holier than thou. Executive office, Armani suits high tax bracket and power to-boot well versed from the best schools trained in perfection, the number one rule. Independence, autonomy and winning is just elitus and best characteristics that must always be shown neve ...

Number of words: 325 | Number of pages: 2

Comparison And Contrast Of William Blake's Poems

... a hollow reed, And I made a rural pen, And I stain'd the water clear, And I wrote my happy songs Every child may joy to hear. Introduction (Experience) Hear the voice of the Bard! Who Present, Past, & Future, sees; Whose ears have heard The Holy Word That walk'd among the ancient trees, Calling the lapsed Soul, And weeping in the evening dew; That might controll The starry pole, And fallen, fallen light renew! ...

Number of words: 2744 | Number of pages: 10

"Dover Beach" By Arnold: Irony, Images, And Illusions

... the night-air is calm and peaceful. She thinks that she is going to this romantic place to be wooed by this man. Instead he turns to her and talks to her about Sophocles. She, not understanding what exactly is going on, later realizes that he was getting to the point of having each other and always being there for one another. The poet uses visual and auditory images to mainly help the romantic, fantasy-like place. “The sea is calm, the tide is full” and “Of pebbles which the waves draw back, and fling,” is an example of images t ...

Number of words: 476 | Number of pages: 2

Harwood's "Impromptu For Ann Jennings" And "Home Of Mercy"

... during their childbearing days. In "An Impromptu for Ann Jennings", Harwood seems to take joy in the unique and very special bond that is made between women friends who share their time throughout this type of experience? Harwood begins her poem by stressing the difficulties of motherhood and ends the poem by discussing the powerful community of women, who are able to share together the burdens and joys of motherhood. The way Harwood presents to us the women in this poem are that through childbirth they have been bought closer together ...

Number of words: 1690 | Number of pages: 7

Differences In "Ode On Grecian Urn" And "Sailing To Byzantium"

... on a Grecian Urn" relies mainly on the battle of immortality in life. This can also be said about "Sailing to Byzantium." We will start with "Sailing to Byzantium to show the strive for immortality. This theme of immortality as I go thoughtout this poem: "That is no country for old men. The young in one other arms, bids in the tree. Those dying generations of their song." (1,2,3) Imortality hit you in the face start off these lines. It talks about old becoming young and birds and trees. This makes you think of spring and vegetation a ...

Number of words: 528 | Number of pages: 2

Poetry: Always And Forever

... Something better, For this you will always be special. I love you more than anyone will ever know, If there was a word to describe my love, Surely it would only be spoken by God, For no other person could love you more than me. In my heart I carry you and the essence of love, In its pure and simple form. All I have to offer you is me and my love, Though both are simple I promise they are true. Even as I write this, I think of how to describe to you. ...

Number of words: 393 | Number of pages: 2

Poem: The Fate Of Hamlet

... of his father’s death, Hamlet vowed to take Claudius’s last breath. In the turmoil of all this. His true affection for Ophelia found no bliss. He could never share his thoughts, Revenge made him overwrought. All this pain caused him to plot, He made the plan to end his lot. But this scheme avenging death, Took also Hamlet’s last breath. Hamlet should have taken heed, And become king indeed. He never had a chance in Shakespheare’s plan, A tragic hero, just another great dead man. ...

Number of words: 121 | Number of pages: 1

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