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Summary Of Easter Wings And Easter Wings
To His Coy Mistress by Marvell, Death Be Not Proud by Donne, and Easter Wings by Herbert are
poems that have similar and different aspects to each other. For instance, Easter Wings and Death
Be Not Proud are similar because both refer to God, as well as life or death. To His Coy Mistress
has no relationship to God, but has a relationship between love and lust. However, To His Coy
Mistress is similar to Death Be Not Proud due to the mention of death or dying in each poem. Easter
Wings and Death Be Not Proud have main ideas that evolve around God, and also evolve around the
concepts of life or death. When Donne started off his poem, he wrote, "Death be not proud, though
some have called thee." (Donne, 1). In the line mentioned, Donne states that death is dreadful, but
later contradicts this line by saying later in his poem that others consider death an escape. He shows
this contradiction by writing: Must pleasure, then from thee, much more must flow, And soonest our
best men with thee doe goe (Donne, 6–7) Donne specifically focused on the aspect of death, while
on the other end, Herbert specifically focused on the aspect of life in his poem, Easter Wings. Easter
Wings primarily focuses on the resurrection, hence the first work of Herbert's poem. Easter, for most
religions, have focused on the resurrection and re–birth of Jesus. Therefore, the title of the poem
automatically foreshadows on what his poem is about and what his poem was inspired by. In
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Similarities Between Hopkins And Jennings And Auden's Poetry
Auden loved to write about friendship in all its variations. His poems very often dealt with people
who were still alive. –– "Auden... wrote poems in praise of friends who were alive and he rejoiced
in their vitality"(Bold 9).Similarly to him Jennings also likes to write about people who are
important to her .Another similarity is that, like Auden, Elizabeth Jennings looks for order in her
poetry. Auden also sought for order in both his life and art.
Auden was an innovative and influential poet. During his lifetime he tried to write in every possible
poetic form. His importance to poetry is so great that his influence, like Eliot's has become almost a
subconscious one. It is his choice of words and the particular care with language that had an ...
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He was knighted in 1979. He started to publish his first poems during the thirties. "They were the
poems of an extremely clever young man, but they were more than this, they were also passionate
and profoundly personal. They were, however, difficult poems, not because they were sprawling or
incoherent but because Empson ransacked all his hearing and reading to find images that would
express accurately his own states of mind and feeling."(Jennings 95) Empson's poetry "is as
complex as his critical theories demanded it should be: a modern counterpart of metaphysical poetry
in its use of scientific conceits and cerebral puzzles."(Ousby
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What Is The Mersey Sound Poem
"The Mersey Sound – Adrian Henri, Roger McGough & Brian Patten"
by Jesús Milla Cabrera Table of contents
1. Introduction
2. Setting the scene (Suburban poetry)
2.1. Liverpool: pop poetry
3. Adrian Henri
3.1. Biographical notes
3.2. Main works
3.3. Style and influences
3.4. "Love is..."
4. Roger McGough
4.1. Biographical notes
4.2. Main works
4.3. "Let Me Die a Youngman's Death"
5. Brian Patten
5.1. Biographical notes
5.2. Main works
5.3. "Little Johnny's Confession"
6. Personal conclusion
7. Bibliography 1. Introduction
When I heard about an anthology written by Liverpool poets, I immediately decided to write this
paper about it. I have been in love with the pop music and The Beatles since I was a young teenager.
That is the reason ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Love has been called "you" and "me" referring to the two lovers (line 17). Personification of love
has given it a significant presence. Love makes a lover feel imprisoned in the jail of love (line 18).
In other words, love keeps you go back to your lover again and again. Even when the two lovers are
physically separated from each other, they can feel the presence of love in their lives (line 19). The
feeling of love is so great that it doesn't know any bounds. It transcends all boundaries of physical
existence and makes the person feel the presence of their beloved even they are not close to them.
Bibliography
Henri, Adrian, Roger McGough, and Brian Patten. The Mersey Sound. London: Penguin Books,
2007 [1967]
Medina Casado, Carmelo. Poetas Ingleses Del Siglo XX. Madrid: Sintesis, 2007
Wade, Stephen. Gladsongs and Gatherings: Poetry and Its Social Context in Liverpool Since the
1960s. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2001
Further bibliography
Charu B. "Summary of "Love Is..." by Adrian Henri." World's Largest Collection of Essays!
Published by Experts. 2012. Web: 5 Nov
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Samuel Taylor Coleridge: English Poet Essay
Over the years great writers have influenced literature in many ways from Shakespeare to Samuel
Taylor Coleridge. Coleridge was a groundbreaking poet whose idea of poetry remains the standard
by which others in English are tried. He was notably responsible for new German demanding
philosophy. His talks about imagination remain the component of institutional criticism. All the
while his infrequent notations on language helped develop Cambridge English in the 1920s. He is
described as a literary critic, psychologist of the imagination, a crucial theologian, and conservative
social philosopher. Coleridge's poems and other works placed him in a high spot among major
critics in literature. His early life helped shape who he became as an ... Show more content on
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Coleridge's marriage was unhappy and he spent much of it apart from his wife. During that period,
Coleridge and Southey collaborated on a play titled The Fall of Robespierre in 1795 (Poets 1).
Coleridge dealt with depression and needed something to help take away his nervousness and stress.
He turned to opium and Laudanum. Laudanum is a mixture of opium and alcohol. This was the
source of Coleridge's literary genius. But this also led to many of his downfalls (The Last Romantics
1). Coleridge became addicted to opium while trying to treat his rheumatism and neuralgic
disorders. He actually came up with one of his greatest poems, Kubla Khan, while on the drug
(European Graduate School 1). In many ways, the merit of Coleridge as a thinker and most
apparently as a poet is to have opposed against the dullness and literature of his time. His work is
inspired by a clear and refreshing appreciation for nature (European Graduate School 1). Coleridge
spent the next few years beginning his career as a writer. He never returned to Cambridge to finish
his degree. He then devoted himself to poetry and the study of ethics, becoming observant one of his
favorite philosophers, David Hartley, that he named his first child after him. In 1796 he published
his first volume of poetry, Poems on Various Subjects (Poets 1). Coleridge, whose early work was
celebratory and conventional,
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English Poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Life has many ups and downs; all of which form obstacles that shape us into what we're destined to
be. For instance, the prestigious an eminent English poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning firsthand
experienced this. For example she faced illness, wrong and right in both political and religious
views, most of all infatuation for another. As a result, of the occurrences faced she had real context
towards her literary work. The prosperous woman was never acquainted with poverty. Since the
beginning she was born into a prestigious home eldest of 12 children. Wealth based on the hard
work and sweat of slaves on her father's sugar plantation. All of which contradicted with the
statement "freely, as men strive for Right"(line 7). The capitalized "R" in right indicated the amount
of significance and her strong beliefs opposing slavery. In addition, taking into consideration that
Elizabeth was homeschooled "she was something of a child prodigy" (Kim 86) even so.
Furthermore, she kept her "childhood's faith" even with her "lost saints" (line 10–12). With in
regards to Elizabeth's sufferings her favorite brother Edward's tragic drowning sending her into a
dark abyss as a result. Therefore, she ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
For she had praised him in one of her poems. Thus, was the start of their written love. 574 letters
were written and were transacted back and forth. Robert being the first whom transferred "his love
for her poetry into love for her" (Evans 88) reached out to share his confession through a letter. It
has been said actions speak louder than words, however, this was not one of those cases. For
example, in "Sonnet 43" Elizabeth continually used the phrase "I love thee" the intense immensity
of her infatuation could not alone be read but be felt, some were even touched. Furthermore, her
love was "to the depth and breadth and height" in short to infinity and beyond was the amount her
love for Robert
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My Ideal Love
When asked the question, what is my ideal of love, it makes me think what do I think love is? Love
is something we do not think about, and it is an act we carry out. We go on throughout our days to
be told to love on all, or love others like you love yourself, and that is what got me thinking for my
ideal of love is first what does it mean to love myself? To love others one must love themselves and
that lead me to my poems that I have chosen. The poems that accurately express my ideal of love
are Elizabeth Barrett Browning's "How do I Love Thee? Let me count the ways" and "If" by
Rudyard Kipling. The reason why I picked these poems is because it describes my thinking of love.
The poem by Elizabeth Browning asks the question about love and that is my way of thinking
because I am still trying to figure that out. Then the main point that it says in the poem that is my
ideal level of love is "I love thee with the breath, Smiles, Tears, of all my life!"(Elizabeth Browning,
Sonnet 43), when thinking of love that is what I think of. Love is not something difficult that we
have to overthink and over complicate, love is simply "Loving" others and yourself. Love is
whatever you make of it whether that is doing good deeds for others or caring for them or showing
them some gratitude with gifts, it does not need to be broken down it is something we can act out
without thinking about it. The other poem "If" talks about loving yourself, and learning about
yourself. It is important for us
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Meaning Of Metaphysical Poetry
INTRODUCTION– The word meta means ' after' and so in simple terms , metaphysical means '
after physical'. Metaphysics cover a wide range of topics from religious to consciousness. It is all
about exploration and philosophy. Samuel Johnson first coined the term ' metaphysical poetry' in his
book lives of the most eminent English poets. Metaphysical poetry can be divided broadly in two
parts. They are– love poems and religious poems. The habit of writing both these type of poetry is
derived from John Donne , who in his first phase of life wrote love poems in during his later life
wrote religious poems. The metaphysical poets are known for their ability to surprise the reader with
the help of conceit, paradoxical images, colloquial language, ... Show more content on
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For example in the poem, "The definition of love", the poet makes a series of paradoxical assertions
that pose a riddle. It invites the reader to identify the nature of the love of which its speaks. The
early stanza suggest love for god. The second half is related to love between man and woman.
We can also see allegory in Marvell's poetry. One such example is " Bermudas". Bermuda is an
allegorical poem of forty iambic tetrameters rhyming in couplets. The poem is in 3 parts– a four line
introduction describing a small boat; a central section of 32 lines consisting of the song sung by the
sailors on the boat , in which the Bermudas are represented as an earthly eden and again a four line
conclusion. Bermuda is an island in the West Indies. They were often referred to as earthly paradise
in the early seventeenth century. Again the image from the small boat to the song plays with two
traditions. A) In Homer's Odyssey , Odysseus is advised that if he wishes to sail past the sirens
safely he must plug his men's ears with the help of wax and have himself tied to the mast so that he
is not seduced by the charm of their choices. B) In Petrarchan lyrics, a man's life is often likened to
a ship sailing through storms until he can reach the harbor the love of his mistress
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An Analysis Of Alfred Lord Tennyson 's ' An Athlete Dying...
Research Paper
Alfred Lord Tennyson was one of the most prolific poets throughout the whole Victorian era. A.E
Housman is one of the most significant poets from the Modern era. Both of these magnificent
authors lived distinct lives. Housman wrote "To an Athlete Dying Young" and Tennyson wrote
"Break, Break, Break." Both of these poems deal with the tragedy of death in different perspectives.
Housman was born in Worcestershire, England on March 26, 1859.At such a young age of 12 years
old he lost his mother due to the horrific illness of cancer. Housman is the oldest son from seven
children. In 1877, he attended St. John's College, and after this completion he spent the next 11
years of his life as a clerk for the Patent Office. His first ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Alfred Lord Tennyson was born on August 6, 1809 in Somersby, United Kingdom. His father was a
director for the church, and he earned an income that was well for the family. His siblings and him
were brought up and raised with books and with writing. At eight years old Tennyson had already
began writing poems, Although Tennyson was raised with his family he did not have the "happy"
family experience that one would want. Tennyson's father known to be an alcoholic and he would
also frequently use drugs. Due to these habits that his father high he would enact in physical abuse
throughout the family. In the year 1827, Tennyson attended Trinity College in Cambridge England.
He was not the only one from his family who attended this college, he had two older brothers that
also attended with him. While he was attending school he met a guy named Arthur Hallam. Hallam
was considered as his best friend. Both men joined a group or community and they were called the
"Apostles." Tennyson did not get to finish his degree in college due to the passing of his father in
1831. Even though, he left the university Tennyson still made an effort to maintain a close
friendship with Hallam. In fact, Hallam was fell in love with Emily the sister of Tennyson. He was
often encouraged to find a different career or to join in the church, but Tennyson was determined to
stick to what he was good at and that was poetry. Hallam unexpectedly passed away due to a
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Mary Sidney Herbert Legacy
The Life and Legacy of Mary Sidney Herbert Who is this woman among women, from a point in
history where women should be remain silent? From Mary's youth through– out adult–hood, what
circumstances in her life, motivated her to develop a strong will and determination against all odds?
Join me as I journey into the life of Mary Sidney Herbert to see how life experiences molded her
into one the greatest writers and authors of British Literature in the late 1500– 1600s. Mary Sidney
Herbert is "the daughter of Sir Henry Sidney and Mary Dudley. She was born at Tickenhall near
Bewdley, Worcestershire, on the Welsh border, October 27th,1561." She had three brothers: Phillip,
Robert and Thomas and one younger sister Ambrosia, approximately fourteen years later,1575,
Ambrosia dies. This would be traumatic experience for any young person. Mary and Ambrosia
received "training in Latin French and Italian language and literature as well as more" feminine
subjects such as needle work, playing the lute and singing whereas their brothers were sent to a
university. Queen Elizabeth invites the Sidney's to send Mary to the court with a promise of
exceptional care "away from the unpleasant air of wales." Secondly, by the age of fifteen, two years
later from being with the queen, she became "the third wife of Henry Herbert, Earl of Pembroke,"
He was known as "one of the richest men in England," he was also associated with her father and
uncle. This would be a huge task placed upon a
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The Metaphysical And Victorian Concept Of Love Essay
The Metaphysical and Victorian concept of love is as diverse as it can be particularly comparing the
intense love shown in 'Porphyria 's Lover ' by Robert Browning with the playful love in nature in 'To
His Coy Mistress ' by Andrew Marvell. Love has multiple definitions and it has so far remained
among the most complex subject that require a single particular definition to define its meaning.
Plato once said "At the touch of love everyone becomes a poet" and that 's why may be we have so
many diverse poetry on the subject of love with so many different definitions of love that are
available. Shakespeare wrote in his Sonnet 116 defining love, "Love is not love which alters when
alteration finds, or bends with the remover to remove", talking about the passion and loyalty, a
belief unassailable, "That look on tempests and is never shaken". Such intensity that Shakespeare
shows and the partial playful nature that Plato hints has the possibilities for influencing a writer to
produce unique individual thoughts, with different approach and equally persuading in nature.
The term metaphysical poets was coined by the critic Samuel Johnson to describe a loose group of
17th–century English poets whose work was characterized by the inventive use of conceits, and by a
greater emphasis on the spoken rather than lyrical quality of their verse. These poets were not
formally affiliated and few were highly regarded until 20th century attention established their
importance. Given the lack
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Using Animals Symbolically by Using Poetic Devices Essay
Using Animals Symbolically by Using Poetic Devices
I will be discussing the ways in which the poets use animals symbolically by using poetic devices.
The three poems that I have chosen are "The Tyger" by William Blake, "The Eagle" by Alfred, Lord
Tennyson. Lastly, Pied Beauty by Gerard Manley Hopkins. Alfred Lord
Tennyson has used an image of an eagle to give the reader an image of a man standing on a cliff top
waiting for his world to fall around him. He is in a desolate area; there is no society near him
"ringed with the azure world. He stands". He watches the sea pass lower than him his world
collapses beneath him n he falls.
"And like a thunderbolt he falls"
The sun has symbolized God. And his closeness to the eagle. ... Show more content on
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However, the poem is trying to tell us that the eagle is standing "close to the sun in lonely lands"
and that the enormous sea is beneath him. These are the ways that the poet has used the eagle
symbolically and to illustrate his strength and power standing high in the sky.
"Tyger! Tyger! Burning bright"
This is an example from "The Tyger"
Metaphors of fire and blazing are emphasize by duplication of the "B" sound. The "B" sound makes
it stronger and powerful to use.
My second choice is "Pied Beauty". Gerard Manley Hopkins who was born in 1844 wrote this
poem. The poem is tells us about all the different creatures that God has shaped. Explaining how for
many belongings in nature there is a contradictory. He is also telling the reader that we should be
thankful towards it and the entire God gifted.
In the poem, there are uses of some oxymoron's by using them it shows the different extremes that
exist within nature. This is similar to the Tyger. In addition, that shows the readers that to
keep the balance on the planet God has created an opposite. "Adazzle, dim". "With swift, slow;
sweet, sour"
He uses animals as one of God's gift for our nature and used them symbolically for the exquisiteness
of the planet.
My third choice of poem is "The Tyger" written by William Blake. This poem shows the evilness of
the
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Summary Of Christopher Marlowe's View On Nature
Throughout Christopher Marlowe, Sir Walter Raleigh, and William Carlos Williams poems,
structure and imagery were used as a way for all three writers to get their view of nature across to
the audience. Both Raleigh and Williams used their perspectives and views on nature in a negative
way while Marlowe used his views on nature in a positive way as a form of portraying how he feels
about his lover to his audience. Although all three men have their different ways on how they each
use structure and imagery to get their points across, they all used imagery to get their perspective on
nature across but for different reasons. Marlowe had a very positive view on nature and his
surroundings in regards to how beautiful and full of life it was. Marlowe conveys his feelings
toward nature through his use of imagery and the structure of his poem. Structure is used throughout
the body of Marlowe's poem which was created by six stanzas. Furthermore, Marlowe's structure
also consists of stressed and unstressed syllables which are emphasized in the first stanza "Come
live with me and be my love, And we will all the pleasures prove That valleys, groves, hills, and
fields, Woods, or steepy mountain yields.". In the first stanza, Marlowe used stressed and unstressed
syllables as a form of emphasising words like live, me, be, and love in order for him to be able to
get his point across to his lover. Furthermore, Marlowe also suggested to the use of imagery within
his poem by using words or
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The Tradition Of War Poetry Essay
The Tradition Of War Poetry
By comparing and contrasting a selection of war poems consider the ways in which attitudes to war
have been explored and expressed. When considering poetry written post 1900 concentrate on a
selection of poems written by Wilfred Owen.
Humans have turned to poetry in many different instances as a way of expressing them selves, using
the best combination of words, in the best order to express exactly how they are feeling at that
moment. Poetry is one of the most powerful means of communication that uses words very
sparingly, and often defines the era in which the poet lived and died. I think that is why many poems
are written about war, as anyone who was involved in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He also uses strong metaphors to describe how the men should fight in the battle, such as "imitate
the action of the tiger." This line prepares the troops psychology as well as physically by saying that
they should be strong, courageous and fierce like the animal. The poem is also very patriotic, and
talks of how the men should not disgrace their mothers or ancestors. Like the poem 'The Soldier' by
Rupert Brooke, it presents the idea that dying for your country would be a good, brave thing to do
and is in a way a sense of duty towards their mother England.
This poem is not wholly positive or negative. It gives war a good image by making it sound
courageous and noble but it also expresses some horrific images such as, "Or close the wall with our
English dead." I think that the last line of the poem, "Cry, God for Harry, England and Saint
George." sums up the overall message of the poem by ending in a strong religious line, using a
group of 3 to make the speech effective, and emphasising the fact that their cause is a righteous one.
Although 'The Charge Of The Light Brigade' does put much importance on the idea of how brave
and courageous the men fighting were it also creates a different message compared to 'The Battle Of
Harfleur' from Henry V. I think what Alfred Tennyson was trying to do in this poem was to convey
and explain what mistakes
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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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The Concept Of Love : The Love Of True Love
Some of the most renowned sonneteers express their love for another person in terms of the
magnitude of that person's beauty, especially during the Elizabethan era. But, the most powerful
form of love is loving someone for who they are instead of what they look like. Loving someone for
love's sake allows love to last a lifetime because love is true and the truth does not change. This
differs from loving someone for physical features in which both the love of looks and the beauty
fade with time. While in the moment it may be charming to be characterized by eternal beauty, as
William Shakespeare does in Sonnet 18, being loved for the real feeling of being loved is more
lovely where true love does not fade like the love for physical features. The truth of true love is
evident in Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Sonnet 14 where she insinuates that the failure to love
someone for only love's sake reveals the love as being superficial. True love should be something
that is not only contained in human nature or characteristics but should be something beyond
humanity that is eternal. Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Sonnet 14 dismisses the love of physical
features that William Shakespeare's Sonnet 18 prides on in order to illustrate that true love is
unearthly, unchanging, and eternal. Shakespeare and Browning both use the concept of eternity in
their sonnets. Both sonnets use the concept of eternity to express the undying beauty of a person to
whom the speaker is speaking to in
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Compare and contrast Daffodils and Loveliest of Trees
Alveria Pickett
Linda Layfield
Enc 1102–03
14 November 2013
COMPARE AND CONTRAST Comparing William Wordsworth and A.E. Housman views on
nature although Wordsworth and Housman are great poets they describe nature in different ways. In
order to imply a connection between nature and the human mind, Wordsworth uses the technique of
identification and comparison whereas A.E. Housman does the opposite in "Loveliest of Trees".
Wordsworth has beliefs about man's relationship face with nature and believes that nature is a
teacher and nurtures you. In "Daffodils" the speaker reminisces about a past experience in which he
seen a multitudes of "Daffodils" swaying in the breeze. As he recollects this scene, the speaker
gradually realizes ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The trees itself stands wearing white referring to a celebration. He refers to woodland of Eastertide.
He creates a simile between the tree as he refer to his life. In "Daffodils", the poet begins great
creativity. "I wandered lonely as a cloud" (Line1). A Simile comparing himself to a cloud, making
him view nature. The comparison to the cloud is similar to floating freely in darkness actually at the
same time. Imagery takes place when the poet states, "A host of golden
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A Lecture On Chatterton, Oscar Wilde 's Career
At the time he delivered his lecture on Chatterton, Oscar Wilde's career was transforming. He was
transitioning from the performances he had honed during four solid years of addressing countless
audiences and was developing, with greater energy than ever before, his profile as an accomplished
author, critic, and editor. His discovery of Chatterton stands at the center of these changes.
Paying close attention to Chatterton enabled Wilde to understand that the astonishing inventiveness
of the Rowley forgeries evinced the imaginative impulse that inspired the finest forms of
imaginative literature. Exploiting the links between imagination, authenticity, and truth, Chatterton's
artistic originality arose in fabrications that conjured a literary past that historically never existed.
Such fakes, Wilde knew from his reading about Chatterton, might strike some interpreters as the
result of ungovernable, if not immoral, impulses.
In the critical essays and shorter fiction that Wilde wrote from the mid–1880s onward, he radically
inverted such interpretations. Throughout these essays, shorter fiction, and dramas, generous artistic
license, lying, and even criminal intent become–as we explain in later chapters–the foundation for
great art.
Understanding Chatterton's artistry not only informed Wilde's creative work; it also shaped his
knowledge of the Romantic poets, whose works he had long admired. If Wilde's interest in Keats
and Shelley stemmed from his university days, through
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English Writer And Poet Gilbert K. Chesterton
English writer and poet Gilbert K. Chesterton once stated that," You cannot love a thing without
wanting to fight for it." Because true love, the passion that binds two people, is something that
renews itself and is never diminished. It neither deteriorates nor does it die. Rather both bliss and
hardship, distance and nearness, pleasure and pain, form the foundation for which love sits upon.
Love, like steel, is tempered by the flames of adversity and as a result it is made stronger by its heat.
Love is so deeply rooted and critical to humanity because in love there is stability, compassion, and
comfort. In love people give a part of their heart, their soul, their own passion, to another. In a world
of loneliness, uncertainty and danger, love is a constant worth fighting for. Moreover, love that one
choses to not fight for does not deserve to be called true love. It can be lust, passion, or endearment
but never love because the gift of love is sacred. It is selfless, mutual, and permanent. It is true.
The Mu`allaqat of 'Antara is one such example of love that is true. This story mirrors that of the
classical Shakespearean tragedy Romeo and Juliet, where love blossoms amidst two warring houses.
The hero of this ode quite literally fights on the battlefield for his lover. The devotion of the man's
love can be seen by how eloquently he describes his feelings for her. He states, "She takes your
heart with the flash edge of her
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John Donne
John Donne is the name in English Literature who gave new direction to the literary activities of his
age. He is in a sense founded the metaphysical lyric, which was practiced by scare of writers. As
Dowden says, "We are told that in the decline of the greater poetry of the Elizabethan period, a
metaphysical school arose and that John Donne was the founder or the first eminent member of this
school." John Donne set up a new tradition in versification by and large Donne must be regarded as
an original poet, "a poet who gave much more than what he borrowed from his age." The word
"metaphysical" has been defined by various writers differently. The learned critics feels that
"metaphysical poetry" is inspired by a philosophy, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Then comes a conceit which also expresses the passion of the lovers:
SHE'S ALL STATES, AND ALL PRINCES I;
NOTHING ELSE IS. The most striking and famous one is the comparison of man who travels and
his beloved who stays at home to a pair of compasses in 'A Valediction Of Forbidding Mourning'.
Here soul of the beloved is like the fixed foot of compasses as by her inborn nature she stays at
home whereas the soul of the lover is like the other foot of compasses which moves beyond the
center to complete a circle of journey.
IF THEY BE TWO, THEY ARE TWO SO
AS STIFF TWIN COMPASSES ARE TWO,
THY SOUL THE FIX FOOT, MAKES NO SHOW
TO MOVE, BUT (DOTH) IF THE OTHER DOE.
In The Relique, John Donne imagines himself lying in a grave as a skeleton with the undeniable
token of spiritual love in the sphere of his beloved's bright lock of hair forming a bracelet about his
wriste borne and because of their great love, he and his beloved will be honored like saints,
ALL WOMEN SHALL ADORE US, AND SOME MEN. Another feature is the use of colloquial
speech which marks the metaphysical poetry. In John Donne's poems, the vigor of colloquialism is
especially apparent in the abrupt, conversational opening of many of his poems. He selected
colloquial diction which has vigor, freshness and originality. He discarded literary words and
phrases which became rusty because of repetition. Another characteristic of metaphysical poetry
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Chistopher Marlowe's The Passionate Shepherd To His Love
Poems Analysis
Chistopher Marlowe's The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
The poem The Passionate Shepherd to His Love was composed by Christopher Marlowe in 1599.
Scholars often create a controversy pertaining to the exact genre of the poem. While many argue
that the poem assumes pastoral characteristics, an equal number maintain that it is a love poem.
Notwithstanding the conflict, the poem demonstrates a masterfully selected topic and diction, which
combined with imagery as well as prosody, imparts Marlowe's themes effectively. Rural life is well
captured in the poem as a theme. Marlowe utilizes imagery to create a rural setting that
characterizes the entire poem. In line two, the Marlowe describes his residential area as "...valleys,
groves, hills, and fields" to introduce the concept of the countryside (Roberts and Zweig 733). Most
of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In order to cover this theme, he has utilized imagery as well as sound patterns. The concept of
romance has been captured through occasional use of words items associated with love. For
example, roses have since time immemorial been used to express romantic feelings towards another
person (Roberts and Zweig 734). Apart from roses, Marlowe has utilized other weightier items such
as myrtle. Notably, this plant was used to signify the Venus, the goddess of love. Use of such words
in the poem depicts Marlowe's strong affiliation with romance, coupled with his love for the
countryside. Undoubtedly, such plants could only be found in the gardens. In addition, the concept
of love has been excellently captured in Marlowe's prosody. For example, the poem maintains a
regular syllabic pattern with four significant stresses in each line. Such a pattern creates uniformity
in the recitation of the poem. A combination of the uniformity and the diction used in the poem
creates a romantic tone, which is felt throughout the
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The Great English Poet By John Keats
Humans, cursed with ambition, desire so much: to achieve greatness, to secure themselves a place in
history, and to find someone to love who returns their sentiments. The great English poet, John
Keats, struggled to achieve these goals for many years As he grew, John Keats struggled to meet
many goals, highlighting the desire that all of humankind shares to achieve greatness. According to
legend, Mrs. Frances Keats gave birth to a healthy baby boy in a stable on October 1, 1795 (Ward
5). Mrs. Keats and her husband, Thomas, named their son John and loved him dearly, spoiling him
even after he gained four younger siblings (George, Tom, Frances Mary, and Edward) (Ward 5–6).
Unfortunately, Edward died in infancy, but his death only served to ... Show more content on
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Fortunately, John channeled some of his energy into positive outlets as well, earning himself the title
of a champion equestrian, swimmer, cricketer, and of course, boxer (Ward 14). Just a few months
after his mother's divorce, in March of 1805, John's beloved grandfather passed away, leaving
behind some wealth for the family. His grandmother, Mrs. Jennings, bought a new house in Enfield,
and appointed two new guardians for the children: Richard Abbey, and John Nowland Sandell
(Ward 20). Two years later, in 1809, John's Uncle Mingley acquired consumption and died, making
devastated 13 year–old John the oldest living male in his family. His mother returned to her parents'
home shortly after her brother's death, presenting a false beacon of hope to her son. Sickly with
rheumatism and consumption, she ailed away as her son nursed her, until she died on March 18,
1810 (Ward 16). Whereas his father's death wakened a ferocious spirit in John, his mother's death
caused the boy to withdraw from the world. He adopted a quiet, standoffish attitude, burying
himself in books (Ward 17). His popularity waned, and all of his friendships, excluding those with
his siblings and Cowden Clarke, the headmaster's son (a boy eight years older than John [Ward 19])
dissolved. His connections to Clarke and his brother George proved especially useful:
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Elizabeth Barrett Browning, An English Poet Of The...
Elizabeth Barrett Browning, an English poet of the Victorian Era, was born on March 6, 1806 at
Coxhoe Hall, Durham, England. Barrett was apart of a big family; her parents had 12 children, she
was the oldest out of all of them. Mary Graham Clarke and Edward Barrett were the parents out of
all 12 children. They educated their children at home. The family made their money off of Jamaican
sugar plantations and depended on slave labor. Barrett began her love for reading and writing poetry
at a very young age. She began reading the classic poetry written by John Milton and William
Shakespeare. When Barrett was 12 years old she wrote her first book of poetry. When Barrett was
14 years old, she suffered a spinal injury while riding her pony. ... Show more content on
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Barrett published her first Novel in 1820, The Battle of Marathon, her father published this book
anonymously. Barrett continued to publish her books anonymously, and in 1826 she published An
Essay on Mind and Other Poems. This book really started the kickoff in her writing career.
In 1829, Barrett 's mother passed away. Due to the abolition of slavery, the Barretts income
decreased tremendously. In 1832, Edward Barrett was forced to sell his rural estate at an auction.
After selling their land, the family rented cottages in a coastal town, where they lived for the next
three years of their life. After that time in their life, the family moved to London, where they
permanently settled. In 1833, after the move, Barrett published her translation of Aeschylus's
Prometheus Bound, an Ancient Greek tragedy. A few years after that she published The Seraphim
and Other Poems, a book expressing her opinion on Christian faith.
Barrett 's health continued to decline, she moved in with her brother, Edward, near the sea of
Torquay. That same year, Edward drowned while sailing in the waters of Torquay. Barrett was
forced to move back to London, she was physically and emotionally weak, but that didn't stop here
from her writing. In 1844, she published her collection Poems. This collection drew lots of attention
from the public, in particular, this drew the attention of the English Poet, Robert Browning.
Browning began to write letters to Barrett,
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The Difference Roles Among Male And Female Poets Essay
In the first chapter it deals with the contemporary issues of gender. The dissertation title is: the
different voices for women in English Renaissance poetry. The notion of gender relates to the fixed
gender roles of that period. This assignment mainly deals with the issue of how gender roles are
different among male and female poets. In addition, to narrow the research only four Elizabethan
poets, who were specialised in religious poetry. Poets such as John Donne, George Herbert, Mary
Sidney Herbert and Aemelia Lanyer. The reason for choosing these poets is because their work
sometimes portrays women in a negative and positive in their religious poetry. This assignment tries
to achieve to see the various voices for women in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Donne born as a catholic, but converted into Protestantism, yet he uses much athletic imagery in his
poetry. Herbert a strong Christian , who has written my devotional poetry sees God Almighty as a
shepherd and uses natural imagery such as, flowers and animals. This is to convey his need for
guidance as well as his piety to his lord. In addition, Mary Sidney Herbert raised as a Calvinist also
uses devotional language in her psalms, yet she uses a more masculine and aggressive tone to
express her anger on the original sin. Lastly, Amelia lanyer raised as protestant who has written
feminist poetry that uses a gentle, passive tone than Sidney. Her approach in describing Eve as the
best woman of the creation. Thus, Lanyer poetry is more feministic but also argumentive in
defending women.
In the book English Poetry of the Sixteenth century 'Gary Waller 'speaks about how poetry is male–
centred; ' In such a society, and within such a philosophy of love, both so male centred, (1986:2)
This shows how patriarchal certain Elizabethan poems were but the religious poetry is different
according to change in gender roles.
In Donne's Holy Sonnets' 18 it speaks about how the church is a bride to Christ. In other words, the
church, bears it purity and holiness it embodies an image of a woman. However, the church could
also means the haven for the mystery bride of Jesus Christ. The search for the bride is illustrated in
the first stanza:
'
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Ap English Literature Essay
Literature has always been a window into life during a particular time frame. Fiction and nonfiction
alike will give its readers a glimpse of the lives of those of varying social statuses, along with the
culture and politics of the time. This remains true regardless of the period in which a work was
written. From the Romantic era to the 20th Century, literature has been skilled at providing
understanding of others and their lives. For example, from the Romantic period works like the two
William Wordsworth poems I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud and The World is Too Much with Us,
along with A Red, Red Rose by Robert Burns. The Victorian era has its own share of works that
reflect the time when it was written, including Lewis Carroll's The Walrus ... Show more content on
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Language can mean a number of things in regards to literature, it can refer to the slang that is used,
the way that the author phrased a sentence, or even the dialect that the work is written in. Authors
like Robert Burns, Gerard Manley Hopkins, and W.H. Auden in particular make use of language in
the first two ways mentioned as a way of reflecting their respective time periods. Robert Burn's A
Red, Red Rose is a poem that makes perfect use of language in order to display the thoughts of the
author, which in turn displays the general thoughts of the time as well as his own location. A Red,
Red Rose is a rather romantic poem, and considering the era in which it was written makes it fairly
obvious that other authors of the time were discussing similar subjects. When discussing the beauty
of his love, Burn's use of language which talks of how, "[...] fair art thou, my bonnie lass [...]" sort
of automatically puts the reader in a mindset that can better understand his life (Burns). Couple the
more archaic way of writing with the dialect of the author, which is put on display in his goodbyes
to his love in the lines, "[...] And fare thee weel, my only luve! And fare thee weel awhile! And I
will come again, my luve [...]" (Burns). God's Grandeur by Gerard Manley Hopkins also use
language in order to further the ideas of his time. While the Victorian period was one of great
scientific advancements, it was also a time when Christianity was a very large part of people's lives.
Hopkins uses solid, imposing words in order to enforce the concept of God's strength, as seen early
on in his poem, where he states that, "[...] The world is charged with the grandeur of God. It will
flame out, like shining from shook foil; It gathers to a greatness, like the ooze of oil [...]" (Hopkins).
The author furthers the power of God by downplaying the strengths of mankind,
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Metaphysical Poems
Metaphysical Poets
John Donne and Andrew Marvell were considered metaphysical poets based on their use of conceit
and wit in depicting similar situations through different metaphors. They would use original
analogies to create fitting and insightful comparisons, usually to persuade.
John Donne and Andrew Marvell have been called metaphysical poets. This is a," name given to a
group of English lyric poets of the 17th century" (Metaphysical poets)" The term metaphysical poets
came to be used almost one hundred years after the death of the two poets. John Donne died John
Donne in1631 and Andrew Marvell died in 1678. The term later became known as 'metaphysical
poetry,' (which was referred to by contemporaries, as 'strong lived'. The ... Show more content on
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In the second stanza, the speaker argues for the life of the flea, as his lady has moved to kill it.
Almost desperate, the speaker describes the flea as holy. "This flea is you and I, and this/Our
marriage bed, and marriage temple is" (lines 12–13). He fails to save the flea, as reflected, "
[p]urpled thy nail in blood of innocence?" She killed the flea and the speaker's last chance of having
relations with her. The speaker at this point realizes that his chance to have sex with this lady is
gone. The speaker realized her killing the flea was his final rejection.
In "To His Coy Mistress," the speaker is attempting to use a Carpe Diem method to persuade the
young lady to make love to him. The speaker attempts to persuade the lady with seize the day. The
speaker continues to tell the woman about how short time is, and how they must hurry because no
one ever knows how much time is left. This is evident in by how the poem begins, "Had we but
world enough, and time,"(page 527) As the poem starts to speed up you realize the speaker is
becoming almost desperate. His promises and analogies become so farfetched."... I would Love you
ten years before the flood" (line 8). Marvell uses symbolism, comparisons and metaphors to show
the speaker as this passionate lover and the lady would be foolish not to give in to his request.
Clearly the two speakers are Metaphysical poets. They have gone in two different directions to try to
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Compare And Contrast Two Views Of War
Compare and contrast essay
War is a scandalous topic where peoples' views differ as to what war is. Some people see it as pure
evil and wicked while others think that it is brave and noble of what soldiers do. Looking at poems
which had been written by people affected by war help show the messages which are portrayed. The
two sets of poems which show different views of war as well as some similarities are "the Charge of
the Light Brigade" by Alfred Lord Tennyson, "To Lucasta, on Going to the Wars" by Richard
Lovelace and "Dulce Et Decorum Est" by Wilfred Owen, "The Song of the Mud" by Mary Borden.
Both these poets use linguistic devices to convince the reader of their view of what the war is.
Tennyson and Lovelace show how war is worthy ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Lovelace's diction helps to develop the theme that war requires a passionate commitment from
soldiers and can be as consuming as a relationship with a person the poet uses many dictions
throughout the poem that suggests going to war such as 'chaste, mistress, embrace, inconstancy,
adore and love'. Likewise, Tennyson's diction helps to develop the themes that war places soldiers
under extreme stress, and soldiers can fight bravely and honorably even if the result of the battle is
unsuccessful. In contrast, the word choices in Owen's poem supports the theme that war is
destructive, bitter, and violent, not the romantic efforts praised by those outside of it. Diction that
has a strong impact on Borden's poem is 'satin, ermine, chic', or words that have strong negative
connotations such as 'obscene, putrid, monstrous'. Equally important, The Diction in Borden's poem
support the theme that war is indifferent to human life. Words that display The Diction in "The Song
of the Mud" are 'cursed, sludge, haunting, trudge, blood–shod'. Whereas The tone of Lovelace's
poem is romantic and slightly playful along with Tennyson tone, which establishes a serious and
respectful tone that also acknowledges the stress and confusion of war. Unlike the tone in the first
set of poems, A great example of irony in Owen's poem is "Ecstasy" (line 9), which usually
associated with positive feelings of joy or intense
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Alfred, Lord Tennyson, A British Poet
Alfred, Lord Tennyson, a British poet was and is one of the most popular and famous poets from
Victorian era Britain. In fact he survived for basically the entirety of the era, as he was born in 1809
and died in 1892, as stated in John Maynard's Alfred , Lord Tennyson (page 4). Born into a large
family in somewhat less than adequate conditions, he found solace mostly in writing, even from a
young age. According to online–literature.com he lived with what the world now knows as
depression and was, apparently, very easily distracted, known as a notoriously absent–minded
person. These traits might have been made a bit more severe thanks to his living conditions, being
the fourth of twelve kids to his parents, who each had their own issues, most definitely including his
father. According to poetsgraves.co.uk Alfred's father, George Tennyson, suffered from a number of
illnesses, including epilepsy, alcoholism, and general mental instability. While this certainly made
life difficult for his twelve children, George tried his best to provide a good education to them,
seeing the potential in Alfred from a young age as he had shown signs of his talent from when he
was very young. George was a pastor who, likely because of his profession, had an interest in
classical and modern literature, and decided to pass this information and passion on down to his
children as best as he could. His life eventually started catching up with him, however, when in the
1820s he began to suffer many
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English IV – Unit 9: Romantic and Victorian Poetry...
English IV – Unit 9: Romantic and Victorian Poetry Project: 19th–Century Views Oral Report
William Wordsworth's poem, "Composed A Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey, On Revisiting The
Banks Of The Wye During A Tour. July 13, 1798" (also known as simply, "Tintern Abbey"), was
included in the book Lyrical Ballads, with a Few Other Poems. This was a joint effort between
himself and author Samuel Taylor Coleridge. "Tintern Abbey" remains one of Wadsworth's most
famous poems, and at its printing, the book was completely sold out in two years. The name of the
poem reflects the inspiration Wadsworth felt upon visiting the ruins of an old church called Tintern
Abbey, with his sister Dorothy. During his young adulthood, Wadsworth took numerous ... Show
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He worked on the poem from 1833 to 1850 as an elegy after the death of his dear friend, Arthur
Hallam. Tennyson is more ambiguous when talking about nature. Considering the poem is made up
of133 'sections', there are only a few instances where he specifically and clearly discusses nature
versus God and faith. Tennyson expresses his feelings that nature is careless and indiscriminate
when it comes to life....caring more for the survival of a species than the preciousness of a single
person's life, as in stanza 56 (LVI), "Are God and Nature then at strife, That Nature lends such evil
dreams? So careful of the type she seems, So careless of the single life" As he continues, he conveys
his perception that
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Thomas Hardy's 'A Trampwoman's Tragedy' and Lord Byron's...
Lord Byron 's "When we two parted" and Thomas Hardy 's "A Trampwoman 's Tragedy" have in
common a lover 's regret for love lost. However, the main narrators in these poems are very different
and the circumstances in their poems show a lot about the difference that social class and gender
make in the love lives seen in "When we two parted" and "A Trampwoman 's Tragedy". Looking at
the tone, narrator gender, and setting of these poems the reader can see how a single general theme,
regret over a lost lover, gets explored in very different ways.
Both poems are in first person narration which helps lend a higher degree of credibility to the
description of the intimate details and emotions. While the poems are in first person, the tone ...
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Whose is the child you are like to bear?–
His? After all my months o ' care? ' (59–62)
She is already pregnant by her lover and not married to him. She loves him but has not married him.
Setting plays an important role in both poems. Setting in these poems helps the reader picture and
dramatize the events happening. Lord Byron 's poem doesn 't give a specific location but does tell us
at what time of day it is: " The dew of the morning / Sunk chill on my brow–" (9–10). It tells the
reader it 's morning, so they possibly met in the early morning hours before sunrise to not be seen,
and the dew suggests that it 's spring time. Hardy 's poem changes settings several times throughout:
"From Wynyard 's Gap the livelong day, / the livelong day, / We beat afoot the northward way" (1–
3). They started on a twenty mile hike to take them to: "The inn that beamed thereby" (16). While
traveling to these small inns they would stop in a tavern, which is the main tone changing setting of
the poem: "The tavern tells the gloomy tale" (73). The tavern is where her lover kills Johnny after
her cruel joke. Once everyone has either been killed or passed away she is left to "Haunting the
Western Moor." (104) She is alone with no lover, no friends and no child in a mossy graveyard like
field to live out the rest of her days.
Both Byron 's "When we two parted" and Hardy 's "A Trampwoman 's Tragedy" are about love and
the experience
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Donne's Poetry
Write a close reading of John Donne's "The Relic". Think about what the poem is about (content),
how it is written (form and structure), and why, to what effect (the relation between form and
content). You may like to refer to Cleanth Brooks' essay, "The Formalists," for inspiration.
This essay will look at the form, structure and content of "The Relic" in an attempt to offer an
explanation as to what the poem is about. It will examine the metaphysical poets, and discuss the
techniques employed by them to express their views. "The Relic" consists of three 11–line stanzas
which incorporate tetrameter (four metrical feet), pentameter (five metrical feet) and two tri–meter
(three metrical feet) lines per stanza. It is written ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This telescoping of images and multiplied associations [...] is one of the sources of the vitality of
their language. (p 1099) If we look again at line 8 of "The Relic", it is noticeable that the
gravedigger would only 'think that there a loving couple lies,' (l.8). It would be logical to assume
that a husband would be buried with his wife, so the use of 'think' (l.8) is puzzling. By following this
with the apparently polysemous 'lies,' (l.8) the poem could be read differently, altering the entire
meaning to suggest that their love was only a fantasy. Another characteristic of metaphysical poetry
is its tendency to use religious imagery to express its views. Towards the end of the first stanza,
"The Relic" introduces the concept of 'their souls, at the last busy day,' (l.10). This has been
interpreted as a veiled reference to judgement day and leads the reader smoothly into the second
stanza where the images of death are replaced with a high lexical density of religious vocabulary.
Donne uses lexis such as 'mis–devotion' and 'doth command' (l.13); 'Bishop' (l.15); 'relics' (l.16);
'Mary Magdalen' (l.17); and 'miracles' (ll.20–22) in order to extend the religious metaphor,
introduced at the end of the first stanza, to evoke powerful images in the mind of the reader. Donne
raises the question, in line 17,
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Empathic Imagery In Keats And Wordsworth
The figure of Wordsworth in an arrogant standing posture must have become a fixture in Keats's
mind. In the "Camelion Poet" letter written about eight months after "On Edmund Kean,"
Wordsworth once again appears in a standing posture: in what has become a staple of a formula of
Wordsworth criticism, namely "the Wordsworthian or egotistical sublime," Keats gives the
definition of a thing per se and stands alone.(387) In "Edmund Kean," Keats mentions Wordsworth
by name with the immediate follow–up of from all his comrades he stands alone and his standing
alone–ness is seen more in the light of the arrogance of one who is totally self–absorbed. Also in
Keats's choice of words there is cunning, even playful, tone of mockery. Keats makes an allusion ...
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In the "Chamber of Maiden–Thought" letter of May 3, 1818, Keats still looks upon Wordsworth as
the measure against which to measure other modern poets, which even includes Milton. Yet the
same letter also shows that he is ready to pit himself against Wordsworth. His branching out in
thought makes him consider Wordsworth "whether or no he has an extended vision or a
circumscribed grandeur whether he is an eagle in his nest or on the wing" (124). Then he goes to
launch his famous reflection on life as a "Mansion of Many Apartment"; and at the end of it he
writes how it "shows you how tall I stand by the giant," which is Wordsworth
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Compare-Contrast Critical Analysis Essay
Savanah Saunders
ENGL102
Jason Sebacher
March 5, 2014
Essentially I feel that each poem in its own "Funeral Blues" (W. H. Auden), "Death, be not proud"
(John Donne), and "Because I could not stop for Death" (Emily Dickinson) are unique in their own
way however, I feel that two poems in particular may show more similarity in each other versus all
three being compared at once although, I will be comparing and contrasting all three poems towards
the end of this essay. For example, When reading "Funeral Blues" (W. H. Auden), I felt a greater
sense of similarity to "Because I could not stop for death" (Emily Dickinson) versus "Death, be not
proud" (John Donne) so I will begin to discuss those poems first. When comparing each poem I will
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Auden's tone toward death is saddened, gloomy, and emotional while Dickinson's tone is more
relaxed, understanding, and accepting of death. Vocabulary is another difference between the two
poems. The vocabulary choice in "Funeral Blues" is overall simple with the exception of a couple
words for example, when Auden wrote, "Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun." Each word
written in this line is simple except dismantle. Instead of simply writing "take down the sun" the
author chose to use "dismantle" making the poem more creative. Throughout "Because I could not
stop for death" a choice of intellectual vocabulary words was used by Dickinson. She wrote, "The
dews grew quivering and chill, for only gossamer my gown." Instead of simply writing, "The night
grew cold, for I only wore a sheer gown" Dickinson decides to use more vivid vocabulary. When
comparing "Death, be not proud" (John Donne) the most comparable poem was "Because I could
not stop for death" (Emily Dickinson). These poems were obviously similar in using death as the
topic however; they were also similar in their attitude toward death. Donne expresses that death isn't
as powerful as it thinks it is. Donne is saying that although Death (referring to death as a person)
thinks he's something special, because he has the power to take life, really, he's not. Death isn't
special because he must take everyone whether they're kings or just regular men. So that means he's
really a slave to every
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Langston Hughes Theme For English B Summary
Langston Hughes was one of the most prominent American poets of the 20th century and the most
recognizable poet to have indited during the soi–disant Harlem Renaissance of the 1910s and '20s.
"Theme for English B" is without a doubt one of Langston Hughes's most famous, beloved, and
anthologized poems. He indited it in 1951, the evening of his vocation, and it addresses one of his
most ubiquitous themes – the American Dream. Thematically, "Theme for English B" resembles
"American Heartbreak" and "Let America Be America Again." The poem is indited in free verse and
lacks a systematic form or meter; its language is simple and casual, and it flows in a stream–of–
consciousness style.
The poem "Theme for English B" by Langston Hughes depicts an ebony adolescent adult who is
endeavoring to decipher what is true in his life via an English assignment. As the only ebony man in
his college English class, the verbalizer is not sure whether to take on the persona of a typical
English student, regardless of race, or to stay true to his heritage and culture. The structure of this
poem conveys a struggle for identity and truth in an expeditious–paced world whose conceptions are
fluctuating.
Through this poem, Langston Hughes asserts that there are multiple types of Americans, and there is
no singular defining "American" experience. Ebony, white, puerile, old, oppressed, free – all can
strive for a piece of the American Dream. This poem is thus much more optimistic than some of
Hughes's
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How Is Imagery Used In The Renaissance
Imagery during the English Renaissance was used by cavalier and metaphysical poets in order to
portray their message, communicate easily to the readers, and reveal their personal lives and
opinions through word choice and figurative language. Imagery was used by poets like Ben Jonson,
George Herbert, and John Milton in order to convey complex messages through the comparison of
spirituality and the physical world in a way that everyday people could relate to and understand.
The cavalier poets came from the subservient class of the 17th century, who lived under the rule of
King Charles I–– a monarch known for his enforcement of the creation and appreciation of art.
Written in short, straight–to–the–point verses, cavalier poetry was casual and focused on witty
commentary, eroticism, and the beauty of love and courtship. With this came straight forward and
somewhat unequivocal imagery. One famous poet of this time was Ben Jonson. Jonson lived a
simplistic life ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The poets spoken about, Ben Jonson the cavalier poet, George Herbert the metaphysical poet, and
John Milton the writer of Paradise Lost, all were made famous for their unique use of imagery. Their
distinct writing styles allowed everyday people to interpret and relate to their literary works.
Imagery is essential is creating a poetic cognate for people of all nationalities, races, ages, and more,
because it relates even the most intricate of ideas to objects or experiences that every individual has
witnessed in their own lives. Visual perception and other physical senses of the body are the key to
one's memories and thoughts, and imagery can be used beautifully if it properly takes advantage of
these intimate components of one's being. In conclusion, imagery if used properly can create an
incredible reading
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The Philosophical Evolution Of Metaphysics Essay
The Philosophical Evolution of Metaphysics: The Influence of Metaphysics on Poets and How It
Pertains to Today Society.
Imagine, the year is 2150 and a student is sitting at her desk looking within at latest technology, she
thinks about lost poets that history books have shunned for the significance of more famous poets.
As a child in modern society, the importance of lesser known poets, such as Thomas Traherne and
George Herbert, are considered valuable for their philosophical influence in poetry. Over the course
of time literature has become a melting pot of ideas borrowed from other poets and literary works,
which are coagulated into one another to make a new idea. People in modern society need to
understand the importance of remembrance in the similarities in the backgrounds, metaphysical
influences, and written works of Thomas Traherne and George Herbert.
It is astonishing how both poets have similar upbringings with almost a 100–year gap between them.
The background of Thomas Traherne presented by Richard Firth has stated that "Thomas Traherne
was born within the wall of Hereford City in 1637 (page 1)." At the age of five, the British Civil
War marched into his town where they beheaded King Charles I. Later that year, Treharne left to
attend the Hereford Cathedral School. After graduation, he then attended Brasenose College in
Oxford, earning his BA (Bachelor of the Arts) in 1656. During the years of 1657–1660, he wrote his
first complete work titled, Select
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Rising Sun and Death be not Proud by John Donne Essay
In this essay I will mainly focus on two poems written by John Donne, The Rising Sun and Death be
not proud. These poems were written during the Elizabethan era, which was an era mainly
characterized by love and colonialism, on separate terms of course. These principles often
influenced poets who lived during this period. Their poetry acts as testimonies of their underlying
thoughts and desires. Furthermore, metaphysical poets deliver a more divine and profound
perspective to their poetry. Within their conceits, they manage to engage and delight themselves in
deeper movements. This essay will further discuss how John Donne used death and the sun to his
disposal. I will also critically analyse the two poems as well grasp on external aspects ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Eternal life thus defeats death and throughout the poem, John's strong background of Christianity
allows him to associate death with temporary entities as he refers to death as a state of "much
pleasure" (7). Death is conceptualized as a phase rather than an element which represents finality.
Death is personified and therefore has no greater power over human beings. Death losses its fearful
connotation and achieves a new meaning that makes it less intimidating and less powerful. The
central theme, introduced quite early within the poem, is the helplessness of death. Throughout the
poem the speaker belittles death and approaches it with such bravery and poise. Donne confronts
death by saying it is not in any regard "mighty and dreadful" (2), but rather brings "much pleasure"
(7). Death is personified in the poem, and in this regard, possess no greater power over man. The
speaker of the poem is Donne himself. He uses his literary tools of rhetoric and poetic devices to
belittle death. Throughout the poem, the speaker comes across as being slightly arrogant, but he
refuses to show weakness. His arrogance shows that he is not afraid of death as he demands death
not to be proud. Donne takes the association of death and sleep, and reinvents this comparison to a
greater effect. He describes sleep as being "pictures" (5) of death and death is no more different or
more frightening. He extends this metaphor throughout the poem. In the second last line of the poem
he
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
What Is The Conflict Of The Victorian Age
He Victorian age experienced a conflict between science and religion. The era found its orthodoxy
battered by movements of thoughts, like Positivism, Empiricism, Utilitarianism, Rationalism,
Liberalism and Marxism which assailed all honest minds with scepticism. There was the new
Biblical criticism and a spurt of scientific progress. They led the generation to secularization,
agnosticism, atheism and religious passivity.
Mostly, the writers of the age revolted against the deification of material progress. The poets were
perhaps the best interpreters of the age (Brett 18). They illustrated in their poems the religious
temper, its faith, doubts and conflicts of their time. The age these poets inherited was rather a fluid
transitional one. The dilemma of the age assaulted the poets very deeply ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
He was the embodiment of the best of England's greatest poets: "the dreaminess of Spenser, the
majesty of Milton, the natural simplicity of Wordsworth, the fantasy of Blake and Coleridge, the
melody of Keats and Shelley, the narrative vigour of Scott and Byron" (Hudson 162–163). What he
lacked was the dramatic power of the Elizabethans. Tennyson was the most representative poet of
the Victorian era (Joseph 305).
The progress of science had greatly influenced the temper of the age. Tennyson was conversant with
the concepts of geology, astrology and evolution, which contested and undermined the Biblical
beliefs, evoking crisis in faith. He was at once mystical and sceptical in his own temper, and so was
fit to become the spokesperson of the doubts and unbelief, and the quest for religious certainties of
his age (Kalla 118). His attitude was one of compromise and he propounded a via media between
materialistic science and dogmatic Christianity (Rockett
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Fate In Paradise Lost Essay
Defined by the Oxford Dictionary, fate is "The development of events outside a person's control,
regarded as predetermined by a supernatural power." Many authors, whether or not they closely
follow Christian faith, play with the idea that fate or a divine being has a lot to do with their place
and ultimately their experience in the world. Revered poets from Milton to Johnson explored the
idea that a supernatural being had a say in their day to day lives, and they often recounted this in
their works. John Milton is perhaps the most uniquely connected author to the divine. Milton
authored the epic Paradise Lost, which is one of the most intricate and religious pieces of work that
was studied during the course of the semester. What is interesting about Milton that one might not
expect is that even though he was a deeply religious man, he had a deeply rooted hatred towards the
Catholic and institutionalized church. Because of this hatred, he was often dubbed "the church of
one." His connection to religion is so deeply rooted in his work that often the pictures of the creation
story that we have in our heads are Miltonic in nature, and more from Paradise Lost rather than from
the biblical text. While Milton does not write about "fate" in context with himself, he does mention
quite often in Paradise Lost that Satan and his demons are fated to be the enemies of God, and it is
something that they have no control over. This can be seen in line 197–198 in book II which reads
"By my advice; since fate inevitable subdues us..." John Donne was also a very religious man with a
unique past. Donne did not become truly focused on the divine until he was much older, after very
wild adventures as a young man. While he was young, he was very much focused on physical
relationships and having fun, and his poetry very much reflected that. When he grew older, he
rediscovered and fully focused on his faith, going on to write the holy sonnets. The holy sonnets
were written entirely to or about God, and were much more professional and somber than his earlier
works. Donne referenced fate often, most famously in the revered sonnet #10 "Death be not Proud."
On line 9, Donne says "Thou art slave to fate..."
On the other hand, Samuel Johnson
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis of Donne's The Bait and Marlowe's Passionate...
Love, an extremely and unsurprisingly popular topic among writers in every time period and corner
of the world, is the central subject of two similar, yet contradicting literary works – "The Passionate
Shepard to His Love" by Christopher Marlowe and "The Bait" by John Donne, respectively. Each
author masterfully utilizes imagery, but in different ways to achieve two different purposes.
Marlowe's idealistic vision of what love should be is countered by Donne's rather cynical realism.
Both works begin with an identical first line that is followed by a line that Donne alters from
Marlowe's original line. The change seems subtle yet it contains thematically significant meaning.
Marlowe's second line reads "...and we will all the pleasures ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
Imagery is another means by which theme is portrayed. Both authors utilize images related to nature
that highlight its special and specific aspects that aid their own personal, respective 'arguments'.
Marlowe utilizes figures of beauty, flowers, opposed to Donne's metaphorical symbolism of a
stream alive with fish – competition. Marlowe creates a picturesque paradise filled with "...beds of
roses", yet again fails to identify the flaws associated with beauty. Just as marriage can spawn
conflicts and create internal turmoil and unrest, underneath the bed of roses lay thorns. Also, from
hearing Marlowe's inflated descriptions one might think the Shepherd actually lives in the Garden of
Eden. Alas, nothing is perfect, not even Adam and Eve creatures God (perfect?) himself created.
Marlowe's vivid depictions of nature are not necessarily inaccurate, but rather one–dimensional and
possibly biased. Donne's illustration of a stream inhabited by fish is one of similar natural
derivation, yet better portrays the struggles and competition nature creates. Every fish seems to be
working toward the common goal of the whole, yet only a limited number can physically achieve
this goal. Those who outlast the "angling reeds" and "shells and weeds", the elite, will be rewarded.
This success requires the utmost degree of focus, resilience and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Summary Of Easter Wings And Easter Wings

  • 1. Summary Of Easter Wings And Easter Wings To His Coy Mistress by Marvell, Death Be Not Proud by Donne, and Easter Wings by Herbert are poems that have similar and different aspects to each other. For instance, Easter Wings and Death Be Not Proud are similar because both refer to God, as well as life or death. To His Coy Mistress has no relationship to God, but has a relationship between love and lust. However, To His Coy Mistress is similar to Death Be Not Proud due to the mention of death or dying in each poem. Easter Wings and Death Be Not Proud have main ideas that evolve around God, and also evolve around the concepts of life or death. When Donne started off his poem, he wrote, "Death be not proud, though some have called thee." (Donne, 1). In the line mentioned, Donne states that death is dreadful, but later contradicts this line by saying later in his poem that others consider death an escape. He shows this contradiction by writing: Must pleasure, then from thee, much more must flow, And soonest our best men with thee doe goe (Donne, 6–7) Donne specifically focused on the aspect of death, while on the other end, Herbert specifically focused on the aspect of life in his poem, Easter Wings. Easter Wings primarily focuses on the resurrection, hence the first work of Herbert's poem. Easter, for most religions, have focused on the resurrection and re–birth of Jesus. Therefore, the title of the poem automatically foreshadows on what his poem is about and what his poem was inspired by. In ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Similarities Between Hopkins And Jennings And Auden's Poetry Auden loved to write about friendship in all its variations. His poems very often dealt with people who were still alive. –– "Auden... wrote poems in praise of friends who were alive and he rejoiced in their vitality"(Bold 9).Similarly to him Jennings also likes to write about people who are important to her .Another similarity is that, like Auden, Elizabeth Jennings looks for order in her poetry. Auden also sought for order in both his life and art. Auden was an innovative and influential poet. During his lifetime he tried to write in every possible poetic form. His importance to poetry is so great that his influence, like Eliot's has become almost a subconscious one. It is his choice of words and the particular care with language that had an ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He was knighted in 1979. He started to publish his first poems during the thirties. "They were the poems of an extremely clever young man, but they were more than this, they were also passionate and profoundly personal. They were, however, difficult poems, not because they were sprawling or incoherent but because Empson ransacked all his hearing and reading to find images that would express accurately his own states of mind and feeling."(Jennings 95) Empson's poetry "is as complex as his critical theories demanded it should be: a modern counterpart of metaphysical poetry in its use of scientific conceits and cerebral puzzles."(Ousby ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. What Is The Mersey Sound Poem "The Mersey Sound – Adrian Henri, Roger McGough & Brian Patten" by Jesús Milla Cabrera Table of contents 1. Introduction 2. Setting the scene (Suburban poetry) 2.1. Liverpool: pop poetry 3. Adrian Henri 3.1. Biographical notes 3.2. Main works 3.3. Style and influences 3.4. "Love is..." 4. Roger McGough 4.1. Biographical notes 4.2. Main works 4.3. "Let Me Die a Youngman's Death" 5. Brian Patten 5.1. Biographical notes 5.2. Main works 5.3. "Little Johnny's Confession" 6. Personal conclusion 7. Bibliography 1. Introduction When I heard about an anthology written by Liverpool poets, I immediately decided to write this paper about it. I have been in love with the pop music and The Beatles since I was a young teenager. That is the reason ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Love has been called "you" and "me" referring to the two lovers (line 17). Personification of love has given it a significant presence. Love makes a lover feel imprisoned in the jail of love (line 18). In other words, love keeps you go back to your lover again and again. Even when the two lovers are physically separated from each other, they can feel the presence of love in their lives (line 19). The feeling of love is so great that it doesn't know any bounds. It transcends all boundaries of physical existence and makes the person feel the presence of their beloved even they are not close to them. Bibliography Henri, Adrian, Roger McGough, and Brian Patten. The Mersey Sound. London: Penguin Books,
  • 4. 2007 [1967] Medina Casado, Carmelo. Poetas Ingleses Del Siglo XX. Madrid: Sintesis, 2007 Wade, Stephen. Gladsongs and Gatherings: Poetry and Its Social Context in Liverpool Since the 1960s. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2001 Further bibliography Charu B. "Summary of "Love Is..." by Adrian Henri." World's Largest Collection of Essays! Published by Experts. 2012. Web: 5 Nov ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Samuel Taylor Coleridge: English Poet Essay Over the years great writers have influenced literature in many ways from Shakespeare to Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Coleridge was a groundbreaking poet whose idea of poetry remains the standard by which others in English are tried. He was notably responsible for new German demanding philosophy. His talks about imagination remain the component of institutional criticism. All the while his infrequent notations on language helped develop Cambridge English in the 1920s. He is described as a literary critic, psychologist of the imagination, a crucial theologian, and conservative social philosopher. Coleridge's poems and other works placed him in a high spot among major critics in literature. His early life helped shape who he became as an ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Coleridge's marriage was unhappy and he spent much of it apart from his wife. During that period, Coleridge and Southey collaborated on a play titled The Fall of Robespierre in 1795 (Poets 1). Coleridge dealt with depression and needed something to help take away his nervousness and stress. He turned to opium and Laudanum. Laudanum is a mixture of opium and alcohol. This was the source of Coleridge's literary genius. But this also led to many of his downfalls (The Last Romantics 1). Coleridge became addicted to opium while trying to treat his rheumatism and neuralgic disorders. He actually came up with one of his greatest poems, Kubla Khan, while on the drug (European Graduate School 1). In many ways, the merit of Coleridge as a thinker and most apparently as a poet is to have opposed against the dullness and literature of his time. His work is inspired by a clear and refreshing appreciation for nature (European Graduate School 1). Coleridge spent the next few years beginning his career as a writer. He never returned to Cambridge to finish his degree. He then devoted himself to poetry and the study of ethics, becoming observant one of his favorite philosophers, David Hartley, that he named his first child after him. In 1796 he published his first volume of poetry, Poems on Various Subjects (Poets 1). Coleridge, whose early work was celebratory and conventional, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. English Poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning Life has many ups and downs; all of which form obstacles that shape us into what we're destined to be. For instance, the prestigious an eminent English poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning firsthand experienced this. For example she faced illness, wrong and right in both political and religious views, most of all infatuation for another. As a result, of the occurrences faced she had real context towards her literary work. The prosperous woman was never acquainted with poverty. Since the beginning she was born into a prestigious home eldest of 12 children. Wealth based on the hard work and sweat of slaves on her father's sugar plantation. All of which contradicted with the statement "freely, as men strive for Right"(line 7). The capitalized "R" in right indicated the amount of significance and her strong beliefs opposing slavery. In addition, taking into consideration that Elizabeth was homeschooled "she was something of a child prodigy" (Kim 86) even so. Furthermore, she kept her "childhood's faith" even with her "lost saints" (line 10–12). With in regards to Elizabeth's sufferings her favorite brother Edward's tragic drowning sending her into a dark abyss as a result. Therefore, she ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For she had praised him in one of her poems. Thus, was the start of their written love. 574 letters were written and were transacted back and forth. Robert being the first whom transferred "his love for her poetry into love for her" (Evans 88) reached out to share his confession through a letter. It has been said actions speak louder than words, however, this was not one of those cases. For example, in "Sonnet 43" Elizabeth continually used the phrase "I love thee" the intense immensity of her infatuation could not alone be read but be felt, some were even touched. Furthermore, her love was "to the depth and breadth and height" in short to infinity and beyond was the amount her love for Robert ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. My Ideal Love When asked the question, what is my ideal of love, it makes me think what do I think love is? Love is something we do not think about, and it is an act we carry out. We go on throughout our days to be told to love on all, or love others like you love yourself, and that is what got me thinking for my ideal of love is first what does it mean to love myself? To love others one must love themselves and that lead me to my poems that I have chosen. The poems that accurately express my ideal of love are Elizabeth Barrett Browning's "How do I Love Thee? Let me count the ways" and "If" by Rudyard Kipling. The reason why I picked these poems is because it describes my thinking of love. The poem by Elizabeth Browning asks the question about love and that is my way of thinking because I am still trying to figure that out. Then the main point that it says in the poem that is my ideal level of love is "I love thee with the breath, Smiles, Tears, of all my life!"(Elizabeth Browning, Sonnet 43), when thinking of love that is what I think of. Love is not something difficult that we have to overthink and over complicate, love is simply "Loving" others and yourself. Love is whatever you make of it whether that is doing good deeds for others or caring for them or showing them some gratitude with gifts, it does not need to be broken down it is something we can act out without thinking about it. The other poem "If" talks about loving yourself, and learning about yourself. It is important for us ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. Meaning Of Metaphysical Poetry INTRODUCTION– The word meta means ' after' and so in simple terms , metaphysical means ' after physical'. Metaphysics cover a wide range of topics from religious to consciousness. It is all about exploration and philosophy. Samuel Johnson first coined the term ' metaphysical poetry' in his book lives of the most eminent English poets. Metaphysical poetry can be divided broadly in two parts. They are– love poems and religious poems. The habit of writing both these type of poetry is derived from John Donne , who in his first phase of life wrote love poems in during his later life wrote religious poems. The metaphysical poets are known for their ability to surprise the reader with the help of conceit, paradoxical images, colloquial language, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For example in the poem, "The definition of love", the poet makes a series of paradoxical assertions that pose a riddle. It invites the reader to identify the nature of the love of which its speaks. The early stanza suggest love for god. The second half is related to love between man and woman. We can also see allegory in Marvell's poetry. One such example is " Bermudas". Bermuda is an allegorical poem of forty iambic tetrameters rhyming in couplets. The poem is in 3 parts– a four line introduction describing a small boat; a central section of 32 lines consisting of the song sung by the sailors on the boat , in which the Bermudas are represented as an earthly eden and again a four line conclusion. Bermuda is an island in the West Indies. They were often referred to as earthly paradise in the early seventeenth century. Again the image from the small boat to the song plays with two traditions. A) In Homer's Odyssey , Odysseus is advised that if he wishes to sail past the sirens safely he must plug his men's ears with the help of wax and have himself tied to the mast so that he is not seduced by the charm of their choices. B) In Petrarchan lyrics, a man's life is often likened to a ship sailing through storms until he can reach the harbor the love of his mistress ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. An Analysis Of Alfred Lord Tennyson 's ' An Athlete Dying... Research Paper Alfred Lord Tennyson was one of the most prolific poets throughout the whole Victorian era. A.E Housman is one of the most significant poets from the Modern era. Both of these magnificent authors lived distinct lives. Housman wrote "To an Athlete Dying Young" and Tennyson wrote "Break, Break, Break." Both of these poems deal with the tragedy of death in different perspectives. Housman was born in Worcestershire, England on March 26, 1859.At such a young age of 12 years old he lost his mother due to the horrific illness of cancer. Housman is the oldest son from seven children. In 1877, he attended St. John's College, and after this completion he spent the next 11 years of his life as a clerk for the Patent Office. His first ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Alfred Lord Tennyson was born on August 6, 1809 in Somersby, United Kingdom. His father was a director for the church, and he earned an income that was well for the family. His siblings and him were brought up and raised with books and with writing. At eight years old Tennyson had already began writing poems, Although Tennyson was raised with his family he did not have the "happy" family experience that one would want. Tennyson's father known to be an alcoholic and he would also frequently use drugs. Due to these habits that his father high he would enact in physical abuse throughout the family. In the year 1827, Tennyson attended Trinity College in Cambridge England. He was not the only one from his family who attended this college, he had two older brothers that also attended with him. While he was attending school he met a guy named Arthur Hallam. Hallam was considered as his best friend. Both men joined a group or community and they were called the "Apostles." Tennyson did not get to finish his degree in college due to the passing of his father in 1831. Even though, he left the university Tennyson still made an effort to maintain a close friendship with Hallam. In fact, Hallam was fell in love with Emily the sister of Tennyson. He was often encouraged to find a different career or to join in the church, but Tennyson was determined to stick to what he was good at and that was poetry. Hallam unexpectedly passed away due to a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Mary Sidney Herbert Legacy The Life and Legacy of Mary Sidney Herbert Who is this woman among women, from a point in history where women should be remain silent? From Mary's youth through– out adult–hood, what circumstances in her life, motivated her to develop a strong will and determination against all odds? Join me as I journey into the life of Mary Sidney Herbert to see how life experiences molded her into one the greatest writers and authors of British Literature in the late 1500– 1600s. Mary Sidney Herbert is "the daughter of Sir Henry Sidney and Mary Dudley. She was born at Tickenhall near Bewdley, Worcestershire, on the Welsh border, October 27th,1561." She had three brothers: Phillip, Robert and Thomas and one younger sister Ambrosia, approximately fourteen years later,1575, Ambrosia dies. This would be traumatic experience for any young person. Mary and Ambrosia received "training in Latin French and Italian language and literature as well as more" feminine subjects such as needle work, playing the lute and singing whereas their brothers were sent to a university. Queen Elizabeth invites the Sidney's to send Mary to the court with a promise of exceptional care "away from the unpleasant air of wales." Secondly, by the age of fifteen, two years later from being with the queen, she became "the third wife of Henry Herbert, Earl of Pembroke," He was known as "one of the richest men in England," he was also associated with her father and uncle. This would be a huge task placed upon a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. The Metaphysical And Victorian Concept Of Love Essay The Metaphysical and Victorian concept of love is as diverse as it can be particularly comparing the intense love shown in 'Porphyria 's Lover ' by Robert Browning with the playful love in nature in 'To His Coy Mistress ' by Andrew Marvell. Love has multiple definitions and it has so far remained among the most complex subject that require a single particular definition to define its meaning. Plato once said "At the touch of love everyone becomes a poet" and that 's why may be we have so many diverse poetry on the subject of love with so many different definitions of love that are available. Shakespeare wrote in his Sonnet 116 defining love, "Love is not love which alters when alteration finds, or bends with the remover to remove", talking about the passion and loyalty, a belief unassailable, "That look on tempests and is never shaken". Such intensity that Shakespeare shows and the partial playful nature that Plato hints has the possibilities for influencing a writer to produce unique individual thoughts, with different approach and equally persuading in nature. The term metaphysical poets was coined by the critic Samuel Johnson to describe a loose group of 17th–century English poets whose work was characterized by the inventive use of conceits, and by a greater emphasis on the spoken rather than lyrical quality of their verse. These poets were not formally affiliated and few were highly regarded until 20th century attention established their importance. Given the lack ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Using Animals Symbolically by Using Poetic Devices Essay Using Animals Symbolically by Using Poetic Devices I will be discussing the ways in which the poets use animals symbolically by using poetic devices. The three poems that I have chosen are "The Tyger" by William Blake, "The Eagle" by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. Lastly, Pied Beauty by Gerard Manley Hopkins. Alfred Lord Tennyson has used an image of an eagle to give the reader an image of a man standing on a cliff top waiting for his world to fall around him. He is in a desolate area; there is no society near him "ringed with the azure world. He stands". He watches the sea pass lower than him his world collapses beneath him n he falls. "And like a thunderbolt he falls" The sun has symbolized God. And his closeness to the eagle. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... However, the poem is trying to tell us that the eagle is standing "close to the sun in lonely lands" and that the enormous sea is beneath him. These are the ways that the poet has used the eagle symbolically and to illustrate his strength and power standing high in the sky. "Tyger! Tyger! Burning bright" This is an example from "The Tyger" Metaphors of fire and blazing are emphasize by duplication of the "B" sound. The "B" sound makes it stronger and powerful to use. My second choice is "Pied Beauty". Gerard Manley Hopkins who was born in 1844 wrote this poem. The poem is tells us about all the different creatures that God has shaped. Explaining how for many belongings in nature there is a contradictory. He is also telling the reader that we should be thankful towards it and the entire God gifted. In the poem, there are uses of some oxymoron's by using them it shows the different extremes that exist within nature. This is similar to the Tyger. In addition, that shows the readers that to keep the balance on the planet God has created an opposite. "Adazzle, dim". "With swift, slow; sweet, sour"
  • 13. He uses animals as one of God's gift for our nature and used them symbolically for the exquisiteness of the planet. My third choice of poem is "The Tyger" written by William Blake. This poem shows the evilness of the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Summary Of Christopher Marlowe's View On Nature Throughout Christopher Marlowe, Sir Walter Raleigh, and William Carlos Williams poems, structure and imagery were used as a way for all three writers to get their view of nature across to the audience. Both Raleigh and Williams used their perspectives and views on nature in a negative way while Marlowe used his views on nature in a positive way as a form of portraying how he feels about his lover to his audience. Although all three men have their different ways on how they each use structure and imagery to get their points across, they all used imagery to get their perspective on nature across but for different reasons. Marlowe had a very positive view on nature and his surroundings in regards to how beautiful and full of life it was. Marlowe conveys his feelings toward nature through his use of imagery and the structure of his poem. Structure is used throughout the body of Marlowe's poem which was created by six stanzas. Furthermore, Marlowe's structure also consists of stressed and unstressed syllables which are emphasized in the first stanza "Come live with me and be my love, And we will all the pleasures prove That valleys, groves, hills, and fields, Woods, or steepy mountain yields.". In the first stanza, Marlowe used stressed and unstressed syllables as a form of emphasising words like live, me, be, and love in order for him to be able to get his point across to his lover. Furthermore, Marlowe also suggested to the use of imagery within his poem by using words or ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. The Tradition Of War Poetry Essay The Tradition Of War Poetry By comparing and contrasting a selection of war poems consider the ways in which attitudes to war have been explored and expressed. When considering poetry written post 1900 concentrate on a selection of poems written by Wilfred Owen. Humans have turned to poetry in many different instances as a way of expressing them selves, using the best combination of words, in the best order to express exactly how they are feeling at that moment. Poetry is one of the most powerful means of communication that uses words very sparingly, and often defines the era in which the poet lived and died. I think that is why many poems are written about war, as anyone who was involved in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He also uses strong metaphors to describe how the men should fight in the battle, such as "imitate the action of the tiger." This line prepares the troops psychology as well as physically by saying that they should be strong, courageous and fierce like the animal. The poem is also very patriotic, and talks of how the men should not disgrace their mothers or ancestors. Like the poem 'The Soldier' by Rupert Brooke, it presents the idea that dying for your country would be a good, brave thing to do and is in a way a sense of duty towards their mother England. This poem is not wholly positive or negative. It gives war a good image by making it sound courageous and noble but it also expresses some horrific images such as, "Or close the wall with our English dead." I think that the last line of the poem, "Cry, God for Harry, England and Saint George." sums up the overall message of the poem by ending in a strong religious line, using a group of 3 to make the speech effective, and emphasising the fact that their cause is a righteous one. Although 'The Charge Of The Light Brigade' does put much importance on the idea of how brave and courageous the men fighting were it also creates a different message compared to 'The Battle Of Harfleur' from Henry V. I think what Alfred Tennyson was trying to do in this poem was to convey and explain what mistakes ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. 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 ...
  • 17. The Concept Of Love : The Love Of True Love Some of the most renowned sonneteers express their love for another person in terms of the magnitude of that person's beauty, especially during the Elizabethan era. But, the most powerful form of love is loving someone for who they are instead of what they look like. Loving someone for love's sake allows love to last a lifetime because love is true and the truth does not change. This differs from loving someone for physical features in which both the love of looks and the beauty fade with time. While in the moment it may be charming to be characterized by eternal beauty, as William Shakespeare does in Sonnet 18, being loved for the real feeling of being loved is more lovely where true love does not fade like the love for physical features. The truth of true love is evident in Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Sonnet 14 where she insinuates that the failure to love someone for only love's sake reveals the love as being superficial. True love should be something that is not only contained in human nature or characteristics but should be something beyond humanity that is eternal. Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Sonnet 14 dismisses the love of physical features that William Shakespeare's Sonnet 18 prides on in order to illustrate that true love is unearthly, unchanging, and eternal. Shakespeare and Browning both use the concept of eternity in their sonnets. Both sonnets use the concept of eternity to express the undying beauty of a person to whom the speaker is speaking to in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Compare and contrast Daffodils and Loveliest of Trees Alveria Pickett Linda Layfield Enc 1102–03 14 November 2013 COMPARE AND CONTRAST Comparing William Wordsworth and A.E. Housman views on nature although Wordsworth and Housman are great poets they describe nature in different ways. In order to imply a connection between nature and the human mind, Wordsworth uses the technique of identification and comparison whereas A.E. Housman does the opposite in "Loveliest of Trees". Wordsworth has beliefs about man's relationship face with nature and believes that nature is a teacher and nurtures you. In "Daffodils" the speaker reminisces about a past experience in which he seen a multitudes of "Daffodils" swaying in the breeze. As he recollects this scene, the speaker gradually realizes ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The trees itself stands wearing white referring to a celebration. He refers to woodland of Eastertide. He creates a simile between the tree as he refer to his life. In "Daffodils", the poet begins great creativity. "I wandered lonely as a cloud" (Line1). A Simile comparing himself to a cloud, making him view nature. The comparison to the cloud is similar to floating freely in darkness actually at the same time. Imagery takes place when the poet states, "A host of golden ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. A Lecture On Chatterton, Oscar Wilde 's Career At the time he delivered his lecture on Chatterton, Oscar Wilde's career was transforming. He was transitioning from the performances he had honed during four solid years of addressing countless audiences and was developing, with greater energy than ever before, his profile as an accomplished author, critic, and editor. His discovery of Chatterton stands at the center of these changes. Paying close attention to Chatterton enabled Wilde to understand that the astonishing inventiveness of the Rowley forgeries evinced the imaginative impulse that inspired the finest forms of imaginative literature. Exploiting the links between imagination, authenticity, and truth, Chatterton's artistic originality arose in fabrications that conjured a literary past that historically never existed. Such fakes, Wilde knew from his reading about Chatterton, might strike some interpreters as the result of ungovernable, if not immoral, impulses. In the critical essays and shorter fiction that Wilde wrote from the mid–1880s onward, he radically inverted such interpretations. Throughout these essays, shorter fiction, and dramas, generous artistic license, lying, and even criminal intent become–as we explain in later chapters–the foundation for great art. Understanding Chatterton's artistry not only informed Wilde's creative work; it also shaped his knowledge of the Romantic poets, whose works he had long admired. If Wilde's interest in Keats and Shelley stemmed from his university days, through ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. English Writer And Poet Gilbert K. Chesterton English writer and poet Gilbert K. Chesterton once stated that," You cannot love a thing without wanting to fight for it." Because true love, the passion that binds two people, is something that renews itself and is never diminished. It neither deteriorates nor does it die. Rather both bliss and hardship, distance and nearness, pleasure and pain, form the foundation for which love sits upon. Love, like steel, is tempered by the flames of adversity and as a result it is made stronger by its heat. Love is so deeply rooted and critical to humanity because in love there is stability, compassion, and comfort. In love people give a part of their heart, their soul, their own passion, to another. In a world of loneliness, uncertainty and danger, love is a constant worth fighting for. Moreover, love that one choses to not fight for does not deserve to be called true love. It can be lust, passion, or endearment but never love because the gift of love is sacred. It is selfless, mutual, and permanent. It is true. The Mu`allaqat of 'Antara is one such example of love that is true. This story mirrors that of the classical Shakespearean tragedy Romeo and Juliet, where love blossoms amidst two warring houses. The hero of this ode quite literally fights on the battlefield for his lover. The devotion of the man's love can be seen by how eloquently he describes his feelings for her. He states, "She takes your heart with the flash edge of her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. John Donne John Donne is the name in English Literature who gave new direction to the literary activities of his age. He is in a sense founded the metaphysical lyric, which was practiced by scare of writers. As Dowden says, "We are told that in the decline of the greater poetry of the Elizabethan period, a metaphysical school arose and that John Donne was the founder or the first eminent member of this school." John Donne set up a new tradition in versification by and large Donne must be regarded as an original poet, "a poet who gave much more than what he borrowed from his age." The word "metaphysical" has been defined by various writers differently. The learned critics feels that "metaphysical poetry" is inspired by a philosophy, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Then comes a conceit which also expresses the passion of the lovers: SHE'S ALL STATES, AND ALL PRINCES I; NOTHING ELSE IS. The most striking and famous one is the comparison of man who travels and his beloved who stays at home to a pair of compasses in 'A Valediction Of Forbidding Mourning'. Here soul of the beloved is like the fixed foot of compasses as by her inborn nature she stays at home whereas the soul of the lover is like the other foot of compasses which moves beyond the center to complete a circle of journey. IF THEY BE TWO, THEY ARE TWO SO AS STIFF TWIN COMPASSES ARE TWO, THY SOUL THE FIX FOOT, MAKES NO SHOW TO MOVE, BUT (DOTH) IF THE OTHER DOE. In The Relique, John Donne imagines himself lying in a grave as a skeleton with the undeniable token of spiritual love in the sphere of his beloved's bright lock of hair forming a bracelet about his wriste borne and because of their great love, he and his beloved will be honored like saints, ALL WOMEN SHALL ADORE US, AND SOME MEN. Another feature is the use of colloquial speech which marks the metaphysical poetry. In John Donne's poems, the vigor of colloquialism is especially apparent in the abrupt, conversational opening of many of his poems. He selected colloquial diction which has vigor, freshness and originality. He discarded literary words and phrases which became rusty because of repetition. Another characteristic of metaphysical poetry ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Chistopher Marlowe's The Passionate Shepherd To His Love Poems Analysis Chistopher Marlowe's The Passionate Shepherd to His Love The poem The Passionate Shepherd to His Love was composed by Christopher Marlowe in 1599. Scholars often create a controversy pertaining to the exact genre of the poem. While many argue that the poem assumes pastoral characteristics, an equal number maintain that it is a love poem. Notwithstanding the conflict, the poem demonstrates a masterfully selected topic and diction, which combined with imagery as well as prosody, imparts Marlowe's themes effectively. Rural life is well captured in the poem as a theme. Marlowe utilizes imagery to create a rural setting that characterizes the entire poem. In line two, the Marlowe describes his residential area as "...valleys, groves, hills, and fields" to introduce the concept of the countryside (Roberts and Zweig 733). Most of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In order to cover this theme, he has utilized imagery as well as sound patterns. The concept of romance has been captured through occasional use of words items associated with love. For example, roses have since time immemorial been used to express romantic feelings towards another person (Roberts and Zweig 734). Apart from roses, Marlowe has utilized other weightier items such as myrtle. Notably, this plant was used to signify the Venus, the goddess of love. Use of such words in the poem depicts Marlowe's strong affiliation with romance, coupled with his love for the countryside. Undoubtedly, such plants could only be found in the gardens. In addition, the concept of love has been excellently captured in Marlowe's prosody. For example, the poem maintains a regular syllabic pattern with four significant stresses in each line. Such a pattern creates uniformity in the recitation of the poem. A combination of the uniformity and the diction used in the poem creates a romantic tone, which is felt throughout the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. The Great English Poet By John Keats Humans, cursed with ambition, desire so much: to achieve greatness, to secure themselves a place in history, and to find someone to love who returns their sentiments. The great English poet, John Keats, struggled to achieve these goals for many years As he grew, John Keats struggled to meet many goals, highlighting the desire that all of humankind shares to achieve greatness. According to legend, Mrs. Frances Keats gave birth to a healthy baby boy in a stable on October 1, 1795 (Ward 5). Mrs. Keats and her husband, Thomas, named their son John and loved him dearly, spoiling him even after he gained four younger siblings (George, Tom, Frances Mary, and Edward) (Ward 5–6). Unfortunately, Edward died in infancy, but his death only served to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Fortunately, John channeled some of his energy into positive outlets as well, earning himself the title of a champion equestrian, swimmer, cricketer, and of course, boxer (Ward 14). Just a few months after his mother's divorce, in March of 1805, John's beloved grandfather passed away, leaving behind some wealth for the family. His grandmother, Mrs. Jennings, bought a new house in Enfield, and appointed two new guardians for the children: Richard Abbey, and John Nowland Sandell (Ward 20). Two years later, in 1809, John's Uncle Mingley acquired consumption and died, making devastated 13 year–old John the oldest living male in his family. His mother returned to her parents' home shortly after her brother's death, presenting a false beacon of hope to her son. Sickly with rheumatism and consumption, she ailed away as her son nursed her, until she died on March 18, 1810 (Ward 16). Whereas his father's death wakened a ferocious spirit in John, his mother's death caused the boy to withdraw from the world. He adopted a quiet, standoffish attitude, burying himself in books (Ward 17). His popularity waned, and all of his friendships, excluding those with his siblings and Cowden Clarke, the headmaster's son (a boy eight years older than John [Ward 19]) dissolved. His connections to Clarke and his brother George proved especially useful: ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Elizabeth Barrett Browning, An English Poet Of The... Elizabeth Barrett Browning, an English poet of the Victorian Era, was born on March 6, 1806 at Coxhoe Hall, Durham, England. Barrett was apart of a big family; her parents had 12 children, she was the oldest out of all of them. Mary Graham Clarke and Edward Barrett were the parents out of all 12 children. They educated their children at home. The family made their money off of Jamaican sugar plantations and depended on slave labor. Barrett began her love for reading and writing poetry at a very young age. She began reading the classic poetry written by John Milton and William Shakespeare. When Barrett was 12 years old she wrote her first book of poetry. When Barrett was 14 years old, she suffered a spinal injury while riding her pony. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Barrett published her first Novel in 1820, The Battle of Marathon, her father published this book anonymously. Barrett continued to publish her books anonymously, and in 1826 she published An Essay on Mind and Other Poems. This book really started the kickoff in her writing career. In 1829, Barrett 's mother passed away. Due to the abolition of slavery, the Barretts income decreased tremendously. In 1832, Edward Barrett was forced to sell his rural estate at an auction. After selling their land, the family rented cottages in a coastal town, where they lived for the next three years of their life. After that time in their life, the family moved to London, where they permanently settled. In 1833, after the move, Barrett published her translation of Aeschylus's Prometheus Bound, an Ancient Greek tragedy. A few years after that she published The Seraphim and Other Poems, a book expressing her opinion on Christian faith. Barrett 's health continued to decline, she moved in with her brother, Edward, near the sea of Torquay. That same year, Edward drowned while sailing in the waters of Torquay. Barrett was forced to move back to London, she was physically and emotionally weak, but that didn't stop here from her writing. In 1844, she published her collection Poems. This collection drew lots of attention from the public, in particular, this drew the attention of the English Poet, Robert Browning. Browning began to write letters to Barrett, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. The Difference Roles Among Male And Female Poets Essay In the first chapter it deals with the contemporary issues of gender. The dissertation title is: the different voices for women in English Renaissance poetry. The notion of gender relates to the fixed gender roles of that period. This assignment mainly deals with the issue of how gender roles are different among male and female poets. In addition, to narrow the research only four Elizabethan poets, who were specialised in religious poetry. Poets such as John Donne, George Herbert, Mary Sidney Herbert and Aemelia Lanyer. The reason for choosing these poets is because their work sometimes portrays women in a negative and positive in their religious poetry. This assignment tries to achieve to see the various voices for women in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Donne born as a catholic, but converted into Protestantism, yet he uses much athletic imagery in his poetry. Herbert a strong Christian , who has written my devotional poetry sees God Almighty as a shepherd and uses natural imagery such as, flowers and animals. This is to convey his need for guidance as well as his piety to his lord. In addition, Mary Sidney Herbert raised as a Calvinist also uses devotional language in her psalms, yet she uses a more masculine and aggressive tone to express her anger on the original sin. Lastly, Amelia lanyer raised as protestant who has written feminist poetry that uses a gentle, passive tone than Sidney. Her approach in describing Eve as the best woman of the creation. Thus, Lanyer poetry is more feministic but also argumentive in defending women. In the book English Poetry of the Sixteenth century 'Gary Waller 'speaks about how poetry is male– centred; ' In such a society, and within such a philosophy of love, both so male centred, (1986:2) This shows how patriarchal certain Elizabethan poems were but the religious poetry is different according to change in gender roles. In Donne's Holy Sonnets' 18 it speaks about how the church is a bride to Christ. In other words, the church, bears it purity and holiness it embodies an image of a woman. However, the church could also means the haven for the mystery bride of Jesus Christ. The search for the bride is illustrated in the first stanza: ' ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Ap English Literature Essay Literature has always been a window into life during a particular time frame. Fiction and nonfiction alike will give its readers a glimpse of the lives of those of varying social statuses, along with the culture and politics of the time. This remains true regardless of the period in which a work was written. From the Romantic era to the 20th Century, literature has been skilled at providing understanding of others and their lives. For example, from the Romantic period works like the two William Wordsworth poems I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud and The World is Too Much with Us, along with A Red, Red Rose by Robert Burns. The Victorian era has its own share of works that reflect the time when it was written, including Lewis Carroll's The Walrus ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Language can mean a number of things in regards to literature, it can refer to the slang that is used, the way that the author phrased a sentence, or even the dialect that the work is written in. Authors like Robert Burns, Gerard Manley Hopkins, and W.H. Auden in particular make use of language in the first two ways mentioned as a way of reflecting their respective time periods. Robert Burn's A Red, Red Rose is a poem that makes perfect use of language in order to display the thoughts of the author, which in turn displays the general thoughts of the time as well as his own location. A Red, Red Rose is a rather romantic poem, and considering the era in which it was written makes it fairly obvious that other authors of the time were discussing similar subjects. When discussing the beauty of his love, Burn's use of language which talks of how, "[...] fair art thou, my bonnie lass [...]" sort of automatically puts the reader in a mindset that can better understand his life (Burns). Couple the more archaic way of writing with the dialect of the author, which is put on display in his goodbyes to his love in the lines, "[...] And fare thee weel, my only luve! And fare thee weel awhile! And I will come again, my luve [...]" (Burns). God's Grandeur by Gerard Manley Hopkins also use language in order to further the ideas of his time. While the Victorian period was one of great scientific advancements, it was also a time when Christianity was a very large part of people's lives. Hopkins uses solid, imposing words in order to enforce the concept of God's strength, as seen early on in his poem, where he states that, "[...] The world is charged with the grandeur of God. It will flame out, like shining from shook foil; It gathers to a greatness, like the ooze of oil [...]" (Hopkins). The author furthers the power of God by downplaying the strengths of mankind, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Metaphysical Poems Metaphysical Poets John Donne and Andrew Marvell were considered metaphysical poets based on their use of conceit and wit in depicting similar situations through different metaphors. They would use original analogies to create fitting and insightful comparisons, usually to persuade. John Donne and Andrew Marvell have been called metaphysical poets. This is a," name given to a group of English lyric poets of the 17th century" (Metaphysical poets)" The term metaphysical poets came to be used almost one hundred years after the death of the two poets. John Donne died John Donne in1631 and Andrew Marvell died in 1678. The term later became known as 'metaphysical poetry,' (which was referred to by contemporaries, as 'strong lived'. The ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the second stanza, the speaker argues for the life of the flea, as his lady has moved to kill it. Almost desperate, the speaker describes the flea as holy. "This flea is you and I, and this/Our marriage bed, and marriage temple is" (lines 12–13). He fails to save the flea, as reflected, " [p]urpled thy nail in blood of innocence?" She killed the flea and the speaker's last chance of having relations with her. The speaker at this point realizes that his chance to have sex with this lady is gone. The speaker realized her killing the flea was his final rejection. In "To His Coy Mistress," the speaker is attempting to use a Carpe Diem method to persuade the young lady to make love to him. The speaker attempts to persuade the lady with seize the day. The speaker continues to tell the woman about how short time is, and how they must hurry because no one ever knows how much time is left. This is evident in by how the poem begins, "Had we but world enough, and time,"(page 527) As the poem starts to speed up you realize the speaker is becoming almost desperate. His promises and analogies become so farfetched."... I would Love you ten years before the flood" (line 8). Marvell uses symbolism, comparisons and metaphors to show the speaker as this passionate lover and the lady would be foolish not to give in to his request. Clearly the two speakers are Metaphysical poets. They have gone in two different directions to try to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Compare And Contrast Two Views Of War Compare and contrast essay War is a scandalous topic where peoples' views differ as to what war is. Some people see it as pure evil and wicked while others think that it is brave and noble of what soldiers do. Looking at poems which had been written by people affected by war help show the messages which are portrayed. The two sets of poems which show different views of war as well as some similarities are "the Charge of the Light Brigade" by Alfred Lord Tennyson, "To Lucasta, on Going to the Wars" by Richard Lovelace and "Dulce Et Decorum Est" by Wilfred Owen, "The Song of the Mud" by Mary Borden. Both these poets use linguistic devices to convince the reader of their view of what the war is. Tennyson and Lovelace show how war is worthy ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Lovelace's diction helps to develop the theme that war requires a passionate commitment from soldiers and can be as consuming as a relationship with a person the poet uses many dictions throughout the poem that suggests going to war such as 'chaste, mistress, embrace, inconstancy, adore and love'. Likewise, Tennyson's diction helps to develop the themes that war places soldiers under extreme stress, and soldiers can fight bravely and honorably even if the result of the battle is unsuccessful. In contrast, the word choices in Owen's poem supports the theme that war is destructive, bitter, and violent, not the romantic efforts praised by those outside of it. Diction that has a strong impact on Borden's poem is 'satin, ermine, chic', or words that have strong negative connotations such as 'obscene, putrid, monstrous'. Equally important, The Diction in Borden's poem support the theme that war is indifferent to human life. Words that display The Diction in "The Song of the Mud" are 'cursed, sludge, haunting, trudge, blood–shod'. Whereas The tone of Lovelace's poem is romantic and slightly playful along with Tennyson tone, which establishes a serious and respectful tone that also acknowledges the stress and confusion of war. Unlike the tone in the first set of poems, A great example of irony in Owen's poem is "Ecstasy" (line 9), which usually associated with positive feelings of joy or intense ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Alfred, Lord Tennyson, A British Poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson, a British poet was and is one of the most popular and famous poets from Victorian era Britain. In fact he survived for basically the entirety of the era, as he was born in 1809 and died in 1892, as stated in John Maynard's Alfred , Lord Tennyson (page 4). Born into a large family in somewhat less than adequate conditions, he found solace mostly in writing, even from a young age. According to online–literature.com he lived with what the world now knows as depression and was, apparently, very easily distracted, known as a notoriously absent–minded person. These traits might have been made a bit more severe thanks to his living conditions, being the fourth of twelve kids to his parents, who each had their own issues, most definitely including his father. According to poetsgraves.co.uk Alfred's father, George Tennyson, suffered from a number of illnesses, including epilepsy, alcoholism, and general mental instability. While this certainly made life difficult for his twelve children, George tried his best to provide a good education to them, seeing the potential in Alfred from a young age as he had shown signs of his talent from when he was very young. George was a pastor who, likely because of his profession, had an interest in classical and modern literature, and decided to pass this information and passion on down to his children as best as he could. His life eventually started catching up with him, however, when in the 1820s he began to suffer many ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. English IV – Unit 9: Romantic and Victorian Poetry... English IV – Unit 9: Romantic and Victorian Poetry Project: 19th–Century Views Oral Report William Wordsworth's poem, "Composed A Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey, On Revisiting The Banks Of The Wye During A Tour. July 13, 1798" (also known as simply, "Tintern Abbey"), was included in the book Lyrical Ballads, with a Few Other Poems. This was a joint effort between himself and author Samuel Taylor Coleridge. "Tintern Abbey" remains one of Wadsworth's most famous poems, and at its printing, the book was completely sold out in two years. The name of the poem reflects the inspiration Wadsworth felt upon visiting the ruins of an old church called Tintern Abbey, with his sister Dorothy. During his young adulthood, Wadsworth took numerous ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He worked on the poem from 1833 to 1850 as an elegy after the death of his dear friend, Arthur Hallam. Tennyson is more ambiguous when talking about nature. Considering the poem is made up of133 'sections', there are only a few instances where he specifically and clearly discusses nature versus God and faith. Tennyson expresses his feelings that nature is careless and indiscriminate when it comes to life....caring more for the survival of a species than the preciousness of a single person's life, as in stanza 56 (LVI), "Are God and Nature then at strife, That Nature lends such evil dreams? So careful of the type she seems, So careless of the single life" As he continues, he conveys his perception that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Thomas Hardy's 'A Trampwoman's Tragedy' and Lord Byron's... Lord Byron 's "When we two parted" and Thomas Hardy 's "A Trampwoman 's Tragedy" have in common a lover 's regret for love lost. However, the main narrators in these poems are very different and the circumstances in their poems show a lot about the difference that social class and gender make in the love lives seen in "When we two parted" and "A Trampwoman 's Tragedy". Looking at the tone, narrator gender, and setting of these poems the reader can see how a single general theme, regret over a lost lover, gets explored in very different ways. Both poems are in first person narration which helps lend a higher degree of credibility to the description of the intimate details and emotions. While the poems are in first person, the tone ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Whose is the child you are like to bear?– His? After all my months o ' care? ' (59–62) She is already pregnant by her lover and not married to him. She loves him but has not married him. Setting plays an important role in both poems. Setting in these poems helps the reader picture and dramatize the events happening. Lord Byron 's poem doesn 't give a specific location but does tell us at what time of day it is: " The dew of the morning / Sunk chill on my brow–" (9–10). It tells the reader it 's morning, so they possibly met in the early morning hours before sunrise to not be seen, and the dew suggests that it 's spring time. Hardy 's poem changes settings several times throughout: "From Wynyard 's Gap the livelong day, / the livelong day, / We beat afoot the northward way" (1– 3). They started on a twenty mile hike to take them to: "The inn that beamed thereby" (16). While traveling to these small inns they would stop in a tavern, which is the main tone changing setting of the poem: "The tavern tells the gloomy tale" (73). The tavern is where her lover kills Johnny after her cruel joke. Once everyone has either been killed or passed away she is left to "Haunting the Western Moor." (104) She is alone with no lover, no friends and no child in a mossy graveyard like field to live out the rest of her days. Both Byron 's "When we two parted" and Hardy 's "A Trampwoman 's Tragedy" are about love and the experience ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Donne's Poetry Write a close reading of John Donne's "The Relic". Think about what the poem is about (content), how it is written (form and structure), and why, to what effect (the relation between form and content). You may like to refer to Cleanth Brooks' essay, "The Formalists," for inspiration. This essay will look at the form, structure and content of "The Relic" in an attempt to offer an explanation as to what the poem is about. It will examine the metaphysical poets, and discuss the techniques employed by them to express their views. "The Relic" consists of three 11–line stanzas which incorporate tetrameter (four metrical feet), pentameter (five metrical feet) and two tri–meter (three metrical feet) lines per stanza. It is written ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This telescoping of images and multiplied associations [...] is one of the sources of the vitality of their language. (p 1099) If we look again at line 8 of "The Relic", it is noticeable that the gravedigger would only 'think that there a loving couple lies,' (l.8). It would be logical to assume that a husband would be buried with his wife, so the use of 'think' (l.8) is puzzling. By following this with the apparently polysemous 'lies,' (l.8) the poem could be read differently, altering the entire meaning to suggest that their love was only a fantasy. Another characteristic of metaphysical poetry is its tendency to use religious imagery to express its views. Towards the end of the first stanza, "The Relic" introduces the concept of 'their souls, at the last busy day,' (l.10). This has been interpreted as a veiled reference to judgement day and leads the reader smoothly into the second stanza where the images of death are replaced with a high lexical density of religious vocabulary. Donne uses lexis such as 'mis–devotion' and 'doth command' (l.13); 'Bishop' (l.15); 'relics' (l.16); 'Mary Magdalen' (l.17); and 'miracles' (ll.20–22) in order to extend the religious metaphor, introduced at the end of the first stanza, to evoke powerful images in the mind of the reader. Donne raises the question, in line 17, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Empathic Imagery In Keats And Wordsworth The figure of Wordsworth in an arrogant standing posture must have become a fixture in Keats's mind. In the "Camelion Poet" letter written about eight months after "On Edmund Kean," Wordsworth once again appears in a standing posture: in what has become a staple of a formula of Wordsworth criticism, namely "the Wordsworthian or egotistical sublime," Keats gives the definition of a thing per se and stands alone.(387) In "Edmund Kean," Keats mentions Wordsworth by name with the immediate follow–up of from all his comrades he stands alone and his standing alone–ness is seen more in the light of the arrogance of one who is totally self–absorbed. Also in Keats's choice of words there is cunning, even playful, tone of mockery. Keats makes an allusion ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the "Chamber of Maiden–Thought" letter of May 3, 1818, Keats still looks upon Wordsworth as the measure against which to measure other modern poets, which even includes Milton. Yet the same letter also shows that he is ready to pit himself against Wordsworth. His branching out in thought makes him consider Wordsworth "whether or no he has an extended vision or a circumscribed grandeur whether he is an eagle in his nest or on the wing" (124). Then he goes to launch his famous reflection on life as a "Mansion of Many Apartment"; and at the end of it he writes how it "shows you how tall I stand by the giant," which is Wordsworth ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. Compare-Contrast Critical Analysis Essay Savanah Saunders ENGL102 Jason Sebacher March 5, 2014 Essentially I feel that each poem in its own "Funeral Blues" (W. H. Auden), "Death, be not proud" (John Donne), and "Because I could not stop for Death" (Emily Dickinson) are unique in their own way however, I feel that two poems in particular may show more similarity in each other versus all three being compared at once although, I will be comparing and contrasting all three poems towards the end of this essay. For example, When reading "Funeral Blues" (W. H. Auden), I felt a greater sense of similarity to "Because I could not stop for death" (Emily Dickinson) versus "Death, be not proud" (John Donne) so I will begin to discuss those poems first. When comparing each poem I will ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Auden's tone toward death is saddened, gloomy, and emotional while Dickinson's tone is more relaxed, understanding, and accepting of death. Vocabulary is another difference between the two poems. The vocabulary choice in "Funeral Blues" is overall simple with the exception of a couple words for example, when Auden wrote, "Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun." Each word written in this line is simple except dismantle. Instead of simply writing "take down the sun" the author chose to use "dismantle" making the poem more creative. Throughout "Because I could not stop for death" a choice of intellectual vocabulary words was used by Dickinson. She wrote, "The dews grew quivering and chill, for only gossamer my gown." Instead of simply writing, "The night grew cold, for I only wore a sheer gown" Dickinson decides to use more vivid vocabulary. When comparing "Death, be not proud" (John Donne) the most comparable poem was "Because I could not stop for death" (Emily Dickinson). These poems were obviously similar in using death as the topic however; they were also similar in their attitude toward death. Donne expresses that death isn't as powerful as it thinks it is. Donne is saying that although Death (referring to death as a person) thinks he's something special, because he has the power to take life, really, he's not. Death isn't special because he must take everyone whether they're kings or just regular men. So that means he's really a slave to every ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. Langston Hughes Theme For English B Summary Langston Hughes was one of the most prominent American poets of the 20th century and the most recognizable poet to have indited during the soi–disant Harlem Renaissance of the 1910s and '20s. "Theme for English B" is without a doubt one of Langston Hughes's most famous, beloved, and anthologized poems. He indited it in 1951, the evening of his vocation, and it addresses one of his most ubiquitous themes – the American Dream. Thematically, "Theme for English B" resembles "American Heartbreak" and "Let America Be America Again." The poem is indited in free verse and lacks a systematic form or meter; its language is simple and casual, and it flows in a stream–of– consciousness style. The poem "Theme for English B" by Langston Hughes depicts an ebony adolescent adult who is endeavoring to decipher what is true in his life via an English assignment. As the only ebony man in his college English class, the verbalizer is not sure whether to take on the persona of a typical English student, regardless of race, or to stay true to his heritage and culture. The structure of this poem conveys a struggle for identity and truth in an expeditious–paced world whose conceptions are fluctuating. Through this poem, Langston Hughes asserts that there are multiple types of Americans, and there is no singular defining "American" experience. Ebony, white, puerile, old, oppressed, free – all can strive for a piece of the American Dream. This poem is thus much more optimistic than some of Hughes's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. How Is Imagery Used In The Renaissance Imagery during the English Renaissance was used by cavalier and metaphysical poets in order to portray their message, communicate easily to the readers, and reveal their personal lives and opinions through word choice and figurative language. Imagery was used by poets like Ben Jonson, George Herbert, and John Milton in order to convey complex messages through the comparison of spirituality and the physical world in a way that everyday people could relate to and understand. The cavalier poets came from the subservient class of the 17th century, who lived under the rule of King Charles I–– a monarch known for his enforcement of the creation and appreciation of art. Written in short, straight–to–the–point verses, cavalier poetry was casual and focused on witty commentary, eroticism, and the beauty of love and courtship. With this came straight forward and somewhat unequivocal imagery. One famous poet of this time was Ben Jonson. Jonson lived a simplistic life ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The poets spoken about, Ben Jonson the cavalier poet, George Herbert the metaphysical poet, and John Milton the writer of Paradise Lost, all were made famous for their unique use of imagery. Their distinct writing styles allowed everyday people to interpret and relate to their literary works. Imagery is essential is creating a poetic cognate for people of all nationalities, races, ages, and more, because it relates even the most intricate of ideas to objects or experiences that every individual has witnessed in their own lives. Visual perception and other physical senses of the body are the key to one's memories and thoughts, and imagery can be used beautifully if it properly takes advantage of these intimate components of one's being. In conclusion, imagery if used properly can create an incredible reading ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. The Philosophical Evolution Of Metaphysics Essay The Philosophical Evolution of Metaphysics: The Influence of Metaphysics on Poets and How It Pertains to Today Society. Imagine, the year is 2150 and a student is sitting at her desk looking within at latest technology, she thinks about lost poets that history books have shunned for the significance of more famous poets. As a child in modern society, the importance of lesser known poets, such as Thomas Traherne and George Herbert, are considered valuable for their philosophical influence in poetry. Over the course of time literature has become a melting pot of ideas borrowed from other poets and literary works, which are coagulated into one another to make a new idea. People in modern society need to understand the importance of remembrance in the similarities in the backgrounds, metaphysical influences, and written works of Thomas Traherne and George Herbert. It is astonishing how both poets have similar upbringings with almost a 100–year gap between them. The background of Thomas Traherne presented by Richard Firth has stated that "Thomas Traherne was born within the wall of Hereford City in 1637 (page 1)." At the age of five, the British Civil War marched into his town where they beheaded King Charles I. Later that year, Treharne left to attend the Hereford Cathedral School. After graduation, he then attended Brasenose College in Oxford, earning his BA (Bachelor of the Arts) in 1656. During the years of 1657–1660, he wrote his first complete work titled, Select ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. The Rising Sun and Death be not Proud by John Donne Essay In this essay I will mainly focus on two poems written by John Donne, The Rising Sun and Death be not proud. These poems were written during the Elizabethan era, which was an era mainly characterized by love and colonialism, on separate terms of course. These principles often influenced poets who lived during this period. Their poetry acts as testimonies of their underlying thoughts and desires. Furthermore, metaphysical poets deliver a more divine and profound perspective to their poetry. Within their conceits, they manage to engage and delight themselves in deeper movements. This essay will further discuss how John Donne used death and the sun to his disposal. I will also critically analyse the two poems as well grasp on external aspects ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Eternal life thus defeats death and throughout the poem, John's strong background of Christianity allows him to associate death with temporary entities as he refers to death as a state of "much pleasure" (7). Death is conceptualized as a phase rather than an element which represents finality. Death is personified and therefore has no greater power over human beings. Death losses its fearful connotation and achieves a new meaning that makes it less intimidating and less powerful. The central theme, introduced quite early within the poem, is the helplessness of death. Throughout the poem the speaker belittles death and approaches it with such bravery and poise. Donne confronts death by saying it is not in any regard "mighty and dreadful" (2), but rather brings "much pleasure" (7). Death is personified in the poem, and in this regard, possess no greater power over man. The speaker of the poem is Donne himself. He uses his literary tools of rhetoric and poetic devices to belittle death. Throughout the poem, the speaker comes across as being slightly arrogant, but he refuses to show weakness. His arrogance shows that he is not afraid of death as he demands death not to be proud. Donne takes the association of death and sleep, and reinvents this comparison to a greater effect. He describes sleep as being "pictures" (5) of death and death is no more different or more frightening. He extends this metaphor throughout the poem. In the second last line of the poem he ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. What Is The Conflict Of The Victorian Age He Victorian age experienced a conflict between science and religion. The era found its orthodoxy battered by movements of thoughts, like Positivism, Empiricism, Utilitarianism, Rationalism, Liberalism and Marxism which assailed all honest minds with scepticism. There was the new Biblical criticism and a spurt of scientific progress. They led the generation to secularization, agnosticism, atheism and religious passivity. Mostly, the writers of the age revolted against the deification of material progress. The poets were perhaps the best interpreters of the age (Brett 18). They illustrated in their poems the religious temper, its faith, doubts and conflicts of their time. The age these poets inherited was rather a fluid transitional one. The dilemma of the age assaulted the poets very deeply ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He was the embodiment of the best of England's greatest poets: "the dreaminess of Spenser, the majesty of Milton, the natural simplicity of Wordsworth, the fantasy of Blake and Coleridge, the melody of Keats and Shelley, the narrative vigour of Scott and Byron" (Hudson 162–163). What he lacked was the dramatic power of the Elizabethans. Tennyson was the most representative poet of the Victorian era (Joseph 305). The progress of science had greatly influenced the temper of the age. Tennyson was conversant with the concepts of geology, astrology and evolution, which contested and undermined the Biblical beliefs, evoking crisis in faith. He was at once mystical and sceptical in his own temper, and so was fit to become the spokesperson of the doubts and unbelief, and the quest for religious certainties of his age (Kalla 118). His attitude was one of compromise and he propounded a via media between materialistic science and dogmatic Christianity (Rockett ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40. Fate In Paradise Lost Essay Defined by the Oxford Dictionary, fate is "The development of events outside a person's control, regarded as predetermined by a supernatural power." Many authors, whether or not they closely follow Christian faith, play with the idea that fate or a divine being has a lot to do with their place and ultimately their experience in the world. Revered poets from Milton to Johnson explored the idea that a supernatural being had a say in their day to day lives, and they often recounted this in their works. John Milton is perhaps the most uniquely connected author to the divine. Milton authored the epic Paradise Lost, which is one of the most intricate and religious pieces of work that was studied during the course of the semester. What is interesting about Milton that one might not expect is that even though he was a deeply religious man, he had a deeply rooted hatred towards the Catholic and institutionalized church. Because of this hatred, he was often dubbed "the church of one." His connection to religion is so deeply rooted in his work that often the pictures of the creation story that we have in our heads are Miltonic in nature, and more from Paradise Lost rather than from the biblical text. While Milton does not write about "fate" in context with himself, he does mention quite often in Paradise Lost that Satan and his demons are fated to be the enemies of God, and it is something that they have no control over. This can be seen in line 197–198 in book II which reads "By my advice; since fate inevitable subdues us..." John Donne was also a very religious man with a unique past. Donne did not become truly focused on the divine until he was much older, after very wild adventures as a young man. While he was young, he was very much focused on physical relationships and having fun, and his poetry very much reflected that. When he grew older, he rediscovered and fully focused on his faith, going on to write the holy sonnets. The holy sonnets were written entirely to or about God, and were much more professional and somber than his earlier works. Donne referenced fate often, most famously in the revered sonnet #10 "Death be not Proud." On line 9, Donne says "Thou art slave to fate..." On the other hand, Samuel Johnson ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 41. Analysis of Donne's The Bait and Marlowe's Passionate... Love, an extremely and unsurprisingly popular topic among writers in every time period and corner of the world, is the central subject of two similar, yet contradicting literary works – "The Passionate Shepard to His Love" by Christopher Marlowe and "The Bait" by John Donne, respectively. Each author masterfully utilizes imagery, but in different ways to achieve two different purposes. Marlowe's idealistic vision of what love should be is countered by Donne's rather cynical realism. Both works begin with an identical first line that is followed by a line that Donne alters from Marlowe's original line. The change seems subtle yet it contains thematically significant meaning. Marlowe's second line reads "...and we will all the pleasures ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Imagery is another means by which theme is portrayed. Both authors utilize images related to nature that highlight its special and specific aspects that aid their own personal, respective 'arguments'. Marlowe utilizes figures of beauty, flowers, opposed to Donne's metaphorical symbolism of a stream alive with fish – competition. Marlowe creates a picturesque paradise filled with "...beds of roses", yet again fails to identify the flaws associated with beauty. Just as marriage can spawn conflicts and create internal turmoil and unrest, underneath the bed of roses lay thorns. Also, from hearing Marlowe's inflated descriptions one might think the Shepherd actually lives in the Garden of Eden. Alas, nothing is perfect, not even Adam and Eve creatures God (perfect?) himself created. Marlowe's vivid depictions of nature are not necessarily inaccurate, but rather one–dimensional and possibly biased. Donne's illustration of a stream inhabited by fish is one of similar natural derivation, yet better portrays the struggles and competition nature creates. Every fish seems to be working toward the common goal of the whole, yet only a limited number can physically achieve this goal. Those who outlast the "angling reeds" and "shells and weeds", the elite, will be rewarded. This success requires the utmost degree of focus, resilience and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...