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Similarities Between The Barred Owl And The History Teacher
In "A Barred Owl" and "The History Teacher", by Richard Wilbur and Billy Collins, both authors ponder child innocence and a child's willingness to
believe what they are told by people they trust. In "The History Teacher" a teacher tells a series of historical events in which he changes the names
and harsh details of the events to protect the children's innocent minds, while in "The Barred Owl", Wilbur describes an innocent child being put back
to sleep after being woken by an owl catching it prey outside their window. Both adults in the poem provide different explanations for their children on
a disturbing event, both authors demonstrate ways to protect a child's innocence, but use different literary devices to make their points, such as the use
of irony... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Using a more innocent, child–like carefree tone in the first stanza, Wilbur tells how a child is woken up, and how she is eased back to bed,
demonstrating a carefree tone by making the owl seem friendly and nothing to worry about, "Was an odd question from a forest bird,/ Asking us, if
rightly listening to,/ "Who cooks for you?" and "Who cooks for you?"". In the second stanza a more haunting tone is used when the child is put to
sleep and the author writes, "And send a small child back to sleep at night/ Not listening for the sound of stealthy flight", when the owl is capturing
its prey. Both of these tones used in this poem show how a child's problem is dealt with and provides protection to the child. The author also uses
juxtaposition, comparing what the child believes is going on to what is truly happening outside. This demonstrated the power of words that the poem
emphasizes to be a key part to our understanding of things, such as our fears and happiness, and how it can contribute to the attempt to save a child's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Gwendolyn Brooks Research Paper
The Incredible Life of Gwendolyn Brooks Imagine the strength required to defy social inequality and rise to become a purveyor of culture upon a new
generation of poets. Gwendolyn Brooks was one with such strength. She had the strength to overcome the garrison of social injustice which held back
so many other African–Americans. She had the strength to establish herself as a master poet by being the first of her kind to win a Pulitzer Prize and
be appointed Poet Laureate of the United States. She, Gwendolyn Brooks, a champion of African–American literature since her youth and a civil rights
activist in her old age, wrote many critically acclaimed works of both prose and poetry and excessively garnered prestige among the ranks of
twentieth–century ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
I want to write poems that will be meaningful( poetryfoundation.org)." This awe–inspiring quote by Gwendolyn Brooks herself shows the purpose
behind her career and what anyone can accomplish if they have the drive to do so. Brooks fully fulfilled and delivered on this mantra. Her first
collection of poetry A Street in Bronzeville ( released in 1945) was a great success and received many honors ( biography.com). Both of her two
autobiographies took heavy criticism which Brooks vehemently refuted saying, "They wanted a list of domestic spats (poetryfoundation.org)."
Writing only one novel Martha Maud, Brooks did not dabble to often in prose ( poets.org). Annie Allen , which won a Pulitzer Prize, and In The
Mecca, which received a National Book Award in poetry, are her two greatest works(poets.org). The awards she acquired for her works are the
American Academy of Arts and Letters Award, Fellowships from the Academy of American Poets, the Frost Medal, a National Endowment for the Arts
Award, the Shelley Memorial Award, among many others (poets.org). All of these allowed her to become a teacher and speaker of literature specifically
poetry at many universities throughout her life and the Poet Laureate of both Illinois and the United States (biography.com; poets.org ). Along with
these government positions came a much more political
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Poetry Analysis Of Natasha Trethewey's Native Guard
Natasha Trethewey is the southern born daughter of an African American mother and white father at a time when such relations were illegal. Her
parents were married in Canada and lived for a time in California, but the pull of the south brought them home. Yet, racism reared its ugly head and
the couple divorced, but not before molding a daughter who would later go on to be named Poet Laureate of the United States. Today, Trethewey is a
professor of creative writing at Emory University. Her poetry collection Native Guard which speaks of the history of life in the south won the Pulitzer
Prize for poetry in 2007 and is indeed a powerful collection.
Native Guard is Trethewey's third book of poetry; first published in 2006, it won the Pulitzer for poetry in 2007. The book's about the history of the
South, of race and racism, of war and peace. The eponymous Native Guard, founded in 1862, was the first African–American regiment in the Union
Army. One job assigned to this unit was guarding the prison–of–war camp at Fort Massachusetts on Ship Island, Mississippi. The crown sonnet
sequence of ten sonnets that makes up "Native Guard" tells the history of the guard from 1862–1865. Each poem is titled with a date, and begins with a
revision of the line that ended the sonnet preceding it. The first poem in the sequence begins with the end of the last poem, so it is a crown of
connected sonnets. Her revisions of lines are intense, clever and beautiful. For example, here is the ending of
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Robert Frost Research Paper
Robert Frost's Life and Work Robert Frost was born on March 26, 1874, in San Francisco, California. He died on January 29, 1963, in Boston,
Massachusetts. His mother was a Scottish immigrant, and she was a teacher. His father was a teacher at first and then became a newspaper man, he
also was an unsuccessful candidate for city tax collector. Frost was a poet and playwright in America. He won the Pulitzer Prize four times. In 1885,
Frost's father died of tuberculosis, and the whole family fell into economic difficulties. In 1886, with the help of Frost's grandfather William Frost, the
family moved to Lawrence, Massachusetts. He became interested in reading and writing poetry during his high school years in Lawrence,
Massachusetts. In 1892, Frost graduated from Lawrence High School. He was enrolled at Dartmouth College in the autumn of 1892. After leaving
school, Frost did various jobs, including worker, teacher and journalist.
His first professional poem, "My Butterfly. An Elegy" was published on November 8, 1894, in the New York newspaper The Independent. He
proposed marriage to Elinor Miriam ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He bought a farm in Franconia, New Hampshire in the same year. Frost taught English at Amherst College in Massachusetts in 1916. In 1921, Frost
accepted a fellowship teaching post at the University of Michigan. While teaching at the University of Michigan, he was awarded a lifetime
appointment at the University as a Fellow in Letters in 1924. In the same year, he won the first of four Pulitzer Prizes for "New Hampshire: A Poem
with Notes and Grace Notes." The Pulitzer Prize is an award for achievements in newspaper, magazine and online journalism, literature, and musical
composition in the United States. He won additional Pulitzer Prizes for "Collected Poems" in 1931, "A Further Range" in 1937, and "A Witness Tree" in
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Robert Frost's Poetry
"In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about life: it goes on" (Robert Frost). March, 1874. The United States of America continues to
recover from the effects of the Civil War. The Reconstruction Era is in full swing and segregation is at a new high point. The Chinese were being
discriminated throughout California throughout the 1870s. In 1882, due to the high rate of Chinese immigrants, the Chinese Exclusion Act was passed
by Congress. This act meant that no Chinese immigrant could enter the United States for a period of ten years. At the beginning of the new century,
the first World War began. As a result of World War One, art began to evolve. Publishers across the globe documented about The Great War and gave
insight to what... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Frost's ability to appeal to the common man through complex ideas and unique writing style has changed American poetry from an old writing style to
a new, modern style. With not only making himself a household name through his many popular works, he also has been awarded four Pulitzer Prize
awards for his poetic books. In schools throughout the United States, Robert Frost's poems are being read and examined today. In conclusion, it is clear
that his poems will forever have a lasting impact on not only American literature, but also American
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Gwendolyn Brooks Research Paper
In 1950, Gwendolyn Brooks was the first African American to win a Pulitzer Prize for her second book titled, Annie Allen, which included 11 poems
that entail Annie's perceptions of discrimination against African Americans as she grows up. Gwendolyn Brooks was sitting in her dimly lit living
room, which she had kept this way because she was struggling with money, when she found out she had won her Pulitzer. The next day multiple
photographers and reports showed up at her house to question her about her recent achievement. She knew that when they went to plug in their
equipment, nothing would work due to her lack of electricity. However, when they plugged everything in, all of it worked perfectly. Someone had
been secretly paying her bills. This is a great example of life imitating Brooks' art; she wrote mostly of people with everyday problems that were able
to overcome them with the help of others.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
She was the first child of David Anderson Brooks, a custodian, and Keziah Brooks, a teacher. Brooks was born in Topeka, Kansas but spent the
majority of her childhood growing up in Chicago, Illinois, where she was encouraged by her parents to excel in reading and writing. However, she
found it challenging to do so because she dreaded school. She was often discriminated against by even those of her own race because she was very shy
and lacked athleticism, light skin, and "good grade hair". Because of the fear of rejection, Brooks often stayed home writing poetry and other works of
literature. Her family and close friends even gave her the nickname of "the female Paul Lawrence Dunbar"( a famous African American
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Sylvia Plath Poetry Style Analysis
Sylvia Plath: "Joie de Vivre" "Perhaps some day I'll crawl back home, beaten, defeated. But not as long as I can make stories out of my heartbreak,
beauty out of sorrow," wrote Sylvia Plath in her journals, unpublished until nineteen years following her death. The relevance between the American
author's life and the inspiration of her literary works cannot be disputed. She wrote about distinct experiences, from the death of her father at a young
age to the depression she fell into after her husband left her. Plath, burdened with hardship, turned her pain into numerous influential poems and a
semi–autobiographical novel, The Bell Jar. She received the honors of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and the Glascock Prize as recognition of her works.
... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
As described previously, "Daddy" combines specific details of Plath's life and her father's, making comparisons as brutal as to the Holocaust in
their own home, and comparing him to the devil. In "Daddy" she wrote that he, "Bit my pretty red heart in two. / I was ten when they buried you.
/ At twenty I tried to die / And get back, back, back to you. / I thought even the bones would do. / But they pulled me out of the sack, / And they
stuck me together with glue." Each line written describes specific events in her life, and it could not be clearer. This one of sixteen stanzas is exactly
related to the events in her life, yet also provides insight into her own thoughts on herself. In "Ariel," plath wrote of being "suicidal," thus describing
her life as she attempted suicide many different times and was successful in 1963 when she killed herself ("Sylvia Plath." Biography).
As much as one could continue connecting Sylvia Plath's life and work based on simple life details, why she wrote about her life is far more
compelling. She was said to have wanted to understand her own mind, the mind that doctors seemed to understand better than herself. Plath also wrote
certain works intending her family never read them, stating that she did not want her mother to read The Bell Jar because it was indicative of her
suicidal thoughts. Sylvia Plath made
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How Does Hardy Use Imagery In The Convergence Of The Twain
Often times in poetry, authors use metaphors and imagery to relate thematic elements in their writing to significant components of their personal life or
general human nature. Frequently, poets use their writing as a vehicle to subtly narrate their inner struggles or personal conflicts to the audience. In the
poem "The Convergence of the Twain," author Thomas Hardy introduces the harsh relationship between human vanity and the formidable power of
nature. Due to Hardy's upbringing in rural England, he often wrote about his isolated life and the hindrance that work and religion had on his education.
According to Wikipedia, Hardy also criticized those involved in English Victorian society and the declining status of rural men and women. The
recurring themes of man's inferiority and the worthlessness of material values in Hardy's work can be attributed to his belief that religion and human
materialism are often at the root of unhappiness and mankind's inferiority to nature. Similar to Hardy's frustration during his childhood, author
Elizabeth Bishop grew up in the early 1900s with an unstable family while struggling to find a place of belonging in society. Prior to moving in with
her grandparents, Bishop's father passed away before she was one year of age and her mother suffered through serious mental instability until she was
admitted to an institution when Bishop turned five years old. In Bishop's poem "The Fish," the author utilizes vivid imagery to highlight the positive
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Childhood Interview Paper
Interviewer: Hello Mrs. Bishop. Can we start the interview off with a reflection of your childhood?
Bishop: Sure– my childhood wasn't easy. I was born in Massachusetts in 1911. My father died when I was young, and my mother was committed to a
mental institution shortly after his death. I went back and forth between my grandparents and relatives– this made my childhood fairly difficult.
I: What about later in your young life? What was your life like then?
B: I obtained my bachelor's degree from Vassar College and decided I wanted to travel. I spent a few years traveling in Europe and Africa. While I was
traveling I began to write, mostly poetry. I enjoyed documenting the beauty I saw on my travels.
I: How would you describe your style of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Being published was a big step, and North & South documented all of my travels. I find that the verse book truly reflects the beauty that I saw all over
the world.
I: People say your greatest publicized collection is Poems: North & South/A Cold Spring which won a Pulitzer Prize. How did you feel to receive that
award?
B: I was ecstatic to be honored with an award as prestigious as a Pulitzer Prize. I also treasure having my collection, Complete Poems, win a National
Book Award. That was around the same time I began working at Harvard, which has been a eccentric experience so far.
I: Let's talk about one of your more famous poems, The Fish.
B: Oh goodness, what are your questions about The Fish?
I: It sounds like you're not too fond of this poem– please explain.
B: "I've declared a moratorium on that [poem]" because of its overuse (Spires).
I: What do you mean overuse?
B: It is repeated so often that "I said nobody could reprint The Fish unless they reprinted three [of my] poems with it" (Spires).
I: Why is that?
B: Although The Fish is one of my favorites, I want some of my other poems to be used in conjunction with it so that the reader can better understand
my
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Essay on Edwin Arlington Robinson biography
Supremacy
1) There is a drear and lonely tract of hell
2) From all the common gloom removed afar:
3) A flat, sad land it is, where shadows are,
4) Whose lorn estate my verse may never tell.
5) I walked among them and I knew them well:
6) Men I had slandered on life's little star
7) for churls and sluggards; and I knew the scar
8) upon their brows of woe ineffable.
9) But as I went majestic on my way,
10) Into the dark they vanished, one by one,
11) Till, with a shaft of God's eternal day,
12) The dream of all my glory was undone,––
13) And, with a fool's importunate dismay,
14) I heard the dead men singing in the sun.
The composition date isn't known but the format of the sonnet is:
Abbaabbacdcdcd
Edwin Arlington Robinson ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The Man Who Died Twice and Tristram The last two of these won Pulitzer Prizes in 1925 and 1927, when he was elected as a member of the National
Academy of Arts and Letters.
Robinson never married but enjoyed the company of many friends. He died of cancer in hospital in New York on April 6, 1935. A few of his most
known poems are, "The Children of the Night" "Captain Craig" "The Town Down the River" "The Man against the Sky" "The Three Taverns" and
"Avon's Harvest." He had 3 Pulitzer prizes awarded to him.
For the first twenty years of Robinson's writing career, he had difficulty in getting published and attracting an audience. He published his first two
volumes privately and friends secretly guaranteed the publication of the third. He did receive positive reviews from the beginning, however, and with
the publication of The Man Against the Sky in 1916 his reputation was secure.
For the rest of his life he was widely regarded as "America's foremost poet," as William Stanley Braithwaite put it. Both academics and the
general public held him in high esteem, as attested by the fact of his winning three Pulitzer Prizes for poetry for volumes published in 1921, 1924, and
1927, when his Tristram became a national best–seller.
Although Robinson's subject matter and philosophical stance differ markedly from that of his predecessors', his form
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Robert Frost Research Paper
Great American Author
Robert Frost was born in March 26, 1874 and died 1963. Robert Frost is one of the great american poets of the early 1900s. Robert Frost spent his first
40 years as an unknown. He exploded on the scene after returning from England at the beginning of WWI. He won four pulitzer prizes. He was also
special guest of president John F Kennedy. He later died of prostate surgry.
In 1912, Frost and Elinor decided to sell their farm in New Hampshire and move the family to England, where they hoped they could find a publisher
who would take on undiscovered poets.Within just a few months, Frost, now 38 found a publisher who would print his first book of poems, A Boy's
Will, followed by North of Boston a year later. The time Frost
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Description Of My Birthday
What is that one day we wait for all year? Well of course, our birthday. We all wait for that special day that is our birthday. Our birthday is that one
special day that lets us know we are getting older. We get older each year we reach our birthday, but have we wondered what happened the day of our
birth? I have also wondered what happened on November 30,2000.
The number one thing i know that happened on November 30 is that I was it was my birth day. I was born on November 30 of the year 2000. That
day seemed to be a very sunny afternoon. That day my parents decided to name me Breanna. They name Breanna means noble strong and virtuous;
the name is the feminine version of the name Brian. The year 2000 was a special year because it was the mathematical year and also because it was
the international year for the culture of peace. Christmas is also an important time of the year and that is also another event most people wait forward
to every year. In this year christmas wasn't to good for the people in china because of a christmas party that turned deadly. The party was at an
unlicensed disco, and it caught on fire and ended up killing more than 300 people
I share my birthday with many people but what excites me the most is the to find famous people that were born the same day as I was. Some famous
people I share my birthday is Mark Twain, Sirwinston Churchill, Shirley Chisholm, John McCrae and Ben Stiller. Mark twain was a famous
american writer and was born on November 30, 1835. Sir winston Churchill was a British statesman who served as a prime minister in the UK.
Shirley Chisholm was the first american black congresswoman and presidential candidate John McCrae was a war world 1 soldier who wrote the
memorial poem named "In Flanders Fields" that is very well known today, and Ben Stiller is a famous actor and filmmaker. Some of this famous
people have been very important to history and that's why i'm honored to share my birthday with them.
One first fact that I have found near my birthday is that on November 29,2000 there was an oil spill 26 miles of the mississippi river. The spill
affected many areas of the around the mississippi river. No injuries were reported, but there was some wildlife animals
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Marianne Moore Essay
I will focus my discussion board posting on Marianne Moore. Marianne was known as a dedicated baseball fan and a poet. An interesting fact
about Marianne is she got to throw out the first ball in 1968 at Yankee Stadium in New York. Her poetry consisted of describing exotic animals and
plants, steamrollers, and more. Marianne won many awards because of her unique style described as "The World's Greatest Living Observer." She
graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 1909. Marianne taught at a United States government school for American Indians for four years. By 1916,
she started to become famous as a new and creative poet. Moreover, she moved to New York City. Marianne took a job working in the New York
Public Library, became an editor of a literary... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Marianne puts an image into the minds of the readers. For example, "Of the crow blue mussel shells, one keeps adjusting the ash heaps; opening and
shutting itself like an injured fan" (McMichael 1510). She paints a picture with her words, and the picture she paints is a blue mussel shell closing in
on itself like a broken fan. I imagine a medium–sized blue mussel shell constantly shifting and moving to fold in on itself. She also describes objects
and things with extreme detail. For instance, "whereupon the stars pink rice grains, ink bespattered jelly–fish, crabs like green lilies and submarine
toadstools, slide each on the other" (McMichael 1510). She compares the stars in the sky to little pink rice grains. Moreover, the jelly–fish have
splashes of ink on them. She allows the readers to allow their imagination to imagine the color of ink as a dark blue or black. Thus, the jellyfish has
spots of blue or black ink on their body. Then, she describes the crabs are like green lilies possibly because the crabs are green. Marianne creates
detailed images in her reader's mind in her poems. Furthermore, she compares the creatures of the ocean to odd objects like pink rice grains, fans, and
toadstools. Marianne Moore's work focuses more on images than themes due to her detailed writing and writing style. Moreover, she describes objects
and sea creatures in The Fish. Thus, she wants to create a setting (in the ocean)
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Appreciation and Value for Life in Richard Wilbur's Poem...
In humanity, one chooses to spend the most amount of time doing what they love in order to result in a satisfying and happily lived existence.
Richard Wilbur expresses his appreciation and value of life throughout the poem, "A Late Aubade". This poem is influenced and based off of Wilbur's
strong relationship with his devoted wife. It emphasizes throughout detailed imagery how one must enjoy the moments they have and can share with
their loved one. The existence of an individual is not about wasting time by being out and completing unnecessary jobs, it's about spending time doing
what one loves to do. Wilbur is convincing his wife to not go about on her "womanly" daily activities; he wants her to stay and to take advantage of
the few valuable moments life offers for them to be together. Throughout "A Late Aubade", Wilbur stresses by applying descriptive language that in
life, one must not waste any precious time and should rather focus on what they are passionate about.
Richard Wilbur was born in New York City on March 1rst in 1921. He contained a strong literary background as he had come from a family of
several journalists. Wilbur's father was a painter and as he recorded experiences of life through his paintings, Wilbur became inspired to do this through
poetry. As he came from a Christian religious background, this was a great influence to him as he alludes to many Christian references throughout his
works. He and his middle class family had moved to North Caldwell,
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Poem Analysis: Richard Cory By Edwin Robinson
Richard Cory Poetry can take many forms and shapes based on the authors personal experiences. These different styles can also be interpreted in
many different ways based on the reader's view of the poem. This possible change in views can give the poem many different meanings to each
individual person. "Richard Cory" by Edwin Robinson, Edwin imbeds many of his past and personal experiences into the poem while still leaving
the poem up to other peoples imagination and analysis's. The best place to start this analysis of "Richard Cory" is how the author's personal
experiences shaped the poem. Robinson was a "third son of a wealthy New England merchant, a man who had little use for the fine arts. He was,
however, encouraged in his poetic pursuits by a neighbor and wrote copiously, experimenting with verse translations from Greek and Latin poets" ("
Edwin Arlington Robinson"). Robinson was exposed to poetry in his early childhood that gave him a strong foothold for his later career. Robinson
was an ordinary child from a wealthy class family that was educated and well taken care of the majority of his life. During his later teenage years
Robinson took ill and his father gave him the best medical treatment in the United States at the time near Harvard which Edwin happened to get
accepted to while already in the area, "In 1891 Edward Robinson provided the funds to send his son to Harvard partly because the aspiring writer
required medical treatment that could best be performed in
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Rita Dove : The Life And Life Of Rita Dove
Rita Dove was born August 28, 1952. She was born in Arkon, Ohio. Her spouse was Fred Viebahn, her mother was name Elvira Hord, her father was
Ray Dove, and their beautiful daughters name was Aviva Dove–Viebahn. She has officially started everything she loves to do and will continue to do
what she loves to do, she really enjoys making poetry and quotes.
This part is gonna be telling you how Rita Dove started her career, Rita Dove was an African American poet. She loved poetry and music from a very
young age. She was a very execptional student and was invited to the White House as a Presidential Scholar out of high school. She was studying on
a Fulbright Scholarship. Later on in her future she was writing at Arizona State University. She has won MANY awards for all of her work in 1897.
She has written many poetry books, "Mother Love" and "Sonata Mulattica". She has received a "Pulitzer Prize" for the book of Thomas and Beulah.
During her educational and personal life she had developed a love for learning and literature at an early age in a household that encouraged reading.
She had been honored as a Presidential Scholar, being ranked at the top 100 high school student in the high school, and as a National Merit Scholar
attended Ohio's Miam University, graqduating 1973 summa cum laude. She studied abroad in Germany before returning to the states and earning her
M.F.A. from the University of Iowa.
Later on in her more personal life, she had met her fellow writer Fred Viebahn,
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Themes Of Anne Sexton
Themes from Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, Gwendolyn Brooks, and Robert Hayden
An Evaluation of themes from Mirror, Courage, Explorer, and Douglas During the 1900's, a series of new poets came into existence. These poets
brought about new themes and perspectives that manipulated the minds of humans all across the world. The poets that are in our study are Sylvia Plath,
Anne Sexton, Gwendolyn Brooks, and Robert Hayden. These four poets wrote detailed, intricate poems that are packed full of a slew of different
themes and perspectives. These themes can be distilled and life lessons can be derived from them. Raymond A. Schroth states intelligently, "Perhaps
the best way to define courage is to live it." Anne Sexton's poem Courage thrives off of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Her unique poem lays down a line of different instances of courage throughout, and describes courage in a way never thought of before. Sexton
elaborately states in lines 20 and 21 of her poem, "Your courage was a small coal that you kept swallowing." She's explaining in this quote that
courage has always been inside everyone, and when everyone is little, they bury it down and don't let it breach the surface. However, as humans
grow and experience, they become more and more open, and courage begins to flow from the souls of everyone. Maya Karsh states in her poem
Courage, "Courage is not your strength, but the ungiven fighting part of you." Brilliantly states by Karsh, courage is the driving force within all
humans, capable of great things. Moreover, Sexton portrays this message thoroughly within her poem. Within Brooks Explorer, she encourages the
message to never hold back on making choices. Within her poem, a man is faced with numerous choices to make as he explores his apartment. She
states in line 12, "He feared most of all the choices, that cried to be taken." Brooks is desperately trying to show her readers that one shouldn't be
afraid to make choices, or to explore, because exploration and more importantly choices, are crucial to human survival. Without the ability to choose,
humanity would be tuck in an endless loop of pain, therefore, Brooks begs us to utilize this marvelous skill
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The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost
"Two roads diverged in a yellow wood and sorry I could not travel both." This is the first line of the opening stanza of Robert Frost's poem, "The
Road Not Taken." The traveler in this story has been walking down a path and come to two diverging roads. Thus, creating a situation in which the
traveler must make a decision. This poem is often misinterpreted by readers and critics. The poem is entertaining, but it is not as deep and profound as
many people believe. I interpret the poem as a reflection of the uncertainties of life, but in a humorous way.
Frost was born in San Francisco, California on March 26, 1874. He was named after the famous Confederate general, Robert E. Lee. Robert Lee
Frost lived in San Francisco until he was eleven. At the age of eleven, his father died of tuberculosis, and Frost moved in with his paternal
grandparents. Shortly after his father's death, his family relocated to Lawrence, Massachusetts. Frost attended school at Lawrence High School and
graduated in 1892. He graduated as class poet and shared co–valedictorian honors with his current girlfriend and future wife, Elinor White. After high
school, he attended Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. It was there that he got a job as a newspaper reporter.
Frost was recognized for his literary talent in 1894 when he published his first poem, "My Butterfly" which earned him $15. After this poem was
published in New York Independent, he made a copy to show his fiancГ©e Elinor. Her reaction
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Carl Sandburg Thesis
Have you ever reaserched Abraham Lincoln ? More than likely Carl Sandburg has written your research paper on him. Carl August Sandburg was
born January 6th, 1878 in Galesburg, Illinois part american and part swedish. He won the pulitzer prize for the biography on Abraham Linclon and
two more for poems. He is really famous for his poem "Chicago" which is one of the poems that won him another pulitzer prize. His famous poem
"Chicago" is really based on his home town Illinois, Chicago. It's where he spent his time as a reporter at Chicago Daily News and the Day Book so he
decided to write a poem about the home town.
Carl's roller coaster life
He was about fourteen years old when he dropped out of school and started driving a milk wagon till he was about 18 ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
After that, he voluntered in the army and got sent to fight in the Spanish–American war in Puerto Rico on July 25, 1898. Carl was not called to battle
though because of him dropping out of school he couldn't pass the reading or math test that they gave him. He then returned home to Galesburg
where he wanted to go back to school so he decided to attend college at Lombard College. He then dropped out with no degree in 1903. Sandburg then
decided to move to Wisconsin and joined the social democratic party. He was as a secratary and served to Emil Seidel. While he was working there
serving Emil Seidel he met a lady and fell in love with her. Her name was Lilian Steichen and he quicly fell in love with her. He married her the
next year in 1908. After their marriage they had 3 girls and moved to Harbert, Michigan and then back to Chicago, Illinois. After he would move to
somewhere his home would always call him back to chicago. Before finally settliing in 331 South York Street in Elmhurst, Illinois from 1919 to 1930
which is where he stayed for the longest. During the time he was there Sandburg wrote "Chicago", "Cornhuskers", and "Smoke and Steel." In 1919
Sandburg won the Pulitzer Prize made possible by a special
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Brooks, Gwendolyn Essay example
Brooks, Gwendolyn
Poet, writer. Born June 7, 1917, in Topeka, Kansas. Throughout most of the twentieth century, Gwendolyn Brooks was a lyrical chronicler of the black
urban experience in America. In 1950, she became the first African–American poet to win the Pulitzer Prize.
Brooks grew up on the South Side of Chicago, Illinois. She began writing poetry as a young girl, and by the age of 16 had begun publishing her
poems regularly in The Chicago Defender. She attended the Woodrow WilsonJunior College in Chicago before marrying a fellow writer, Henry L.
Blakely, in 1939. The couple lived together in Chicago, divorcing in 1969 but reuniting in 1973. They had two children, Nora Brooks Blakely and
Henry Blakely Jr.
Brooks earned a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
A collection of children's poems, entitled Bronzeville Boys and Girls (1956), was followed by The Bean Eaters (1960), widely considered to contain
some of her finest verse, and Selected Poems (1963).
In the latter half of the 1960s, Brooks' poetry became mroe radical and took on a more explicit tone of social concern, a transition that coincided with
the politically charged atmosphere of the decade and the influence of the black power movement among African–American writers and thinkers. Her
next volume of poetry, In the Mecca (1968), told the bleak story of people living in the Mecca, a large, fortress–like apartment building on the South
Side that had deteriorated into a slum. The book clearly displayed Brooks' new political awareness, including a poem entitled "Malcolm X," after the
black militant leader who was assassinated in 1965.
In the Mecca was nominated for the National Book Award. It was also the last of Brooks' books published by a mainstream publisher, Harper & Row.
Her next book, Riot (1969) was published by Broadside Press, a small, black–owned company based in Detroit. With a newly political tone and without
a mainstream publisher, Brooks' later works often received little attention from the critics at major publications. Nevertheless, she remained a major
literary figure throughout the next several decades, publishing more than a dozen volumes of poetry, including Aloneness (1971), To Disembark
(1981), The
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Carl Sandburg Research Paper
Carl Sandburg was a poet and writer as well as an editor. Sandburg was famous for works such as Chicago Poems and The People, Yes. He was an
American man who wrote poetry about the places around him, people he admired, and many other sources of creativity. Sandburg was also
famous for not only writing in the perspective or about the life of himself, the writing for and about the people of the world. Not only was
Sandburg a poet, but he also did some folk singing along with everything else. Carl Sandburg was born in Illinois in 1878 to his Swedish parents.
His family was very poor and Sandburg dropped out of school to work and support his family. He was never known for being school smart due to his
dropping around the age of 13. Sandburg worked many jobs before starting to write professionally and attending college. He even volunteered for the
military, but never actually fought in a battle.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The Pulitzer Prize is an award given each year to artist and authors on subjects relating to literature, photography and music. The Pulitzer Prize is given
to the works the foundation considers the best in their field that year. His first Pulitzer Prize was a poetry one which he won for "Cornhuskers" in 1919.
His second Pulitzer Prize was awarded in 1940 for a biography of Abraham Lincoln called "Abraham Lincoln: The War Years," the second part of his
Lincoln biography series. His third and final Pulitzer Prize was given for "Complete Poems" in 1950. Not many people have ever received three
Pulitzer Prizes, so it is a great accomplishment for Sandburg. The Robert Frost medal was awarded to Sandburg in 1952, a prestigious award given to
authors for being a great
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Essay on Analysis of Rita Dove’s, “Daystar”
C Stevens 07/09/2010 Professor Kierath English 102.212 Analysis of Rita Dove's, "Daystar" "Daystar" by Rita Dove is an expressive poem, which
centers on the main character, a young mother and wife, who internally struggles with her burdensome, daily duties, which creates a lack of freedom
in her world. Dove's choice of words lets the reader empathize with her confined life. In this poem, irony exists for the mere fact that from birth to
adulthood the female population is brought up to feel fulfilled by simply becoming a wife and mother; however, this poem describes the monotonous
duties and the joyless bond that can be between husband and wife. As the poem opens, Dove begins with a metaphor that entertains the idea of... Show
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"Later that night when Thomas roller over and lurched into her, she would open her eyes and think of the place that was hers" this proves the point
that she cannot even express herself sexually because she does not feel as if she has control in the situation. Her mind wanders elsewhere, in a place
where she is her own master, instead of what is reality. Additionally, the main character's husband shows some selfish tendencies in the fact that he may
not notice his wife's discontentment with his affection. However, this may also present the lack of communication between man and wife and
therefore may cause a sense of isolation from her husband. The main character possesses the characteristics of most young women, a full plate of
responsibility and the lack of freedom that can wither away a person's soul. My response to this poem is that I strongly respect the author for bringing
up such a controversial issue such as discontentment with being a stay–at–home mother, since this is usually to be expected of women. Dove explains
the poem delicately and leaves the underlying sense that she may have possibly been through the situation herself. This being said, her imagery is
wonderfully used and the metaphor of the doll being slumped over is a brilliant way to reflect upon the main character's feelings and actions. The irony
comes into play, in my opinion,
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How Did The 1920s Change In The 1920's
Although some of the history had a big impact on Frost and his life not all impacted him as greatly. The country was having rapid growth of
Industry and Agriculture that increased US wealth from 1870 1920. In 1920 women gained the right to vote. During the 1920's and beginning of the
1930' alcohol sale is prohibited. American Indians became citizens in 1924. The massive stock market collapsed in 1933 causing the Great
depression with 13 million people unemployed. The year 1945 many things happened like the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima and
Nagasaki and they also exploded the first hydrogen bomb, and World War II ended, also the US becomes charter member of the United Nations. In
1954 the Supreme Court rules that public schools... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
His poems made people stop and think instead of just saying everything straight forward. Even though he made people think he was loved but most
people. He won many prizes for his writingsНѕ in 1917 he won Poetry Prize for "The Snow", in 1924 he won Pulitzer Prize for "New Hampshire", in
1931 he won two prizes, the Pulitzer Prize for "Collected Poems" and Russell Loines Poetry Prize, 1937 he won another Pulitzer Prize for "A
Further Range" and lastly he won his 4th Pulitzer Prize in 1943 for the poem "A Witness Tree". Frost was also invited to do many things that most
poets would never have a chance to do and he received memberships and honoraries that no one else was receiving. He was invited to Phi Beta
Kappa Day at Harvard to read "The Bonfire" in 1916. In 1918 he received honorary M.A. from Amherst college. He was elected a membership in
the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Us Senate adopts resolution honoring frost on his 76th birthday in 1950 and on his 85th birthday in
1959. In 1954 he became delegate to World Congress of Writers in Sao Paulo, Brazil. He was awarded with honorary Litt. D. by Oxford and Cambridge
Universities and National University of Ireland in 1957.
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Frost'sMending Wall, By Robert Frost
"Mending Wall" was influenced by Frost's neighbor while he lived on his farm in New Hampshire. Like in "Home Burial," and "Stopping by
Woods on a Snowy Evening," "Mending Wall" is based on Frost's experiences in New England. Frost and his neighbor met every spring to wall
along their stone wall and fix any problems with it, this is the exact setting of "Mending Wall" ("History"). Frost's neighbor, like the neighbor in the
poem, always believed in the same saying "good fences make good neighbors." The only major difference between the poem and Frost's actual
experiences is that in the poem the farmer and his neighbor had orchards, while Frost had a poultry farm ("History").
To this day Frost remains one of the most significant poets and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This proves that everything he wrote had an impact on the literary world and what he wrote was important too. Furthermore, Frost was nominated
for the Nobel Prize in 1950 and was close to winning it again in 1961, but failed to win it because of his "advanced age" (Kainzow). To be so close
to winning one of the most recognized awards at the age of 86, further proves his significance in the literary canon. Frost was so important to the
literary world that Poet Society of America named an award after him. TheRobert Frost Medal is awarded to poets for their "distinguished lifetime
achievement in American poetry" ("Frost").
In 1960 Frost was presented with the Congressional Gold Medal, which is the highest award an American civilian can win. President John F.
Kennedy presented him with the award in 1960 and a year later President Kennedy asked Frost to recite a poem at his inauguration (Biography). Frost
recited "The Gift Outright" but because his vision was begging to fail he had to memorize the poem. This shows just how popular Frost was, and how
well respect he was too.
Frost's importance to the literary canon can be shown by more than the awards he has won. Frost was able to reach a "large and diversified
readership" (Caravantes), unlike poets like Shakespear whose work can be found harder to read and comprehend, Frost's work consisted of colloquial
language which allowed him to be able to speak in "poetic but plain language"
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Descriptive Essay On My Birthday
On my Birthday... Everyone around the world celebrates their birthdays in a different way, yet many do not know much about the day they were
born. As I began researching about all the things that have happened on my birthdate and year, I found various interesting facts. Some were not
really intriguing, while others caught my attention. I have discovered many facts that occurred on May 1. On May 1, 2001, my mom went for a
checkup on my due date. They monitered her and found out she was having contractions, but did not know it. The doctor asked her if she wanted
to have me that day and she said she would. She went home, got her things, her best friend, some lunch to eat on the way, and went back to the
hospital. She had me in about two hours. I was born at 4:58 pm on a sunny Tuesday. They almost named me Victoria, but mom did not want people
to call me Vicky, so they settled on Sarah Elizabeth. My full name has very neat meanings. Sarah means "princess" and Elizabeth means "oath or
fullness of God" in Bible meaning. Elkins comes from the name Elias in the Bible which means "Jehovah is God". My family came from England, for
the most part. There were a handful of interesting events that happened on May 1. On May 1, 1931, the Empire State Building officially opened. In
1963, an American topped Mount Everest. The most interesting thing that I found happened on my actual birthday. There was an ex–member of the
KKK convicted of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing
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Essay On We Real Cool
Strong Connection in"We Real Cool"
As well all know, connections are not easy to come by. Connections are made for resembling one thing to another. In addition to the resemblance, the
poem, "We Real Cool", has a strong connection that is shown by the author that help illustrate the meaning of the poem. In the poem of, "We Real
Cool", by Gwendolyn Brooks, there is a satisfyingly strong connection involving the poem, title, and author.
Firstly, to show the satisfyingly strong connection from Gwendolyn Brooks, is the poem. In the poem, "We Real Cool", Gwendolyn brooks uses a part
of her background in the stanza. The poem, "we real cool", illustrates a gang of people that like to play pool at late hours. The poems stanza begins
with the word, "We", to represent the group of people. Gwendolyn writes, "We lurk late, we strike straight. We sing sin, we thin gin", in the second and
third stanza, pointing out the attributes of these people back in the 1960's. Furthermore, the second and third stanza also commemorates their life and
what they did to consider themselves real cool, with the help of vivid words that were used to show visual imagery in the poem, such as left school,
lurk late, strike straight, sing sin, thin gin, jazz June, and die soon, henceforth illustrating the connection between the poem and title. ... Show more
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The title, "We Real Cool", has a deeper in text meaning than just being 3 simple words. Throughout the poem, the phrase We Real Cool and it's
identity, is described thoroughly. The name in essence, tells of what was to be considered cool back in the 1960's. The pool players, were the people
that most wouldn't affiliate with according to the poem. Using slang such as we sing sin, and we thin gin, along with being a pool player, further helps
tie the connection with the poem and its
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Research Paper On Anne Sexton
Anne sexton (November 9, 1928– October 4, 1974) was an American poet who found love in poetry and was known for her highly personal
confessional verse. She was born as Anne Gray Harvey to her mother and father Mary Gray Staples and Ralph Churchill Harvey. Anne sexton wrote
about her long battles against depression, mania, and her suicidal thoughts, she looked to help people fight personal problems and ease their pain.
Sexton suffered from severe mental illness for much of her life, her first manic episode taking place in 1954. After a second episode in 1955 she met
Dr. Martin Orne, who became her long–term therapist at the Glenside Hospital. It was Dr. Orne who encouraged her to take up poetry. Sextons poetic
career was encouraged by a mentor ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The next year she published her first poetry book, "To Bedlam and Part Way Back". This book encouraged her to write more and gave her national
recognition. But she was failing badly on emotional side. After the sudden death of her parents, she was emotionally broke. Her married life was
facing turbulence with discord and physical abuse by her husband. In 1962, Anne Sexton published her second poetry book, "All My Pretty Ones".
The book became immensely popular and following its success, she started working on four children's books with her longtime friend Maxine
Cumin. In the time period between, August 22 to October 27, 1963, Sexton toured to Europe. The year 1964 saw a change in the medical history of
Anne, her longtime psychiatrist moved to Philadelphia and she had to look for a new psychiatrist. The new psychiatrist placed her on drug,
Thomasine, to control her depressions. Anne Sexton achieved an important distinction in 1965, when she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society
of Literature in London. She received the esteemed Pulitzer Prize in 1967 for her highly appreciated book, "Live or Die". She also received the
Shelley Memorial Prize in the same
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Rita Dove: The First African-American Poet
Rita Dove: The First African Woman to become a Poet
"Poetry is a language at its most distilled and most powerful" (Poets.org). This reflects Dove's love of poetry by saying that it is very powerful and
that it speaks to everyone. Rita Dove was an African American poet who in addition to her love of music, she loved to writepoetry. Dove won the
Pulitzer Prize in poetry in 1987. (Poetry Foundation). Her powerful voice sends a strong message in her poems. Even though her work is powerful, an
example of some of Dove's powerful work is "Canary".
Rita Dove's story begins on August 28, 1952 in Akron, Ohio. Dove was the firstAfrican American woman to write poetry. (Poetry Foundation). Dove
loved poetry, writing, and music when she was in school. When she graduated high school, she studied in Germany, went to Ohio's Miami University,
and taught at the University ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
A free verse is a poem that does not rhyme. Sense devices in this poem are a simile and a metaphor. An example of a simile is in line two, it says
"Billie Holiday's burned voice had as many shadows as lights". A simile is a comparison using like or as. The summary of this poem is that a
woman suffers from the addiction of drugs. Canary's purpose is to remind us about the late Billie Holiday (Poets.org). The form or structure is a
lyrical poem. The form or structure is how the poem is written.This poem's audience is directed towards women. The audience is who the poem is
talking to. A brief paraphrase and summary of this paragraph is a woman reflecting on the use of drugs and other addictions. The theme of this
poem is do not use drugs. Theme is the main point of a message of a story or even a poem. The imagery in "Canary" is "the gardenia covers her
signature under her ruined face", this means that she could be sleeping. My personal reaction of Canary is that it reminds us of the late Billie Holiday
and her incredible
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Robert Frost Contributions
Robert Frost is a rare twentieth century poet, that may be the most recognized name in poetry. He won the Pulitzer Prize a total of four times,
which is more than any other poet. Some of his best work includes: "The Road Not Taken", "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening". Robert Frost
was a literary legacy. When he was 87 years old, he was asked to write and recite a poem for President John F. Kennedys inauguration. During Robert
Frosts lifetime, he received over 40 honorary degrees and of course his four Pulitzer Prizes. Robert Frosts life was reflected in his poetry in a variety of
ways. Robert Frost was raised in New England, and many of his poems characters and settings are based in New England. Robert Frost was also
greatly influenced by emotions and events in everyday life. He could take every day events such as: watching ice weigh down birch tree branches,
the mowing of fields of hay or even the mending of stories on a wall and perceives a deeper meaning to love, hate, or conflict. These writing
techniques lead to another reason as to why Robert Frost is so successful. Many of his poems, such as, "Mending Wall" and "Stopping by Woods on
a Snowy Evening" are inspired by the natural world. In 1897, Frost began studying at Harvard. This really helped Robert Frost become an intellectual
and more of a serious poet. Unfortunately, after two years he had drop out of school. He then became a chicken farmer, which helped familiarize him
with farming and rural life. This
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Robert Frost Research Paper
Robert Frost, a very famous, well known poet from the very late 1800s to mid 1900s. [It wasn't always easy for him to get where he wanted to be in
his literary career.] He made very many drastic changes in order to succeed in his want to be a poet. [Including moving from the United States all the
way to New England, where his poetry first debuted.] After everything he tried he became really successful as an educator and poet.
He was born on March 26, 1874, and he "passed away in 1963 from complications after a prostate surgery" (Robert Frost Bio). "Frost spent 40 years of
his life as an unknown" (Robert Frost Bio). "Frost received four Pulitzer Prizes and was a guest at John F. Kennedy's inauguration to recite 'The Gift
Outright'" (The English Years of Robert Frost). He spent 11 years of his life in San Francisco, California, that was until his father passed away of
tuberculosis. He then met his future wife, Elinor White, which was his highschool sweetheart. Then attended college and "wrote his first poem, 'My
Butterfly: An Elegy'" (Robert Frost Bio). At the time he owned a small farm with his wife and children. After their first born died of cholera they gave
birth to four more children. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"Most poets had to pay to have their poetry published in England" (The English Years of Robert Frost). Frost then met fellow poets, "Ezra Pound
and Edward Thomas" (Robert Frost Bio), who decided to publish his first book of poems. However, in 1914, WWI broke out and Elinor, Frost, and
the children were forced to move back to America. "All wasn't too terrible because his popularity carried with him and he met Henry Holt, who
became his new publisher and will be from here on out" (Robert Frost Bio). After making many more books of poetry and publishing more poems he
and his wife then settled down on a farm they bought in Franconia, New Hampshire. Frost then taught at several different
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Barred Owl and History Teacher
In "A Barred Owl" by Richard Wilbur and "The History Teacher" by Billy Collins, adults provide easy explanations for children when confronted
with harsh realities. Both works explore the use of white lies to respond to children's fear and curiosity in an attempt to preserve their innocence.
However, the writers employ literary devices that convey these concepts in different ways. While Wilbur presents parents' well–intentioned untruths as
beneficial to a child's peace of mind, Collins reveals the serious consequences of a teacher's trivial fabrications.
In "A Barred Owl," Wilbur constructs a singsong narrative of two stanzas with three couplets each. This arrangement provides a simple and steady
rhythm that echoes the parents' crooning to their child when she is frightened by "the boom / [o]f an owl's voice" (1–2). A light–hearted tone is
established when they "tell the wakened child that all she heard / [w]as an odd question from a forest bird" (3–4). The parents' personification of the
owl makes it less foreign and intimidating, and therefore alleviates the child's worry. The interpretation of the hooting as a repetitive and absurd
question – "Who cooks for you?" – further makes light of the situation (6). The second stanza introduces a more ominous tone by directly addressing
the contrasting purposes words may serve given a speaker's intention. While they "can make our terror bravely clear," they "[c]an also thus domesticate
a fear" (7–8). This juxtaposition is
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The Poetry of Robert Frost Essay
Have you ever looked outside your window and wondered what the world really means? Reading Robert Frost's poetry you will be able to form your
own opinion and thoughts about this pulchritudinous world. His poetry is so deep and meaningful you will be overwhelmed with what was going
through this man's head. Life is not paradisiacal, and this is something Robert Frost knew but his poetry gave insight to the people of his time and the
generations to come. Although Robert Frost's life was far from perfect he was still an extraordinary person; his great inspirations, themes, and figurative
language have won him many honors and awards thus creating one of the greatest American poets known to this day. Robert Frost went though a lump
growing up ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Over the next decade life became more bothersome for Frost because he had a tremendous amount of jobs. Times were hard for Robert but he
worked very hard to make due of what he had and did not complain of what he did not have. Frost life was filled with devastation and success all
wrapped in one. His life was getting better when he met his soon to be wife Elinor White. Robert Frost and Elinor White married in 1895.(Barry
ix). In 1899 the married couple moved to Derry, New Hampshire which is the state where he became a cobbler, farmer, and a teacher at Pinkerton
Academy.(Barry ix). Frost and his wife had many children but sadly many of them did not live long enough to even see their teenage years.(Barry ix).
His children went though some cataclysmic times, his son shot himself and his daughter was always very ill.(Bober 173). Whether his life was going
marvelous or god–awful Frost still
Gonzalez, Jones 3 managed to be a great friend, husband, and parent.(Burnshaw 458). Frost was making commendable career moves that no
longer made him known as a farmer but as an auspicious poet. In 1912 he moved himself and his family to New England and even published his first
book "A Boy's Will".(Barry xi). When Frost writes his poetry he talks about what he saw in the world or what was going on in his life.(Bober 10).
Readers got to see a world in a uniquely explained way which was the way Frost
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The 's Mini Research Paper Essay
Santa Iglesia Advanced English 1, Per. 7 14 November 2016 OMS Mini Research Paper The word man has a very simple definition: an adult male
("The Definition"). However, there are many symbols and meanings being it. A Native American picture known as "Man in a Maze," originally
called I 'itoi, depicts a man standing at the entrance of a maze. At the center is the man's dreams where God greets him and passes him into the
next world. The center is not easy to reach, for there are many twists and turns in the maze itself. The maze symbolizes life and the difficulties man
has to go through to reach the end and move on. In this instance man is naive, but represents strength, and must go through the challenges faced
through existence in order to find the way to the finish ("The Symbol"). Another simple, yet very complex word beyond its basic definition, is
"old". The book definition of old is to have existed for a long time ("I Found"). The word "old" is associated with wisdom because a lot of
experience is thought to be gained during long periods of time. When combining the two words, old and man, a new and very intricate symbol is
made. "Old man" symbolizes wisdom of humanity and the power of great knowledge. The phrase "old man" is also associated with high status and
special powers because with great wisdom comes significant respect from less experienced individuals (Cirlot). Joe DiMaggio was a famous baseball
player for the Yankees and was nicknamed "Yankee Clipper" who
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Metaphors In The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost
THE USAGE OF METAPHORS What differentiates poem from other works of writing? What makes you realize that what you read is a poem but
not a short story? Bearing in mind that the answer might differ from person to person, I believe that the crucial difference is that the underlying
message is generally not obvious in the poem, and it forces the readers to think about it for a while to understand its deeper meaning. The fact that the
message is not apparent in the poem, is often attributed to the usage of metaphors in the poetry. According to Oxford Dictionary, metaphors are the
"figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to an object or action to which it is not literally applicable". Even though they are used for
different reasons ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
She introduces the metaphor in the first two lines of the poem by saying, ""Hope" is the thing with feathers – / That perches in the soul –" and then
builds the poem around the idea of a bird. When Dickinson says, "And sings the tune without the words– / And never stops – at all –" she shows that
the hope doesn't have to be sensible, and it never stops existing in one's heart. In the last stanza she says, "I've heard it in the chillest land – / And on
the strangest Sea –". It is not a possible thing to hear the hope, but in this line she tries to say that that hope is everywhere. Even though the main idea
of the poem is hope being in everyone's heart, the metaphor of hope being a bird is actually what makes the poem more interesting for the
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Gwendolyn Brooks Research Paper
Gwendolyn Brooks was a well renowned poet of the 1900s. She earned the honor of being the first Black author to win a Pulitzer Prize for poetry.
Brooks was also the first Black woman to hold the position of poetry consultant for the Library of Congress. Her works portray a political
consciousness, reflecting the civil rights activism of the 1960s. While expressing her commitment to racial identity as well as equality, Gwendolyn
managed to bridge the gap between academic poets of her generation and Black militant writers of the 1960s. Gwendolyn Elizabeth Brooks is a
Topeka, Kansas native. She was born on June 7, 1917 to Keizah Wims–Brooks and David Anderson Brooks. When she was only 6 weeks old, Brooks'
family moved to Chicago, Illinois, as part of the Great Migration. The Great Migration was a historical event that influenced Brooks' writing because
it initiated her family's moving and the racial prejudice that would be the foundation for some of her best poems. Her mother became a school teacher
and her father a janitor, because he could not afford to continue his education and pursue his dreams of becoming a doctor. Gwendolyn was bullied by
other children because of her family's economic status. Keizah began teacher her... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"According to George Kent, she was 'spurned by members of her own race because she lacked social or athletic abilities, a light skin, and good grade
hair'."(www.notablebiographies.com –Early Life) This type of racial prejudice was one of the many social influences that shaped her understanding of
social dynamics and greatly influenced her writing. BY the time she had reached 16 she had published about 75 poems. Upon graduating from Wilson
Junior College in 1936, Brooks began to works as a publicity director for a youth organization of the NAACP. This job allowed Gwendolyn to establish
a connection with the youth and gain modern, first hand details about South Side
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Poem Analysis: Hedgehog & Night of the Armadillo
A Tale of Two Mammals: The Analysis of How to Make it in Society
Connected by the delicate branches of the tree that sprouted from the constantly expanding lineage of the Mammalian family, the hedgehog and the
armadillo are also separated by millions of years of evolution. The choice in animals for the poems did not fall under the laws of natural selection, they
were hand selected to represent the separate, yet connected underlying messages. Paul Muldoon, author of "Hedgehog", and Yusef Komunyakaa, author
of "Night of the Armadillo", both declare society as a negative parasitic being. Both mammalian protagonists bear suits of armor that barely suppress the
impending offensive physical/social forces, all the meanwhile representing the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The author realizes that society wants a hero, a savior to improve the world. The reason there is not one is that we forget the good people in the world,
because the independent ones who make their own choices take the "road less traveled" and society looks down on this. In the next stanza, the tone
shifts as the author directly connects the conflict between the hedgehog vs. the voices to man vs. society when he clarifies, "We forget the god..." (17).
Muldoon covertly exposes the real identity of the hedgehog when substituting the animal as the deity that, in the Judea–Christian belief, is whom
"created man in His own image" (Genesis 1:27). While the hedgehog is God, the voice is society as the author connects the dots between the narrator
and "We". When Muldoon states "We", he in–avertedly ties together the voice, "We", and he reaches out of the paper to also include the audience, and
society all into this one same being. In this poem our god–like hedgehog is adorned "under this crown of thorns" (18), to represent the spikes that shield
him from the outer world, to represent the pain and agony the hedgehog bears from the rejection of the voice, and to connect the event to yet another
religious tie, the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. As society condemned the Savior, a good man who went against common beliefs, to execution with the
symbolism of the crown of thorns. If there are good people in the world, then
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War During The Twentieth Century War Poetry Essay
Throughout the twentieth century, many poets have written about war. They have protested against it, created propaganda in support, celebrated
conflict, and questioned it. War in general tends to evoke emotion in everyone, whether it is pride in a country, grief of losing a loved one, fear of the
unknown, or even happiness because of a victory. On page one of Philippa Lyon's "Twentieth Century WarPoetry", she writes,"...much poetry has been
written by individuals (both male and female) who were not necessarily in the thick of battle." She is saying that a lot of them poems were written by
individuals with a different point of view of the war than the soldiers. Not all of war poetry was written by soldier–poets, who offer a first–hand
account of what it was like and their experiences. Lyons then continues and writes, "...the poetry poses direct questions about motivation, intent and
fairness; that is to say, about the nature, morality and politics of war." The individuals had many questions about the war and they present those
questions through poetry. It is not always seen as an individual's hardship and struggles turned into art. Amy Lowell's "September 1918" and Carl
Sandburg's "Grass" both describe a common theme of war, which evokes a spectrum of emotions. Lowell's use of imagery and diction in her poem
evokes a plethora of emotions. As an Imagist, she used a lot of imagery in her poems. The book "American Literature" in Funk & Wagnalls New
World Encyclopedia says, "The
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
How Did Robert Frost Create A True Figure In His Work?
Even though Robert Frost was not known for quite some time, his life, themes, and praise make him a true figure in literature. However, it is his style
that make him stand out in literature. His life was full of education, family, and profounding events. This man used many themes in his works to
convey a message to readers. Frost received much praise and awards, including the Poet Association award, the Pulitzer prize, and the Bollinger prize.
The styles Frost used were profound and filled with rhythm and rhyme.
Robert Lee Frost had a very interesting life. Born on March 26, 1878, in San Francisco, California, Frost stayed there for multiple years. His father,
William Prescott, was a journalist and his mother, Isabelle Moodie, was a teacher. The two parents' careers carved the pathway for this young man. A
time after Robert Frost was born, he and his family moved to New England, where his family had originally come from. But a tragedy came in 1885
when Frost was only 11: his father passed away. The now 16 year old began to constructpoetry. Words seemingly entered his mind and came out in the
form of words on paper. After finishing High School, the young man would read nothing but British Poems. This newly established love of poetry
forced Frost to want to write even more. This concluded in the man writing for the newspaper. But to really fulfill his craving to be a professional
poet, Frost needed to attend a college. But he was poor and could not pay tuition. Sam Elliot,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Erykah Badu's Song On And On
These poets/ songwriters for Erykah Badu's song "On and On" are Greg Kurstin and Shaznay Lewis. Kurstin was born May 14, 1969 in Los
Angeles, California. Lewis was born 6 years later, October 14, 1975 in Islington, London, United Kingdom. If you were to ask, yes, they do still
happen to be alive. Greg Kurstin has been nominated for grammy awards and golden globe awards Shaznay Lewis has a history of singing herself
not just song writing. This song vocalized/sung by Erykah Badu on her album "Baduizm," "On and On" was published, released in 1997. This song
is comprised of 9 food filled stanzas. And no, not the food you eat...food for thought. There is not really a set pattern to these stanzas,
though..considering the fact it is still a song..there is kind of a set pattern. It uses repetition for the following lines: If we were made in his image
then call by our names, most intellects do not believe in God but they fear us just the same..On and on and on and on my cipher keeps moving like a
rolling stone.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
They will
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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  • 1. Similarities Between The Barred Owl And The History Teacher In "A Barred Owl" and "The History Teacher", by Richard Wilbur and Billy Collins, both authors ponder child innocence and a child's willingness to believe what they are told by people they trust. In "The History Teacher" a teacher tells a series of historical events in which he changes the names and harsh details of the events to protect the children's innocent minds, while in "The Barred Owl", Wilbur describes an innocent child being put back to sleep after being woken by an owl catching it prey outside their window. Both adults in the poem provide different explanations for their children on a disturbing event, both authors demonstrate ways to protect a child's innocence, but use different literary devices to make their points, such as the use of irony... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Using a more innocent, child–like carefree tone in the first stanza, Wilbur tells how a child is woken up, and how she is eased back to bed, demonstrating a carefree tone by making the owl seem friendly and nothing to worry about, "Was an odd question from a forest bird,/ Asking us, if rightly listening to,/ "Who cooks for you?" and "Who cooks for you?"". In the second stanza a more haunting tone is used when the child is put to sleep and the author writes, "And send a small child back to sleep at night/ Not listening for the sound of stealthy flight", when the owl is capturing its prey. Both of these tones used in this poem show how a child's problem is dealt with and provides protection to the child. The author also uses juxtaposition, comparing what the child believes is going on to what is truly happening outside. This demonstrated the power of words that the poem emphasizes to be a key part to our understanding of things, such as our fears and happiness, and how it can contribute to the attempt to save a child's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Gwendolyn Brooks Research Paper The Incredible Life of Gwendolyn Brooks Imagine the strength required to defy social inequality and rise to become a purveyor of culture upon a new generation of poets. Gwendolyn Brooks was one with such strength. She had the strength to overcome the garrison of social injustice which held back so many other African–Americans. She had the strength to establish herself as a master poet by being the first of her kind to win a Pulitzer Prize and be appointed Poet Laureate of the United States. She, Gwendolyn Brooks, a champion of African–American literature since her youth and a civil rights activist in her old age, wrote many critically acclaimed works of both prose and poetry and excessively garnered prestige among the ranks of twentieth–century ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... I want to write poems that will be meaningful( poetryfoundation.org)." This awe–inspiring quote by Gwendolyn Brooks herself shows the purpose behind her career and what anyone can accomplish if they have the drive to do so. Brooks fully fulfilled and delivered on this mantra. Her first collection of poetry A Street in Bronzeville ( released in 1945) was a great success and received many honors ( biography.com). Both of her two autobiographies took heavy criticism which Brooks vehemently refuted saying, "They wanted a list of domestic spats (poetryfoundation.org)." Writing only one novel Martha Maud, Brooks did not dabble to often in prose ( poets.org). Annie Allen , which won a Pulitzer Prize, and In The Mecca, which received a National Book Award in poetry, are her two greatest works(poets.org). The awards she acquired for her works are the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award, Fellowships from the Academy of American Poets, the Frost Medal, a National Endowment for the Arts Award, the Shelley Memorial Award, among many others (poets.org). All of these allowed her to become a teacher and speaker of literature specifically poetry at many universities throughout her life and the Poet Laureate of both Illinois and the United States (biography.com; poets.org ). Along with these government positions came a much more political ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Poetry Analysis Of Natasha Trethewey's Native Guard Natasha Trethewey is the southern born daughter of an African American mother and white father at a time when such relations were illegal. Her parents were married in Canada and lived for a time in California, but the pull of the south brought them home. Yet, racism reared its ugly head and the couple divorced, but not before molding a daughter who would later go on to be named Poet Laureate of the United States. Today, Trethewey is a professor of creative writing at Emory University. Her poetry collection Native Guard which speaks of the history of life in the south won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 2007 and is indeed a powerful collection. Native Guard is Trethewey's third book of poetry; first published in 2006, it won the Pulitzer for poetry in 2007. The book's about the history of the South, of race and racism, of war and peace. The eponymous Native Guard, founded in 1862, was the first African–American regiment in the Union Army. One job assigned to this unit was guarding the prison–of–war camp at Fort Massachusetts on Ship Island, Mississippi. The crown sonnet sequence of ten sonnets that makes up "Native Guard" tells the history of the guard from 1862–1865. Each poem is titled with a date, and begins with a revision of the line that ended the sonnet preceding it. The first poem in the sequence begins with the end of the last poem, so it is a crown of connected sonnets. Her revisions of lines are intense, clever and beautiful. For example, here is the ending of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. Robert Frost Research Paper Robert Frost's Life and Work Robert Frost was born on March 26, 1874, in San Francisco, California. He died on January 29, 1963, in Boston, Massachusetts. His mother was a Scottish immigrant, and she was a teacher. His father was a teacher at first and then became a newspaper man, he also was an unsuccessful candidate for city tax collector. Frost was a poet and playwright in America. He won the Pulitzer Prize four times. In 1885, Frost's father died of tuberculosis, and the whole family fell into economic difficulties. In 1886, with the help of Frost's grandfather William Frost, the family moved to Lawrence, Massachusetts. He became interested in reading and writing poetry during his high school years in Lawrence, Massachusetts. In 1892, Frost graduated from Lawrence High School. He was enrolled at Dartmouth College in the autumn of 1892. After leaving school, Frost did various jobs, including worker, teacher and journalist. His first professional poem, "My Butterfly. An Elegy" was published on November 8, 1894, in the New York newspaper The Independent. He proposed marriage to Elinor Miriam ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He bought a farm in Franconia, New Hampshire in the same year. Frost taught English at Amherst College in Massachusetts in 1916. In 1921, Frost accepted a fellowship teaching post at the University of Michigan. While teaching at the University of Michigan, he was awarded a lifetime appointment at the University as a Fellow in Letters in 1924. In the same year, he won the first of four Pulitzer Prizes for "New Hampshire: A Poem with Notes and Grace Notes." The Pulitzer Prize is an award for achievements in newspaper, magazine and online journalism, literature, and musical composition in the United States. He won additional Pulitzer Prizes for "Collected Poems" in 1931, "A Further Range" in 1937, and "A Witness Tree" in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Robert Frost's Poetry "In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about life: it goes on" (Robert Frost). March, 1874. The United States of America continues to recover from the effects of the Civil War. The Reconstruction Era is in full swing and segregation is at a new high point. The Chinese were being discriminated throughout California throughout the 1870s. In 1882, due to the high rate of Chinese immigrants, the Chinese Exclusion Act was passed by Congress. This act meant that no Chinese immigrant could enter the United States for a period of ten years. At the beginning of the new century, the first World War began. As a result of World War One, art began to evolve. Publishers across the globe documented about The Great War and gave insight to what... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Frost's ability to appeal to the common man through complex ideas and unique writing style has changed American poetry from an old writing style to a new, modern style. With not only making himself a household name through his many popular works, he also has been awarded four Pulitzer Prize awards for his poetic books. In schools throughout the United States, Robert Frost's poems are being read and examined today. In conclusion, it is clear that his poems will forever have a lasting impact on not only American literature, but also American ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Gwendolyn Brooks Research Paper In 1950, Gwendolyn Brooks was the first African American to win a Pulitzer Prize for her second book titled, Annie Allen, which included 11 poems that entail Annie's perceptions of discrimination against African Americans as she grows up. Gwendolyn Brooks was sitting in her dimly lit living room, which she had kept this way because she was struggling with money, when she found out she had won her Pulitzer. The next day multiple photographers and reports showed up at her house to question her about her recent achievement. She knew that when they went to plug in their equipment, nothing would work due to her lack of electricity. However, when they plugged everything in, all of it worked perfectly. Someone had been secretly paying her bills. This is a great example of life imitating Brooks' art; she wrote mostly of people with everyday problems that were able to overcome them with the help of others.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She was the first child of David Anderson Brooks, a custodian, and Keziah Brooks, a teacher. Brooks was born in Topeka, Kansas but spent the majority of her childhood growing up in Chicago, Illinois, where she was encouraged by her parents to excel in reading and writing. However, she found it challenging to do so because she dreaded school. She was often discriminated against by even those of her own race because she was very shy and lacked athleticism, light skin, and "good grade hair". Because of the fear of rejection, Brooks often stayed home writing poetry and other works of literature. Her family and close friends even gave her the nickname of "the female Paul Lawrence Dunbar"( a famous African American ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. Sylvia Plath Poetry Style Analysis Sylvia Plath: "Joie de Vivre" "Perhaps some day I'll crawl back home, beaten, defeated. But not as long as I can make stories out of my heartbreak, beauty out of sorrow," wrote Sylvia Plath in her journals, unpublished until nineteen years following her death. The relevance between the American author's life and the inspiration of her literary works cannot be disputed. She wrote about distinct experiences, from the death of her father at a young age to the depression she fell into after her husband left her. Plath, burdened with hardship, turned her pain into numerous influential poems and a semi–autobiographical novel, The Bell Jar. She received the honors of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and the Glascock Prize as recognition of her works. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As described previously, "Daddy" combines specific details of Plath's life and her father's, making comparisons as brutal as to the Holocaust in their own home, and comparing him to the devil. In "Daddy" she wrote that he, "Bit my pretty red heart in two. / I was ten when they buried you. / At twenty I tried to die / And get back, back, back to you. / I thought even the bones would do. / But they pulled me out of the sack, / And they stuck me together with glue." Each line written describes specific events in her life, and it could not be clearer. This one of sixteen stanzas is exactly related to the events in her life, yet also provides insight into her own thoughts on herself. In "Ariel," plath wrote of being "suicidal," thus describing her life as she attempted suicide many different times and was successful in 1963 when she killed herself ("Sylvia Plath." Biography). As much as one could continue connecting Sylvia Plath's life and work based on simple life details, why she wrote about her life is far more compelling. She was said to have wanted to understand her own mind, the mind that doctors seemed to understand better than herself. Plath also wrote certain works intending her family never read them, stating that she did not want her mother to read The Bell Jar because it was indicative of her suicidal thoughts. Sylvia Plath made ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. How Does Hardy Use Imagery In The Convergence Of The Twain Often times in poetry, authors use metaphors and imagery to relate thematic elements in their writing to significant components of their personal life or general human nature. Frequently, poets use their writing as a vehicle to subtly narrate their inner struggles or personal conflicts to the audience. In the poem "The Convergence of the Twain," author Thomas Hardy introduces the harsh relationship between human vanity and the formidable power of nature. Due to Hardy's upbringing in rural England, he often wrote about his isolated life and the hindrance that work and religion had on his education. According to Wikipedia, Hardy also criticized those involved in English Victorian society and the declining status of rural men and women. The recurring themes of man's inferiority and the worthlessness of material values in Hardy's work can be attributed to his belief that religion and human materialism are often at the root of unhappiness and mankind's inferiority to nature. Similar to Hardy's frustration during his childhood, author Elizabeth Bishop grew up in the early 1900s with an unstable family while struggling to find a place of belonging in society. Prior to moving in with her grandparents, Bishop's father passed away before she was one year of age and her mother suffered through serious mental instability until she was admitted to an institution when Bishop turned five years old. In Bishop's poem "The Fish," the author utilizes vivid imagery to highlight the positive ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. Childhood Interview Paper Interviewer: Hello Mrs. Bishop. Can we start the interview off with a reflection of your childhood? Bishop: Sure– my childhood wasn't easy. I was born in Massachusetts in 1911. My father died when I was young, and my mother was committed to a mental institution shortly after his death. I went back and forth between my grandparents and relatives– this made my childhood fairly difficult. I: What about later in your young life? What was your life like then? B: I obtained my bachelor's degree from Vassar College and decided I wanted to travel. I spent a few years traveling in Europe and Africa. While I was traveling I began to write, mostly poetry. I enjoyed documenting the beauty I saw on my travels. I: How would you describe your style of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Being published was a big step, and North & South documented all of my travels. I find that the verse book truly reflects the beauty that I saw all over the world. I: People say your greatest publicized collection is Poems: North & South/A Cold Spring which won a Pulitzer Prize. How did you feel to receive that award? B: I was ecstatic to be honored with an award as prestigious as a Pulitzer Prize. I also treasure having my collection, Complete Poems, win a National Book Award. That was around the same time I began working at Harvard, which has been a eccentric experience so far. I: Let's talk about one of your more famous poems, The Fish. B: Oh goodness, what are your questions about The Fish? I: It sounds like you're not too fond of this poem– please explain. B: "I've declared a moratorium on that [poem]" because of its overuse (Spires). I: What do you mean overuse? B: It is repeated so often that "I said nobody could reprint The Fish unless they reprinted three [of my] poems with it" (Spires). I: Why is that? B: Although The Fish is one of my favorites, I want some of my other poems to be used in conjunction with it so that the reader can better understand my ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Essay on Edwin Arlington Robinson biography Supremacy 1) There is a drear and lonely tract of hell 2) From all the common gloom removed afar: 3) A flat, sad land it is, where shadows are, 4) Whose lorn estate my verse may never tell. 5) I walked among them and I knew them well: 6) Men I had slandered on life's little star 7) for churls and sluggards; and I knew the scar 8) upon their brows of woe ineffable. 9) But as I went majestic on my way, 10) Into the dark they vanished, one by one, 11) Till, with a shaft of God's eternal day, 12) The dream of all my glory was undone,–– 13) And, with a fool's importunate dismay, 14) I heard the dead men singing in the sun. The composition date isn't known but the format of the sonnet is: Abbaabbacdcdcd Edwin Arlington Robinson ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Man Who Died Twice and Tristram The last two of these won Pulitzer Prizes in 1925 and 1927, when he was elected as a member of the National Academy of Arts and Letters. Robinson never married but enjoyed the company of many friends. He died of cancer in hospital in New York on April 6, 1935. A few of his most known poems are, "The Children of the Night" "Captain Craig" "The Town Down the River" "The Man against the Sky" "The Three Taverns" and "Avon's Harvest." He had 3 Pulitzer prizes awarded to him.
  • 11. For the first twenty years of Robinson's writing career, he had difficulty in getting published and attracting an audience. He published his first two volumes privately and friends secretly guaranteed the publication of the third. He did receive positive reviews from the beginning, however, and with the publication of The Man Against the Sky in 1916 his reputation was secure. For the rest of his life he was widely regarded as "America's foremost poet," as William Stanley Braithwaite put it. Both academics and the general public held him in high esteem, as attested by the fact of his winning three Pulitzer Prizes for poetry for volumes published in 1921, 1924, and 1927, when his Tristram became a national best–seller. Although Robinson's subject matter and philosophical stance differ markedly from that of his predecessors', his form ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Robert Frost Research Paper Great American Author Robert Frost was born in March 26, 1874 and died 1963. Robert Frost is one of the great american poets of the early 1900s. Robert Frost spent his first 40 years as an unknown. He exploded on the scene after returning from England at the beginning of WWI. He won four pulitzer prizes. He was also special guest of president John F Kennedy. He later died of prostate surgry. In 1912, Frost and Elinor decided to sell their farm in New Hampshire and move the family to England, where they hoped they could find a publisher who would take on undiscovered poets.Within just a few months, Frost, now 38 found a publisher who would print his first book of poems, A Boy's Will, followed by North of Boston a year later. The time Frost ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Description Of My Birthday What is that one day we wait for all year? Well of course, our birthday. We all wait for that special day that is our birthday. Our birthday is that one special day that lets us know we are getting older. We get older each year we reach our birthday, but have we wondered what happened the day of our birth? I have also wondered what happened on November 30,2000. The number one thing i know that happened on November 30 is that I was it was my birth day. I was born on November 30 of the year 2000. That day seemed to be a very sunny afternoon. That day my parents decided to name me Breanna. They name Breanna means noble strong and virtuous; the name is the feminine version of the name Brian. The year 2000 was a special year because it was the mathematical year and also because it was the international year for the culture of peace. Christmas is also an important time of the year and that is also another event most people wait forward to every year. In this year christmas wasn't to good for the people in china because of a christmas party that turned deadly. The party was at an unlicensed disco, and it caught on fire and ended up killing more than 300 people I share my birthday with many people but what excites me the most is the to find famous people that were born the same day as I was. Some famous people I share my birthday is Mark Twain, Sirwinston Churchill, Shirley Chisholm, John McCrae and Ben Stiller. Mark twain was a famous american writer and was born on November 30, 1835. Sir winston Churchill was a British statesman who served as a prime minister in the UK. Shirley Chisholm was the first american black congresswoman and presidential candidate John McCrae was a war world 1 soldier who wrote the memorial poem named "In Flanders Fields" that is very well known today, and Ben Stiller is a famous actor and filmmaker. Some of this famous people have been very important to history and that's why i'm honored to share my birthday with them. One first fact that I have found near my birthday is that on November 29,2000 there was an oil spill 26 miles of the mississippi river. The spill affected many areas of the around the mississippi river. No injuries were reported, but there was some wildlife animals ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Marianne Moore Essay I will focus my discussion board posting on Marianne Moore. Marianne was known as a dedicated baseball fan and a poet. An interesting fact about Marianne is she got to throw out the first ball in 1968 at Yankee Stadium in New York. Her poetry consisted of describing exotic animals and plants, steamrollers, and more. Marianne won many awards because of her unique style described as "The World's Greatest Living Observer." She graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 1909. Marianne taught at a United States government school for American Indians for four years. By 1916, she started to become famous as a new and creative poet. Moreover, she moved to New York City. Marianne took a job working in the New York Public Library, became an editor of a literary... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Marianne puts an image into the minds of the readers. For example, "Of the crow blue mussel shells, one keeps adjusting the ash heaps; opening and shutting itself like an injured fan" (McMichael 1510). She paints a picture with her words, and the picture she paints is a blue mussel shell closing in on itself like a broken fan. I imagine a medium–sized blue mussel shell constantly shifting and moving to fold in on itself. She also describes objects and things with extreme detail. For instance, "whereupon the stars pink rice grains, ink bespattered jelly–fish, crabs like green lilies and submarine toadstools, slide each on the other" (McMichael 1510). She compares the stars in the sky to little pink rice grains. Moreover, the jelly–fish have splashes of ink on them. She allows the readers to allow their imagination to imagine the color of ink as a dark blue or black. Thus, the jellyfish has spots of blue or black ink on their body. Then, she describes the crabs are like green lilies possibly because the crabs are green. Marianne creates detailed images in her reader's mind in her poems. Furthermore, she compares the creatures of the ocean to odd objects like pink rice grains, fans, and toadstools. Marianne Moore's work focuses more on images than themes due to her detailed writing and writing style. Moreover, she describes objects and sea creatures in The Fish. Thus, she wants to create a setting (in the ocean) ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. Appreciation and Value for Life in Richard Wilbur's Poem... In humanity, one chooses to spend the most amount of time doing what they love in order to result in a satisfying and happily lived existence. Richard Wilbur expresses his appreciation and value of life throughout the poem, "A Late Aubade". This poem is influenced and based off of Wilbur's strong relationship with his devoted wife. It emphasizes throughout detailed imagery how one must enjoy the moments they have and can share with their loved one. The existence of an individual is not about wasting time by being out and completing unnecessary jobs, it's about spending time doing what one loves to do. Wilbur is convincing his wife to not go about on her "womanly" daily activities; he wants her to stay and to take advantage of the few valuable moments life offers for them to be together. Throughout "A Late Aubade", Wilbur stresses by applying descriptive language that in life, one must not waste any precious time and should rather focus on what they are passionate about. Richard Wilbur was born in New York City on March 1rst in 1921. He contained a strong literary background as he had come from a family of several journalists. Wilbur's father was a painter and as he recorded experiences of life through his paintings, Wilbur became inspired to do this through poetry. As he came from a Christian religious background, this was a great influence to him as he alludes to many Christian references throughout his works. He and his middle class family had moved to North Caldwell, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Poem Analysis: Richard Cory By Edwin Robinson Richard Cory Poetry can take many forms and shapes based on the authors personal experiences. These different styles can also be interpreted in many different ways based on the reader's view of the poem. This possible change in views can give the poem many different meanings to each individual person. "Richard Cory" by Edwin Robinson, Edwin imbeds many of his past and personal experiences into the poem while still leaving the poem up to other peoples imagination and analysis's. The best place to start this analysis of "Richard Cory" is how the author's personal experiences shaped the poem. Robinson was a "third son of a wealthy New England merchant, a man who had little use for the fine arts. He was, however, encouraged in his poetic pursuits by a neighbor and wrote copiously, experimenting with verse translations from Greek and Latin poets" (" Edwin Arlington Robinson"). Robinson was exposed to poetry in his early childhood that gave him a strong foothold for his later career. Robinson was an ordinary child from a wealthy class family that was educated and well taken care of the majority of his life. During his later teenage years Robinson took ill and his father gave him the best medical treatment in the United States at the time near Harvard which Edwin happened to get accepted to while already in the area, "In 1891 Edward Robinson provided the funds to send his son to Harvard partly because the aspiring writer required medical treatment that could best be performed in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Rita Dove : The Life And Life Of Rita Dove Rita Dove was born August 28, 1952. She was born in Arkon, Ohio. Her spouse was Fred Viebahn, her mother was name Elvira Hord, her father was Ray Dove, and their beautiful daughters name was Aviva Dove–Viebahn. She has officially started everything she loves to do and will continue to do what she loves to do, she really enjoys making poetry and quotes. This part is gonna be telling you how Rita Dove started her career, Rita Dove was an African American poet. She loved poetry and music from a very young age. She was a very execptional student and was invited to the White House as a Presidential Scholar out of high school. She was studying on a Fulbright Scholarship. Later on in her future she was writing at Arizona State University. She has won MANY awards for all of her work in 1897. She has written many poetry books, "Mother Love" and "Sonata Mulattica". She has received a "Pulitzer Prize" for the book of Thomas and Beulah. During her educational and personal life she had developed a love for learning and literature at an early age in a household that encouraged reading. She had been honored as a Presidential Scholar, being ranked at the top 100 high school student in the high school, and as a National Merit Scholar attended Ohio's Miam University, graqduating 1973 summa cum laude. She studied abroad in Germany before returning to the states and earning her M.F.A. from the University of Iowa. Later on in her more personal life, she had met her fellow writer Fred Viebahn, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Themes Of Anne Sexton Themes from Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, Gwendolyn Brooks, and Robert Hayden An Evaluation of themes from Mirror, Courage, Explorer, and Douglas During the 1900's, a series of new poets came into existence. These poets brought about new themes and perspectives that manipulated the minds of humans all across the world. The poets that are in our study are Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, Gwendolyn Brooks, and Robert Hayden. These four poets wrote detailed, intricate poems that are packed full of a slew of different themes and perspectives. These themes can be distilled and life lessons can be derived from them. Raymond A. Schroth states intelligently, "Perhaps the best way to define courage is to live it." Anne Sexton's poem Courage thrives off of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Her unique poem lays down a line of different instances of courage throughout, and describes courage in a way never thought of before. Sexton elaborately states in lines 20 and 21 of her poem, "Your courage was a small coal that you kept swallowing." She's explaining in this quote that courage has always been inside everyone, and when everyone is little, they bury it down and don't let it breach the surface. However, as humans grow and experience, they become more and more open, and courage begins to flow from the souls of everyone. Maya Karsh states in her poem Courage, "Courage is not your strength, but the ungiven fighting part of you." Brilliantly states by Karsh, courage is the driving force within all humans, capable of great things. Moreover, Sexton portrays this message thoroughly within her poem. Within Brooks Explorer, she encourages the message to never hold back on making choices. Within her poem, a man is faced with numerous choices to make as he explores his apartment. She states in line 12, "He feared most of all the choices, that cried to be taken." Brooks is desperately trying to show her readers that one shouldn't be afraid to make choices, or to explore, because exploration and more importantly choices, are crucial to human survival. Without the ability to choose, humanity would be tuck in an endless loop of pain, therefore, Brooks begs us to utilize this marvelous skill ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood and sorry I could not travel both." This is the first line of the opening stanza of Robert Frost's poem, "The Road Not Taken." The traveler in this story has been walking down a path and come to two diverging roads. Thus, creating a situation in which the traveler must make a decision. This poem is often misinterpreted by readers and critics. The poem is entertaining, but it is not as deep and profound as many people believe. I interpret the poem as a reflection of the uncertainties of life, but in a humorous way. Frost was born in San Francisco, California on March 26, 1874. He was named after the famous Confederate general, Robert E. Lee. Robert Lee Frost lived in San Francisco until he was eleven. At the age of eleven, his father died of tuberculosis, and Frost moved in with his paternal grandparents. Shortly after his father's death, his family relocated to Lawrence, Massachusetts. Frost attended school at Lawrence High School and graduated in 1892. He graduated as class poet and shared co–valedictorian honors with his current girlfriend and future wife, Elinor White. After high school, he attended Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. It was there that he got a job as a newspaper reporter. Frost was recognized for his literary talent in 1894 when he published his first poem, "My Butterfly" which earned him $15. After this poem was published in New York Independent, he made a copy to show his fiancГ©e Elinor. Her reaction ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Carl Sandburg Thesis Have you ever reaserched Abraham Lincoln ? More than likely Carl Sandburg has written your research paper on him. Carl August Sandburg was born January 6th, 1878 in Galesburg, Illinois part american and part swedish. He won the pulitzer prize for the biography on Abraham Linclon and two more for poems. He is really famous for his poem "Chicago" which is one of the poems that won him another pulitzer prize. His famous poem "Chicago" is really based on his home town Illinois, Chicago. It's where he spent his time as a reporter at Chicago Daily News and the Day Book so he decided to write a poem about the home town. Carl's roller coaster life He was about fourteen years old when he dropped out of school and started driving a milk wagon till he was about 18 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... After that, he voluntered in the army and got sent to fight in the Spanish–American war in Puerto Rico on July 25, 1898. Carl was not called to battle though because of him dropping out of school he couldn't pass the reading or math test that they gave him. He then returned home to Galesburg where he wanted to go back to school so he decided to attend college at Lombard College. He then dropped out with no degree in 1903. Sandburg then decided to move to Wisconsin and joined the social democratic party. He was as a secratary and served to Emil Seidel. While he was working there serving Emil Seidel he met a lady and fell in love with her. Her name was Lilian Steichen and he quicly fell in love with her. He married her the next year in 1908. After their marriage they had 3 girls and moved to Harbert, Michigan and then back to Chicago, Illinois. After he would move to somewhere his home would always call him back to chicago. Before finally settliing in 331 South York Street in Elmhurst, Illinois from 1919 to 1930 which is where he stayed for the longest. During the time he was there Sandburg wrote "Chicago", "Cornhuskers", and "Smoke and Steel." In 1919 Sandburg won the Pulitzer Prize made possible by a special ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Brooks, Gwendolyn Essay example Brooks, Gwendolyn Poet, writer. Born June 7, 1917, in Topeka, Kansas. Throughout most of the twentieth century, Gwendolyn Brooks was a lyrical chronicler of the black urban experience in America. In 1950, she became the first African–American poet to win the Pulitzer Prize. Brooks grew up on the South Side of Chicago, Illinois. She began writing poetry as a young girl, and by the age of 16 had begun publishing her poems regularly in The Chicago Defender. She attended the Woodrow WilsonJunior College in Chicago before marrying a fellow writer, Henry L. Blakely, in 1939. The couple lived together in Chicago, divorcing in 1969 but reuniting in 1973. They had two children, Nora Brooks Blakely and Henry Blakely Jr. Brooks earned a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... A collection of children's poems, entitled Bronzeville Boys and Girls (1956), was followed by The Bean Eaters (1960), widely considered to contain some of her finest verse, and Selected Poems (1963). In the latter half of the 1960s, Brooks' poetry became mroe radical and took on a more explicit tone of social concern, a transition that coincided with the politically charged atmosphere of the decade and the influence of the black power movement among African–American writers and thinkers. Her next volume of poetry, In the Mecca (1968), told the bleak story of people living in the Mecca, a large, fortress–like apartment building on the South Side that had deteriorated into a slum. The book clearly displayed Brooks' new political awareness, including a poem entitled "Malcolm X," after the black militant leader who was assassinated in 1965. In the Mecca was nominated for the National Book Award. It was also the last of Brooks' books published by a mainstream publisher, Harper & Row. Her next book, Riot (1969) was published by Broadside Press, a small, black–owned company based in Detroit. With a newly political tone and without a mainstream publisher, Brooks' later works often received little attention from the critics at major publications. Nevertheless, she remained a major literary figure throughout the next several decades, publishing more than a dozen volumes of poetry, including Aloneness (1971), To Disembark (1981), The
  • 22. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. Carl Sandburg Research Paper Carl Sandburg was a poet and writer as well as an editor. Sandburg was famous for works such as Chicago Poems and The People, Yes. He was an American man who wrote poetry about the places around him, people he admired, and many other sources of creativity. Sandburg was also famous for not only writing in the perspective or about the life of himself, the writing for and about the people of the world. Not only was Sandburg a poet, but he also did some folk singing along with everything else. Carl Sandburg was born in Illinois in 1878 to his Swedish parents. His family was very poor and Sandburg dropped out of school to work and support his family. He was never known for being school smart due to his dropping around the age of 13. Sandburg worked many jobs before starting to write professionally and attending college. He even volunteered for the military, but never actually fought in a battle.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Pulitzer Prize is an award given each year to artist and authors on subjects relating to literature, photography and music. The Pulitzer Prize is given to the works the foundation considers the best in their field that year. His first Pulitzer Prize was a poetry one which he won for "Cornhuskers" in 1919. His second Pulitzer Prize was awarded in 1940 for a biography of Abraham Lincoln called "Abraham Lincoln: The War Years," the second part of his Lincoln biography series. His third and final Pulitzer Prize was given for "Complete Poems" in 1950. Not many people have ever received three Pulitzer Prizes, so it is a great accomplishment for Sandburg. The Robert Frost medal was awarded to Sandburg in 1952, a prestigious award given to authors for being a great ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Essay on Analysis of Rita Dove’s, “Daystar” C Stevens 07/09/2010 Professor Kierath English 102.212 Analysis of Rita Dove's, "Daystar" "Daystar" by Rita Dove is an expressive poem, which centers on the main character, a young mother and wife, who internally struggles with her burdensome, daily duties, which creates a lack of freedom in her world. Dove's choice of words lets the reader empathize with her confined life. In this poem, irony exists for the mere fact that from birth to adulthood the female population is brought up to feel fulfilled by simply becoming a wife and mother; however, this poem describes the monotonous duties and the joyless bond that can be between husband and wife. As the poem opens, Dove begins with a metaphor that entertains the idea of... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "Later that night when Thomas roller over and lurched into her, she would open her eyes and think of the place that was hers" this proves the point that she cannot even express herself sexually because she does not feel as if she has control in the situation. Her mind wanders elsewhere, in a place where she is her own master, instead of what is reality. Additionally, the main character's husband shows some selfish tendencies in the fact that he may not notice his wife's discontentment with his affection. However, this may also present the lack of communication between man and wife and therefore may cause a sense of isolation from her husband. The main character possesses the characteristics of most young women, a full plate of responsibility and the lack of freedom that can wither away a person's soul. My response to this poem is that I strongly respect the author for bringing up such a controversial issue such as discontentment with being a stay–at–home mother, since this is usually to be expected of women. Dove explains the poem delicately and leaves the underlying sense that she may have possibly been through the situation herself. This being said, her imagery is wonderfully used and the metaphor of the doll being slumped over is a brilliant way to reflect upon the main character's feelings and actions. The irony comes into play, in my opinion, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. How Did The 1920s Change In The 1920's Although some of the history had a big impact on Frost and his life not all impacted him as greatly. The country was having rapid growth of Industry and Agriculture that increased US wealth from 1870 1920. In 1920 women gained the right to vote. During the 1920's and beginning of the 1930' alcohol sale is prohibited. American Indians became citizens in 1924. The massive stock market collapsed in 1933 causing the Great depression with 13 million people unemployed. The year 1945 many things happened like the first atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki and they also exploded the first hydrogen bomb, and World War II ended, also the US becomes charter member of the United Nations. In 1954 the Supreme Court rules that public schools... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... His poems made people stop and think instead of just saying everything straight forward. Even though he made people think he was loved but most people. He won many prizes for his writingsНѕ in 1917 he won Poetry Prize for "The Snow", in 1924 he won Pulitzer Prize for "New Hampshire", in 1931 he won two prizes, the Pulitzer Prize for "Collected Poems" and Russell Loines Poetry Prize, 1937 he won another Pulitzer Prize for "A Further Range" and lastly he won his 4th Pulitzer Prize in 1943 for the poem "A Witness Tree". Frost was also invited to do many things that most poets would never have a chance to do and he received memberships and honoraries that no one else was receiving. He was invited to Phi Beta Kappa Day at Harvard to read "The Bonfire" in 1916. In 1918 he received honorary M.A. from Amherst college. He was elected a membership in the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Us Senate adopts resolution honoring frost on his 76th birthday in 1950 and on his 85th birthday in 1959. In 1954 he became delegate to World Congress of Writers in Sao Paulo, Brazil. He was awarded with honorary Litt. D. by Oxford and Cambridge Universities and National University of Ireland in 1957. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Frost'sMending Wall, By Robert Frost "Mending Wall" was influenced by Frost's neighbor while he lived on his farm in New Hampshire. Like in "Home Burial," and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," "Mending Wall" is based on Frost's experiences in New England. Frost and his neighbor met every spring to wall along their stone wall and fix any problems with it, this is the exact setting of "Mending Wall" ("History"). Frost's neighbor, like the neighbor in the poem, always believed in the same saying "good fences make good neighbors." The only major difference between the poem and Frost's actual experiences is that in the poem the farmer and his neighbor had orchards, while Frost had a poultry farm ("History"). To this day Frost remains one of the most significant poets and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This proves that everything he wrote had an impact on the literary world and what he wrote was important too. Furthermore, Frost was nominated for the Nobel Prize in 1950 and was close to winning it again in 1961, but failed to win it because of his "advanced age" (Kainzow). To be so close to winning one of the most recognized awards at the age of 86, further proves his significance in the literary canon. Frost was so important to the literary world that Poet Society of America named an award after him. TheRobert Frost Medal is awarded to poets for their "distinguished lifetime achievement in American poetry" ("Frost"). In 1960 Frost was presented with the Congressional Gold Medal, which is the highest award an American civilian can win. President John F. Kennedy presented him with the award in 1960 and a year later President Kennedy asked Frost to recite a poem at his inauguration (Biography). Frost recited "The Gift Outright" but because his vision was begging to fail he had to memorize the poem. This shows just how popular Frost was, and how well respect he was too. Frost's importance to the literary canon can be shown by more than the awards he has won. Frost was able to reach a "large and diversified readership" (Caravantes), unlike poets like Shakespear whose work can be found harder to read and comprehend, Frost's work consisted of colloquial language which allowed him to be able to speak in "poetic but plain language" ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Descriptive Essay On My Birthday On my Birthday... Everyone around the world celebrates their birthdays in a different way, yet many do not know much about the day they were born. As I began researching about all the things that have happened on my birthdate and year, I found various interesting facts. Some were not really intriguing, while others caught my attention. I have discovered many facts that occurred on May 1. On May 1, 2001, my mom went for a checkup on my due date. They monitered her and found out she was having contractions, but did not know it. The doctor asked her if she wanted to have me that day and she said she would. She went home, got her things, her best friend, some lunch to eat on the way, and went back to the hospital. She had me in about two hours. I was born at 4:58 pm on a sunny Tuesday. They almost named me Victoria, but mom did not want people to call me Vicky, so they settled on Sarah Elizabeth. My full name has very neat meanings. Sarah means "princess" and Elizabeth means "oath or fullness of God" in Bible meaning. Elkins comes from the name Elias in the Bible which means "Jehovah is God". My family came from England, for the most part. There were a handful of interesting events that happened on May 1. On May 1, 1931, the Empire State Building officially opened. In 1963, an American topped Mount Everest. The most interesting thing that I found happened on my actual birthday. There was an ex–member of the KKK convicted of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Essay On We Real Cool Strong Connection in"We Real Cool" As well all know, connections are not easy to come by. Connections are made for resembling one thing to another. In addition to the resemblance, the poem, "We Real Cool", has a strong connection that is shown by the author that help illustrate the meaning of the poem. In the poem of, "We Real Cool", by Gwendolyn Brooks, there is a satisfyingly strong connection involving the poem, title, and author. Firstly, to show the satisfyingly strong connection from Gwendolyn Brooks, is the poem. In the poem, "We Real Cool", Gwendolyn brooks uses a part of her background in the stanza. The poem, "we real cool", illustrates a gang of people that like to play pool at late hours. The poems stanza begins with the word, "We", to represent the group of people. Gwendolyn writes, "We lurk late, we strike straight. We sing sin, we thin gin", in the second and third stanza, pointing out the attributes of these people back in the 1960's. Furthermore, the second and third stanza also commemorates their life and what they did to consider themselves real cool, with the help of vivid words that were used to show visual imagery in the poem, such as left school, lurk late, strike straight, sing sin, thin gin, jazz June, and die soon, henceforth illustrating the connection between the poem and title. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The title, "We Real Cool", has a deeper in text meaning than just being 3 simple words. Throughout the poem, the phrase We Real Cool and it's identity, is described thoroughly. The name in essence, tells of what was to be considered cool back in the 1960's. The pool players, were the people that most wouldn't affiliate with according to the poem. Using slang such as we sing sin, and we thin gin, along with being a pool player, further helps tie the connection with the poem and its ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Research Paper On Anne Sexton Anne sexton (November 9, 1928– October 4, 1974) was an American poet who found love in poetry and was known for her highly personal confessional verse. She was born as Anne Gray Harvey to her mother and father Mary Gray Staples and Ralph Churchill Harvey. Anne sexton wrote about her long battles against depression, mania, and her suicidal thoughts, she looked to help people fight personal problems and ease their pain. Sexton suffered from severe mental illness for much of her life, her first manic episode taking place in 1954. After a second episode in 1955 she met Dr. Martin Orne, who became her long–term therapist at the Glenside Hospital. It was Dr. Orne who encouraged her to take up poetry. Sextons poetic career was encouraged by a mentor ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The next year she published her first poetry book, "To Bedlam and Part Way Back". This book encouraged her to write more and gave her national recognition. But she was failing badly on emotional side. After the sudden death of her parents, she was emotionally broke. Her married life was facing turbulence with discord and physical abuse by her husband. In 1962, Anne Sexton published her second poetry book, "All My Pretty Ones". The book became immensely popular and following its success, she started working on four children's books with her longtime friend Maxine Cumin. In the time period between, August 22 to October 27, 1963, Sexton toured to Europe. The year 1964 saw a change in the medical history of Anne, her longtime psychiatrist moved to Philadelphia and she had to look for a new psychiatrist. The new psychiatrist placed her on drug, Thomasine, to control her depressions. Anne Sexton achieved an important distinction in 1965, when she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in London. She received the esteemed Pulitzer Prize in 1967 for her highly appreciated book, "Live or Die". She also received the Shelley Memorial Prize in the same ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Rita Dove: The First African-American Poet Rita Dove: The First African Woman to become a Poet "Poetry is a language at its most distilled and most powerful" (Poets.org). This reflects Dove's love of poetry by saying that it is very powerful and that it speaks to everyone. Rita Dove was an African American poet who in addition to her love of music, she loved to writepoetry. Dove won the Pulitzer Prize in poetry in 1987. (Poetry Foundation). Her powerful voice sends a strong message in her poems. Even though her work is powerful, an example of some of Dove's powerful work is "Canary". Rita Dove's story begins on August 28, 1952 in Akron, Ohio. Dove was the firstAfrican American woman to write poetry. (Poetry Foundation). Dove loved poetry, writing, and music when she was in school. When she graduated high school, she studied in Germany, went to Ohio's Miami University, and taught at the University ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... A free verse is a poem that does not rhyme. Sense devices in this poem are a simile and a metaphor. An example of a simile is in line two, it says "Billie Holiday's burned voice had as many shadows as lights". A simile is a comparison using like or as. The summary of this poem is that a woman suffers from the addiction of drugs. Canary's purpose is to remind us about the late Billie Holiday (Poets.org). The form or structure is a lyrical poem. The form or structure is how the poem is written.This poem's audience is directed towards women. The audience is who the poem is talking to. A brief paraphrase and summary of this paragraph is a woman reflecting on the use of drugs and other addictions. The theme of this poem is do not use drugs. Theme is the main point of a message of a story or even a poem. The imagery in "Canary" is "the gardenia covers her signature under her ruined face", this means that she could be sleeping. My personal reaction of Canary is that it reminds us of the late Billie Holiday and her incredible ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Robert Frost Contributions Robert Frost is a rare twentieth century poet, that may be the most recognized name in poetry. He won the Pulitzer Prize a total of four times, which is more than any other poet. Some of his best work includes: "The Road Not Taken", "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening". Robert Frost was a literary legacy. When he was 87 years old, he was asked to write and recite a poem for President John F. Kennedys inauguration. During Robert Frosts lifetime, he received over 40 honorary degrees and of course his four Pulitzer Prizes. Robert Frosts life was reflected in his poetry in a variety of ways. Robert Frost was raised in New England, and many of his poems characters and settings are based in New England. Robert Frost was also greatly influenced by emotions and events in everyday life. He could take every day events such as: watching ice weigh down birch tree branches, the mowing of fields of hay or even the mending of stories on a wall and perceives a deeper meaning to love, hate, or conflict. These writing techniques lead to another reason as to why Robert Frost is so successful. Many of his poems, such as, "Mending Wall" and "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" are inspired by the natural world. In 1897, Frost began studying at Harvard. This really helped Robert Frost become an intellectual and more of a serious poet. Unfortunately, after two years he had drop out of school. He then became a chicken farmer, which helped familiarize him with farming and rural life. This ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Robert Frost Research Paper Robert Frost, a very famous, well known poet from the very late 1800s to mid 1900s. [It wasn't always easy for him to get where he wanted to be in his literary career.] He made very many drastic changes in order to succeed in his want to be a poet. [Including moving from the United States all the way to New England, where his poetry first debuted.] After everything he tried he became really successful as an educator and poet. He was born on March 26, 1874, and he "passed away in 1963 from complications after a prostate surgery" (Robert Frost Bio). "Frost spent 40 years of his life as an unknown" (Robert Frost Bio). "Frost received four Pulitzer Prizes and was a guest at John F. Kennedy's inauguration to recite 'The Gift Outright'" (The English Years of Robert Frost). He spent 11 years of his life in San Francisco, California, that was until his father passed away of tuberculosis. He then met his future wife, Elinor White, which was his highschool sweetheart. Then attended college and "wrote his first poem, 'My Butterfly: An Elegy'" (Robert Frost Bio). At the time he owned a small farm with his wife and children. After their first born died of cholera they gave birth to four more children. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "Most poets had to pay to have their poetry published in England" (The English Years of Robert Frost). Frost then met fellow poets, "Ezra Pound and Edward Thomas" (Robert Frost Bio), who decided to publish his first book of poems. However, in 1914, WWI broke out and Elinor, Frost, and the children were forced to move back to America. "All wasn't too terrible because his popularity carried with him and he met Henry Holt, who became his new publisher and will be from here on out" (Robert Frost Bio). After making many more books of poetry and publishing more poems he and his wife then settled down on a farm they bought in Franconia, New Hampshire. Frost then taught at several different ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Barred Owl and History Teacher In "A Barred Owl" by Richard Wilbur and "The History Teacher" by Billy Collins, adults provide easy explanations for children when confronted with harsh realities. Both works explore the use of white lies to respond to children's fear and curiosity in an attempt to preserve their innocence. However, the writers employ literary devices that convey these concepts in different ways. While Wilbur presents parents' well–intentioned untruths as beneficial to a child's peace of mind, Collins reveals the serious consequences of a teacher's trivial fabrications. In "A Barred Owl," Wilbur constructs a singsong narrative of two stanzas with three couplets each. This arrangement provides a simple and steady rhythm that echoes the parents' crooning to their child when she is frightened by "the boom / [o]f an owl's voice" (1–2). A light–hearted tone is established when they "tell the wakened child that all she heard / [w]as an odd question from a forest bird" (3–4). The parents' personification of the owl makes it less foreign and intimidating, and therefore alleviates the child's worry. The interpretation of the hooting as a repetitive and absurd question – "Who cooks for you?" – further makes light of the situation (6). The second stanza introduces a more ominous tone by directly addressing the contrasting purposes words may serve given a speaker's intention. While they "can make our terror bravely clear," they "[c]an also thus domesticate a fear" (7–8). This juxtaposition is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. The Poetry of Robert Frost Essay Have you ever looked outside your window and wondered what the world really means? Reading Robert Frost's poetry you will be able to form your own opinion and thoughts about this pulchritudinous world. His poetry is so deep and meaningful you will be overwhelmed with what was going through this man's head. Life is not paradisiacal, and this is something Robert Frost knew but his poetry gave insight to the people of his time and the generations to come. Although Robert Frost's life was far from perfect he was still an extraordinary person; his great inspirations, themes, and figurative language have won him many honors and awards thus creating one of the greatest American poets known to this day. Robert Frost went though a lump growing up ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Over the next decade life became more bothersome for Frost because he had a tremendous amount of jobs. Times were hard for Robert but he worked very hard to make due of what he had and did not complain of what he did not have. Frost life was filled with devastation and success all wrapped in one. His life was getting better when he met his soon to be wife Elinor White. Robert Frost and Elinor White married in 1895.(Barry ix). In 1899 the married couple moved to Derry, New Hampshire which is the state where he became a cobbler, farmer, and a teacher at Pinkerton Academy.(Barry ix). Frost and his wife had many children but sadly many of them did not live long enough to even see their teenage years.(Barry ix). His children went though some cataclysmic times, his son shot himself and his daughter was always very ill.(Bober 173). Whether his life was going marvelous or god–awful Frost still Gonzalez, Jones 3 managed to be a great friend, husband, and parent.(Burnshaw 458). Frost was making commendable career moves that no longer made him known as a farmer but as an auspicious poet. In 1912 he moved himself and his family to New England and even published his first book "A Boy's Will".(Barry xi). When Frost writes his poetry he talks about what he saw in the world or what was going on in his life.(Bober 10). Readers got to see a world in a uniquely explained way which was the way Frost ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. The 's Mini Research Paper Essay Santa Iglesia Advanced English 1, Per. 7 14 November 2016 OMS Mini Research Paper The word man has a very simple definition: an adult male ("The Definition"). However, there are many symbols and meanings being it. A Native American picture known as "Man in a Maze," originally called I 'itoi, depicts a man standing at the entrance of a maze. At the center is the man's dreams where God greets him and passes him into the next world. The center is not easy to reach, for there are many twists and turns in the maze itself. The maze symbolizes life and the difficulties man has to go through to reach the end and move on. In this instance man is naive, but represents strength, and must go through the challenges faced through existence in order to find the way to the finish ("The Symbol"). Another simple, yet very complex word beyond its basic definition, is "old". The book definition of old is to have existed for a long time ("I Found"). The word "old" is associated with wisdom because a lot of experience is thought to be gained during long periods of time. When combining the two words, old and man, a new and very intricate symbol is made. "Old man" symbolizes wisdom of humanity and the power of great knowledge. The phrase "old man" is also associated with high status and special powers because with great wisdom comes significant respect from less experienced individuals (Cirlot). Joe DiMaggio was a famous baseball player for the Yankees and was nicknamed "Yankee Clipper" who ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Metaphors In The Road Not Taken By Robert Frost THE USAGE OF METAPHORS What differentiates poem from other works of writing? What makes you realize that what you read is a poem but not a short story? Bearing in mind that the answer might differ from person to person, I believe that the crucial difference is that the underlying message is generally not obvious in the poem, and it forces the readers to think about it for a while to understand its deeper meaning. The fact that the message is not apparent in the poem, is often attributed to the usage of metaphors in the poetry. According to Oxford Dictionary, metaphors are the "figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to an object or action to which it is not literally applicable". Even though they are used for different reasons ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She introduces the metaphor in the first two lines of the poem by saying, ""Hope" is the thing with feathers – / That perches in the soul –" and then builds the poem around the idea of a bird. When Dickinson says, "And sings the tune without the words– / And never stops – at all –" she shows that the hope doesn't have to be sensible, and it never stops existing in one's heart. In the last stanza she says, "I've heard it in the chillest land – / And on the strangest Sea –". It is not a possible thing to hear the hope, but in this line she tries to say that that hope is everywhere. Even though the main idea of the poem is hope being in everyone's heart, the metaphor of hope being a bird is actually what makes the poem more interesting for the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. Gwendolyn Brooks Research Paper Gwendolyn Brooks was a well renowned poet of the 1900s. She earned the honor of being the first Black author to win a Pulitzer Prize for poetry. Brooks was also the first Black woman to hold the position of poetry consultant for the Library of Congress. Her works portray a political consciousness, reflecting the civil rights activism of the 1960s. While expressing her commitment to racial identity as well as equality, Gwendolyn managed to bridge the gap between academic poets of her generation and Black militant writers of the 1960s. Gwendolyn Elizabeth Brooks is a Topeka, Kansas native. She was born on June 7, 1917 to Keizah Wims–Brooks and David Anderson Brooks. When she was only 6 weeks old, Brooks' family moved to Chicago, Illinois, as part of the Great Migration. The Great Migration was a historical event that influenced Brooks' writing because it initiated her family's moving and the racial prejudice that would be the foundation for some of her best poems. Her mother became a school teacher and her father a janitor, because he could not afford to continue his education and pursue his dreams of becoming a doctor. Gwendolyn was bullied by other children because of her family's economic status. Keizah began teacher her... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "According to George Kent, she was 'spurned by members of her own race because she lacked social or athletic abilities, a light skin, and good grade hair'."(www.notablebiographies.com –Early Life) This type of racial prejudice was one of the many social influences that shaped her understanding of social dynamics and greatly influenced her writing. BY the time she had reached 16 she had published about 75 poems. Upon graduating from Wilson Junior College in 1936, Brooks began to works as a publicity director for a youth organization of the NAACP. This job allowed Gwendolyn to establish a connection with the youth and gain modern, first hand details about South Side ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Poem Analysis: Hedgehog & Night of the Armadillo A Tale of Two Mammals: The Analysis of How to Make it in Society Connected by the delicate branches of the tree that sprouted from the constantly expanding lineage of the Mammalian family, the hedgehog and the armadillo are also separated by millions of years of evolution. The choice in animals for the poems did not fall under the laws of natural selection, they were hand selected to represent the separate, yet connected underlying messages. Paul Muldoon, author of "Hedgehog", and Yusef Komunyakaa, author of "Night of the Armadillo", both declare society as a negative parasitic being. Both mammalian protagonists bear suits of armor that barely suppress the impending offensive physical/social forces, all the meanwhile representing the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The author realizes that society wants a hero, a savior to improve the world. The reason there is not one is that we forget the good people in the world, because the independent ones who make their own choices take the "road less traveled" and society looks down on this. In the next stanza, the tone shifts as the author directly connects the conflict between the hedgehog vs. the voices to man vs. society when he clarifies, "We forget the god..." (17). Muldoon covertly exposes the real identity of the hedgehog when substituting the animal as the deity that, in the Judea–Christian belief, is whom "created man in His own image" (Genesis 1:27). While the hedgehog is God, the voice is society as the author connects the dots between the narrator and "We". When Muldoon states "We", he in–avertedly ties together the voice, "We", and he reaches out of the paper to also include the audience, and society all into this one same being. In this poem our god–like hedgehog is adorned "under this crown of thorns" (18), to represent the spikes that shield him from the outer world, to represent the pain and agony the hedgehog bears from the rejection of the voice, and to connect the event to yet another religious tie, the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. As society condemned the Savior, a good man who went against common beliefs, to execution with the symbolism of the crown of thorns. If there are good people in the world, then ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. War During The Twentieth Century War Poetry Essay Throughout the twentieth century, many poets have written about war. They have protested against it, created propaganda in support, celebrated conflict, and questioned it. War in general tends to evoke emotion in everyone, whether it is pride in a country, grief of losing a loved one, fear of the unknown, or even happiness because of a victory. On page one of Philippa Lyon's "Twentieth Century WarPoetry", she writes,"...much poetry has been written by individuals (both male and female) who were not necessarily in the thick of battle." She is saying that a lot of them poems were written by individuals with a different point of view of the war than the soldiers. Not all of war poetry was written by soldier–poets, who offer a first–hand account of what it was like and their experiences. Lyons then continues and writes, "...the poetry poses direct questions about motivation, intent and fairness; that is to say, about the nature, morality and politics of war." The individuals had many questions about the war and they present those questions through poetry. It is not always seen as an individual's hardship and struggles turned into art. Amy Lowell's "September 1918" and Carl Sandburg's "Grass" both describe a common theme of war, which evokes a spectrum of emotions. Lowell's use of imagery and diction in her poem evokes a plethora of emotions. As an Imagist, she used a lot of imagery in her poems. The book "American Literature" in Funk & Wagnalls New World Encyclopedia says, "The ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40. How Did Robert Frost Create A True Figure In His Work? Even though Robert Frost was not known for quite some time, his life, themes, and praise make him a true figure in literature. However, it is his style that make him stand out in literature. His life was full of education, family, and profounding events. This man used many themes in his works to convey a message to readers. Frost received much praise and awards, including the Poet Association award, the Pulitzer prize, and the Bollinger prize. The styles Frost used were profound and filled with rhythm and rhyme. Robert Lee Frost had a very interesting life. Born on March 26, 1878, in San Francisco, California, Frost stayed there for multiple years. His father, William Prescott, was a journalist and his mother, Isabelle Moodie, was a teacher. The two parents' careers carved the pathway for this young man. A time after Robert Frost was born, he and his family moved to New England, where his family had originally come from. But a tragedy came in 1885 when Frost was only 11: his father passed away. The now 16 year old began to constructpoetry. Words seemingly entered his mind and came out in the form of words on paper. After finishing High School, the young man would read nothing but British Poems. This newly established love of poetry forced Frost to want to write even more. This concluded in the man writing for the newspaper. But to really fulfill his craving to be a professional poet, Frost needed to attend a college. But he was poor and could not pay tuition. Sam Elliot, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 41. Erykah Badu's Song On And On These poets/ songwriters for Erykah Badu's song "On and On" are Greg Kurstin and Shaznay Lewis. Kurstin was born May 14, 1969 in Los Angeles, California. Lewis was born 6 years later, October 14, 1975 in Islington, London, United Kingdom. If you were to ask, yes, they do still happen to be alive. Greg Kurstin has been nominated for grammy awards and golden globe awards Shaznay Lewis has a history of singing herself not just song writing. This song vocalized/sung by Erykah Badu on her album "Baduizm," "On and On" was published, released in 1997. This song is comprised of 9 food filled stanzas. And no, not the food you eat...food for thought. There is not really a set pattern to these stanzas, though..considering the fact it is still a song..there is kind of a set pattern. It uses repetition for the following lines: If we were made in his image then call by our names, most intellects do not believe in God but they fear us just the same..On and on and on and on my cipher keeps moving like a rolling stone.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They will ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...