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The Defeat of Many by One Essay
The Defeat of Many by One
In The Moor's Last Sigh, Salman Rushdie uses the complex and changing character of the Moor to
represent a complex and changing image of India. By making the eclectic family history of the Da–
Gama Zogoiby family the central theme in the first two parts of the novel, Rushdie portrays India as
a culturally and religiously pluralistic society. This pluralistic society is layered by violence caused
by the corruption of multiplicity by various characters and the threat of Hindu fundamentalism. As
pluralism is defeated by fascism in Part Three of the novel, the nature of the violence changes
drastically and is symbolized by the Moor's significant character change: "The Moor whose
tragedy–the tragedy of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The Zogoiby's diverse history entails attempts to embrace many of these ideals. The eclectic cultural
backgrounds of the Zogoiby family are representative of pluralism in India. The Da–Gamas are
Portuguese Catholics while the Zogoibys are Moorish Jews. All of the Moor's ancestors blatantly
reject religion and embrace secularism: an arguably important component of pluralism. When
Camoens went to see Gandhi speak, he told his wife Belle, "I hear nothing. I had seen India's beauty
in that crowd with its soda–water and cucumber but with that God stuff I got scared" (Rushdie 55).
Another example of pluralism within the Zogoiby family is Aurora's artwork, especially her
childhood paintings in which she strives to represent the variety and multiplicity in the vision of the
world and the vision of India. As Aurora ages, however, her childhood visions of pluralism are
significantly changed.
Although Aurora's later paintings also embrace pluralism, they reveal possible catastrophe: A place
where worlds collide, flow in and out of one another, and washofy away. Place where an air–man
can drowno in water, or else grow gills; where a water–creature can get drunk, but also chokeofy on
air. One universe, one dimension, one country, one dream, bumpo'ing into another, or being under or
on top of. Call it Palimpstine" (226). "
This image of "Mooristan" shows the danger of multiple worlds
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis of a Horses by Edwin Muir Essay
Analysis of a poem– Horses by Edwin Muir It is said that one should forget the past and live in the
present
It is said that one should forget the past and live in the present.
However, Edwin Muir's 'Horses' is a poem of past memories only. The interesting part is that it deals
with many conflicts and issues which are prevalent even today. It is thus a bridge between the past
and present and is expressed in the form of a piece of literature. Muir himself said that in writing
about horses in this poem, he was reflecting his childhood view of his father's plough horses, which
must have seemed huge, powerful and mysterious to a boy of four or five. Some of his poems,
including 'Horses', have a close equivalent in passages from ... Show more content on
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Under the "great hulks" of these creatures he sees is however another truth. The way these symbols
of "power" trod, allows the reader to infer another thought. Muir talks about the "ritual" of trodding
hooves turning the field beneath to brown. This can relate to the nuclear tests taking place, the desire
for power and how it would destroy the earth just as the horses' trodding was literally destroying the
earth underneath. The line, "Gleamed with a cruel apocalyptic light," has an even greater
significance when he talks as if an apocalyptic war has taken place and the world has come to an
end. In Muir's time, this could obviously refer to the World War or perhaps a civil war and maybe
future wars as well. The manner in which the poet expresses great anguish at the fact that this anger
and blind hatred has left nothing in its wake, throws light on where the world is headed.
The third verse also suggests subjugation of the powerful and privileged over the Underprivileged.
The "conquering hooves" show the might of the powerful class who dominate the suppressed and
force them into subservience. Muir is depicting the power struggle and hegemony that will always
be prevalent in the world despite opposing views of
Charles Edward Markham. The latter, states in his poem, 'Man with the
Hoe', after the "Silence of centuries", how the oppressed took back their power
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Tipis Chapter Summary
Introductory The book is about the transformation of tipis from past to the present day. The book
mentions the first culture that made tipis which was the "Clovis" and a brief background of their
culture. After the introductory into the Clovis' history the book will go into the reasons behind the
making of the tipis and how we view them in the modern day. Introductory Into Clovis History After
the Gravettian Culture split up to travel to search for more food after the food they hunted started to
run low, the Gravettian's mostly hunted Mammoths. New cultures developed around the world after
the Gravettian Split up and spread around the world. In America the new culture called the Clovis
developed. 80% of Native Americans in the present day in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Dogs didn't live very long due to the way they lived. They weren't allowed to live in the Tipi so they
were exposed to the weather and were only given food what the Native Americans could spare,
sometime the food that was given to the dogs was inedible for humans can't eat. Due to the dogs not
living long, the Native Americans made temporary tipi like structures to shield the dog them from
the weather. Due to the compactor and the pieces of the tipi being easily, it was easily transported
using horses. Horses allowed tribes to travel further than they could before. If there wasn't any
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Essay On Masculinity In Huck Finn
Since the Frontier era in American history masculinity has evolved from simply being an advanced
Neanderthal, someone who is an adventurous, strong, outdoorsman that provides for, and protects
his family to that of a well–mannered, kempt aristocrat by the end to turn of the 19th century.
While reading many early Romanticism, Transcendentalism, and Realism works have you ever
noticed authors views are predominantly parallel with the society and time in which they lived?
American authors (men/woman) where thought of as revolutionary with their popular, well noted
works, but their gender ideals stem from society's views rather than their own perceptions. Without
societies stipulations, these early authors could have been even more significant and influential than
they already are thought to be. The most well noted early American authors all have one big,
sometimes unrealized bias. That bias is gender. Authors such as Mark Twain, Walt Whitman, and
Henry James all follow this unintentional norm in the way that they have represented masculinity
through their works. The most popular frontier author, Mark Twain, represents an early and more
simplistic male view through his work "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn". Through Huck's
adventures Twain is able to capture the early, simplistic forms of masculinity. Huck was always
exploring
"But the next day I went exploring around down through the island. I was boss of it; it all belonged
to me, so to say, and I wanted to know all
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In What Ways do the Poets Studied Write about Childhood...
In What Ways do the Poets Studied Write about Childhood Experiences?
"Discord in Childhood" by David Herbert Lawrence
"Piano" by David Herbert Lawrence
"Fern Hill" by Dylan Thomas
"Death of a Naturalist" by Seamus Heaney
The poets studied all write about their childhood in their poetry, but there are subtle differences in
the way that the poet has expressed himself and in how the poem comes across to the reader. The
view of the poets' changes between the three, and the setting of the poem have both similarities and
differences. All four poems are written about childhood, but there are differences in structure and
format between each poet.
Each poem is written about the poet's childhood, but they are not all
written ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He uses phrases like "mammy frog" and "slime kings" which are childlike in their use. He also
makes references to things like a child – he talks about telling the weather from the frog's colour.
"Fern Hill" however, is written in a more grand style similar to that of an adult expressing in words a
memory which he could not have described previously as a child. Dylan Thomas tells his poem in a
much more elaborate manner to try a get across an idea that he could not do before.
Childhood is often referred to by many writers as the happiest times of your life. Seamus Heaney's
and Dylan Thomas's poems show that they believe in that principle. However, DH Lawrence's
poems show that he did not have a happy childhood and he makes that point abundantly clear. In
"Death of a Naturalist", Heaney shows that he once had a love of nature but, after one incident, he
lost that love forever. The structure of the poem shows his change of opinion: the first verse uses
adjectives and nice images that infer that the subject he is talking about is one that he likes; but the
style of language changes in the second verse where the vocabulary used shows the reader that the
poet now does not like his poem subject at all. Words like "rank",
"coarse" and "obscene" are used as negative adjectives in the second verse, so enforcing the view
that he has now lost his love for nature.
The first half of the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Song Essay
The Song
Many of John Donne's poems are on the subject of love and equally as many on the subject of sex.
As a love poet, especially when Donne writes vividly on his wife he is very much concerned with
his subject
(his wife) however he can appear selfish and cold in the more sexual referenced poems. To fully
make my point I have studied two poems, which I believe show his character as less self–absorbed
as in the sexual referenced poems.
This poem is written for his wife and is essentially saying goodbye as he is leaving her 'physically'
but arguing that she mustn't be sad of his departure and instead arguing that they are not really
parting and each verse is a different 'image' or argument for this.
I feel that this poem ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This is an effective metaphor as when compared to the distance of the world that the sun has to
travel to return, his distance seems small and therefore not as bad, and combining his feelings with
the relatively small distance, this reassures that there is every chance of him returning.
When thou sigh'st, thou sigh'st not wind,
But sigh'st my soul away;
When thou weep'st, unkindly kind, my life's blood doth decay.
When she sighs or weeps, he says he feels worse. This is his way of asking her to not be sad at his
leaving and uses the paradox unkindly kind, which means that she is being cruel to him by being
upset as it is hurting him inside (his blood doth decay – decaying away inside, the blood). In a way
he is selfish in his love, as he doesn't like to see her upset over him so uses his 'power' he has over
her to stop her from making him feel worse. If she really loved him then she would not break him up
as she is and waste his life. (It cannot be, that thou lov'st me, as thou say'st, If in thine my life thou
waste)
Let not thy divining heart
Forethink me any
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Marie Howe : What The Living Do
Marie Howe: What the Living Do
In What the Living Do, Marie Howe finds trauma and suffering rooted from an abusive childhood
and the loss of her many loved ones. We follow young Marie Howe from 1950's New York to
womanhood and her journey with identity, sexuality, family dynamic, and the death of her beloved
brother John in this elegiac collection. The first section explores an adolescent Marie Howe and her
role as the oldest girl of a large Irish Catholic family. As the assistant mother, she complies with the
strict gender roles of this era, despite brief moments of "boyish" superiority. We further explore
themes of gender awareness and identity in addition to sexuality in the poem "Practicing" which
opens:
I want to write a love ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It's apparent how much Howe adored and loved her brother in "The Attic"; she calls him the "exiled
grown prince" and encourages us to "Praise him". Yet, this poem does present a key theme of
immense emotional pain appropriate for an elegy, whether it be the speaker or her loved ones. She
addresses this from the perspective of John:
I don't know if he knows he's building a world where I can one day love a man–he sits there without
saying anything. Praise him.
I know he can hardly bear to touch me. The portrayal of suffering is especially strong in these
couplets, with John's silence speaking volumes; Howe poetically uses prolonged pause in these lines
to emphasize this silence and melancholy. This poem is much more abstract than Howe's other
works in this collection in which there is something very artistic about the language and imagery in
"The Attic"; the reader is literally placed within the drawing board where John is building an
imaginary world for his sister, one "where I (Howe) can one day love a man" and "with so many
doors it's finally quiet, / so that when our father climbs heavily up the attic stairs, he doesn't / at first
hear him". This poem among others suggest a quite dysfunctional relationship with their father, a
chronic alcoholic– "his fingers trembled like a girl's" just days sober (from "Two or Three Times").
The lines "he barely hears the springs of my bed / when my
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Multiculturalism : A Multicultural Perspective On Or A Way...
In 1970, the emergence of multiculturalism began, first in Canada and Australia, and then in the
United States as well as others. Multiculturalism is the diversity of two or more cultures in a region
or country. According to Bhikhn Parekh, the author or Rethinking Multiculturalism, best
understands multiculturalism as a "perspective on or a way of viewing life." Bhikhu Parekh in his
novel, Rethinking Multiculturalism, argues for a pluralist view on cultural diversity. He brings upon
many explanations on why a pluralistic society should be allowed to thrive in a single society. In his
reading Parekh, explains in depth the reasons behind why cultural differences should be respected
and tolerated. The main point of Parekh's essay is how multicultural societies are bound to create
situations of disagreement between communities and create crisis. Parekh's essay involves weighing
in on particular cultural traditions against the values of the larger multicultural society, that is, the
balancing of diverse forms of "thick" and "thin" considerations. Parekh, suggests that much the the
"acimony could have been avoided if the parties had, had access to a public forum where
perceptions and emotions could have been tried and mutually tested." This paper will focus on the
Muslim religion and provide information of the misunderstanding of the religion. More importantly,
this paper will explain Parekh's conceived theory of multiculturalism and the challenges that
politics, religion and
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Compare the ways in which the poet presents people in...
Compare the ways in which the poet presents people in night of the scorpion and one other poem?
Night of the scorpion is a poem about a woman getting stung by a scorpion and the events that
follow it. The poem two scavengers... is about the comparison between two garbage men and a
couple going to work. Although the two poems sound totally different, they both convey the
message about equality in society.
In night of the scorpion the people are peasants. They are religious people. The crowd of peasants
have a different religious belief than us. They believe that if they chant about god then this will help
cure the mother. They believe that chants will help cure the mother, this is shown by when the
peasants said, "with every ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He even poured a little paraffin upon the bitten toe and put a match on it." Although the father does
not believe in the religious side of the society he tried all of them at the thought of loosing his wife.
After all of the events that happened she only was grateful that it took her and not one of her
children. The author does not clearly state his opinion of this, but he is clearly affected by it or he
would have not mentioned it. The poem two scavengers... only has descriptions of the two sets of
people for comparative purposes. These being the garbage men and the cool couple. The poet might
prefer the garbage men, this is due to the words he uses to describe the garbage men. "The garbage
men up since four a.m. grungy from their route on the way home." This shows that the author feels
sympathy for the two men, having to do the hard tasks that they do. The final verse suggests that the
two sets of people should perhaps not be treated so differently. The cool couple are treated as special
people and have it easy where as the Garbage men have hard tasks to do but are treated much worse
than the couple. This conveys the point that there should be equality in society.
The language used in night of the scorpion has a very religious aspect to it. This shows the peasants
beliefs in god. The break in the structure before the last 3 lines shows the impression of the child
watching the mother, this could be the poet or maybe just an idea,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Why Is Forbidden Books Banned
Forbidden Books: Why banning books is never a good idea.
Numerous books have been prohibited by various people and countries all over the world, however,
is it really intelligent to do so? At the very least, I personally believe that it's a completely ridiculous
idea and that an approach of such likes should be lost. Everybody, regardless of their background or
living status, have a right to read what they desire for. Without question, books are one of the great
human inventions which originate from the will to record one's ideas, findings and memories to pass
down to future generations.
First of all, the possession of someone's freedom and the right to choose and read is essential,
therefore the banning of particular books, to me, is nonsense. However, it is understandable that
many books consist of uncomfortable explicit content which ... Show more content on
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This book was published in 1988 and was banned for its content, which offended countless Muslims
due to the fact that it portrayed Islam as a deceptive religion which was sexually deviant. It is also
known how there were many gruesome incidents situated around the problem concerning the book.
Examples include a Japanese translator of the book being stabbed to death as well as an Italian
translator encountering yet another assault, which resulted in a serious injury. Clearly, it can be seen
how easily the antagonism developed into an irreparable situation. Therefore, allow me to affirm
how books should not have the option of being banned to avoid predicaments likewise.
In the end, I find books to be a valuable source of information and beliefs that cannot, and should
not, be bound by the chains of selfishness. Furthermore, people are privileged to read and express
their thoughts in freedom. Thus, I believe that a person's choice of books should never be affected
by anyone and should be chosen accordingly by the person
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analyse the poem 'The Eolian Harp' by Samuel Taylor...
The Eolian Harp by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, can be described as the musings of a man thinking
about his love for his wife Sara, the beauty of nature and about the wonder of God in providing him
with both nature and Sara. The voice of the poem is Coleridge himself as it refers to Sara, his wife at
the time of writing. It is a Romantic poem as it deals with a mixture of traditional Romantic themes:
those of strong feelings, the importance of the imagination and the idea of the sublime, and the
natural world.
The Eolian Harp is written in blank verse and has an irregular split into two verse paragraphs, one
long, one short. The form is lyrical as it deals with a mans thoughts and emotions but it is often
written in a conversational style, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The end of each line needs and makes more sense once the next line has been read.
In opposition to this quickening of pace is the use of caesura to cause a sudden thought provoking
stop in the middle of a line:The stilly murmur of the distant SeaTells us of Silence. (l.11–12)The
effect of using this technique at this point brings the thought to mind that we only truly hear the
noise of the sea when all else is silent. This sudden stop and silence seems a perfect way to
introduce the main theme as from this point on Coleridge talks about the Harp that is to dominate
the tone of the poem until the end of the first verse paragraph.
Coleridge uses a wonderful section of continuous alliteration from lines 17–20 in order to give depth
to the Harp:And now its stringsBoldlier swept, the long sequacious notesOver delicious surges sink
and rise,Such a soft floating witchery of sound' (emphasis added) (l.17–19)The effect of this
continuous use of the s sound creates the effect of a gentle, flowing and moving sound much like the
long, delicious, floating sound that Coleridge tries to describe the harp as having. The actual effect
of this alliteration is to create a sensual, relaxing tone at this point in the poem.
Another technique of emphasis used throughout the poem is the use of imagery. Coleridge
personifies the nature around him by comparing it to abstract nouns – the white flowerd Jasmin
represents Innocence, the broad–leavd
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Tim Winton
Good morning sir and fellow students. Significant events are pivotal in enriching ones
understanding of their identity, which leads to an understanding of where they belong in the world.
This is shown through our prescribed text "The Simple Gift" composed by Steven Herrick; as well
as Tim Winton's "The Turning". | Steven Herrick's free verse novel explores this value of events that
shape a persons identity and hence their sense of belonging in their world. The cause of his
alienation appears to be physical and psychological abuse from his father, lack of caring from his
school and his run down neglected neighbourhood with its "deadbeat no hoper... downtrodden house
in Longlands Rd, Nowheresville". | The symbolism and scatological imagery ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Herrick induces us to feel empathy rather than antagonism to the protagonist. This is accomplished
through the intimate use of language, changing perspectives and personal anecdotes. | Growth in
maturity is shown as both Billy and Old Bill show signs of growth as they help each other. Billy's
growth is demonstrated as he becomes a 'different' individual from the beginning of the narrative
poem showing positive thinking "sure there's hope in the world...even for hobos like us". | Herrick
also represents this change through his use of natural imagery and pathetic fallacy; exemplified in
the poem "Hobos like us", "Sit in the sunshine". Old Bill's view of the world slowly starts to change,
as the protagonist reduces his consumption of alcohol and ventures to move on with his life. This is
done through Herrick's use of Motif throughout the novel of Old Bills alcoholic nature. | While Old
Bill demonstrates the symbolism of 'A Simple Gift' when he gave his keys to his old home to Caitlin
and Billy symbolizing his final pivotal moment enriching Billy's, Caitlin's and Old Bill's
understanding of their identity, which leads to their understanding of where they belong in the
world. | Tim Winton's "The Turning" also explores this value of events that shape a persons identity
and hence their sense of belonging in their world. The short story "The Turning" tells the narrative
of Raelene, which reveals the notion
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The Main Theme of Tennyson's The Charge of the Light...
The Main Theme of Tennyson's The Charge of the Light Brigade
From the first few lines of 'The Charge of the Light Brigade,' Tennyson plunges you into the poem,
creating an awesome, in depth feeling of reality. His words are so powerful, that they make you feel
as if you are one of the Light Brigade. With this war language he uses he gives the reader a feeling
of heroism and bravery, an inexorable feeling.
'Charge for the guns! Into the valley of death rode the six hundred.' This illustrates the great irony or
war, as they are marching into the valley on a misinterpreted command. The actual command that
was given was to ret rite from the valley and not to go into it.
'Forward the Light ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In verse three it exclaims that there was a;
'Cannon to the right of them,
Cannon to the left of them
Cannon in front of them.'
This is an audio image of bombardment, which almost allows you to hear the cannons being set off.
This draws the reader in, making them think as if they were there.
'Into the jaws of Death, into the mouth of hell'. In this line I have come across personification, as the
valley has been brought to life by being given human attributes. This highlights the horror, torture
and suffering the soldiers uncovered and shows the wicked darkness of war.
In verse four there is a dramatic pause, 'All the world wondered.' This line suggests that the whole
world knew of their bravery and that they would be always remembered as heroes of their era.
'Reeled from the sabre–stroke,' in this short line you can nearly hear the sabres slashing through the
air violently.
'Shattered and sundered' tells us that they were beaten, but beaten as warriors of war.
'Then they rode back, but not, Not the six hundred'. This statement is very emphatic and stark, which
makes the reader dwell on their unfortunate defeat.
In the next verse Tennyson uses repetition of the cannons this brings them to life and makes the
reader reflect back on the previous verse in which
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
How Tenyson Describes The Eagle
How Tenyson Describes the Eagle
In verse 1, line 1 he describes the eagle as being harsh, violent and rough by using alliteration in the
words 'clasps', 'crag', and 'crooked'. He uses onomatopoeia also in these words to get over the
violentness of the bird and also its rough environment. When using the phrase 'crooked hands'
Tenyson is describing how the shape of the claws are crooked but when he used the word 'hands'
instead of claws this is implying the eagle has god like qualities.
The phrase 'close to the sun' has connotations of the bird being god–like (because some religions
worship the sun like a god). The sun also has connotations of energy and strength implying the bird
has these ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In line 5 Tenyson says 'he watches from his mountain walls'. Tenyson describes the walls as 'his'
making it sound as if the eagle owns the mountains and its 'his' territory. This furthers the idea of the
eagle being powerful.
In the last line of the poem Tenyson says 'And like a thunderbolt he falls'
This is saying how the eagle can fall effortlessly like a thunderbolt, which shows how much power
the eagle holds.
What did Cowper think of Tiney?
Cowper is obviously very fond of his pet hare, Tiney. He is very protective over it; this is shown in
verse 1 of the poem –
"Here lies, whom hound did n'er pursue,
Nor swifter greyhound follow,
Whose got ne'er tainted morning dew,
Nor ear heard huntsman's 'hallo' " ==================================
Cowper is saying that his hare has never been let into danger, and his feet have never even touched
the 'morning dew'. This shows that Cowper cares for Tiney and will not let him come to any harm.
In the second verse Cowper describes how he raised the hare like one of his children, but even
though Cowper was trying to raise the hare like he was the hare still had a wild streak in him.
"Old Tiney, surliest of his kind,
Who, nursed with tender care,
And domestic bounds confined,
Was still a wild
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Midnight's Children and Satanic Verses
The western world often touts multiculturalism as an ideal for society. However, only nations with
centuries of cultural integration realize this goal. With the advent of the postmodern Earth, however,
young nations are striving headstrong into the practice of cultural unification to cope with the
massive influx of interconnectivity between nations, cultures, and peoples. In doing so they neglect
people's cultural that have stood for hundreds of years. Salman Rushdie, a man exposed firsthand to
cultural hubs all over the globe, writes using dream–like magical sequences to allow him to explore
the inner–workings of the transcultural man. In doing so, he uses the cultural connotations of the
images to convey the chaos and surrealism of the modern world. In Midnight's Children and Satanic
Verses, Salman Rushdie aptly applies magical realism and religious parallels to convey the internal
struggle of reconciling self–determination with cultural heritage. Through the character Saladin
Chamcha's arc in The Satanic Verses, Rushdie illustrates the internal turmoil that results from
denying one's cultural roots in favor of a self–determined identity. Chamcha, an Indian–British
citizen, is molested at the age of thirteen and has an estranged relationship with his father. In an
effort to distance himself from these experiences, he abandons his Indian lifestyle by changing his
gestures and accent to create an English identity. Decades later, traveling from England to India to
visit
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Analytical Analysis Of Frost At Midnight By Samuel Coleridge
Analytical essay of "Frost at Midnight" by Samuel Coleridge
People think that nature brings a sort of calmness, happiness or peace, which is why most people
travel to places with beautiful sceneries, or build houses near beaches, or have a plant in their
surrounding or even just a painting of a tree, flower or mountain. The importance of nature is
subjective as it nature touches people in different ways. The poem "Frost at Midnight," Samuel
Coleridge, is a monolingual conversation between the speaker and his sleeping infant. It is written in
blank verse, with little or no rhyme but in iambic pentameter. In this poem, the speaker emphasises
the importance of nature by equating it to God, he also speaks about the ability of nature to create
treasured memories, which he wants to use to plant himself in his child's future, therefore, he his
rallying against modernization because of this.
The speaker stresses the importance of nature by comparing it to God, he says that his child will be
far from God because he will not be able to hear God's voice which apparently is, "The lovely
shapes and sounds intelligible / Of that eternal language..." (65–66). I believe that this comparison is
quite different as most religions such as Christianity do not equate God with earth but instead
suggests that God created earth (New International Version, Gen. 1.1). This sentence makes me
think that God can mean different things to different people. The thing or person we worship the
most or respect the most can be a god, money can be a god, a popular music artist can be a god, and
a tyrannical president can also be a god. The speaker's definition of a God involved the ability to:
"from eternity doth teach Himself in all... Great universal Teacher!" (67–69).The speaker's definition
of God entails the ability to be able to teach one's self and be able to mold spirits. Thereby nature is
important in this way because it can mold people's spirits and lives.
Another way in which the speaker stresses the importance of nature is by stating benefits from
nature. He is sitting at home and staring out through the window, looking at the fluttering object and
listening to the owl while the rest of the residents in the house are asleep. He is in his
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Essay on Understanding Poetry: Billy Collins, Introduction...
Understanding Poetry: Billy Collins, Introduction to Poetry Billy Collins uses dark rooms, oceans,
hives, color slides and mouse mazes to describe his poem "Introduction to Poetry", but also a way to
analyze poetry in general. Growing up, students are advised by teachers how to analyze poetry. The
speaker of Introduction to Poetry, Billy Collins, attempts to guide the readers by teaching them a
unique and appropriate way to analyze poetry. The use of personification and imagery, by the author,
gives the readers a new perspective to interpret and find the significance in poetry. In this particular
poem, the speaker does not want the reader to listen to the teachers of the reader's past, "tie the poem
to a chair with rope and torture a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The speaker wants the readers, who take up the roll of students of the poem, to envision poetry as a
color slide. The speaker wishes the reader to understand that he cannot see the full detail of the slide
if it is not held into light. When thinking of this in a metaphorical way, the speaker is asking the
reader to examine poetry and see all of its beauty and self–interpreted meaning. Most readers tend to
base their interpretation on methods they have been taught, but what the speaker wants the reader to
do is to use their own mind to illuminate the poems meaning, much how you use you're to eyes to
decipher visual imagery. The sense motif continues into the next verse switching from visualization
to hearing. The metaphor shifts from the reader's eyes looking through a slide, to ears listening
pressed up against a beehive. Just as the speaker is asking the reader to hold up a poem to the light,
he is also asking them to press their ears against a beehive, and listen to the bee's making the honey.
The speaker wants readers to take something they perceive as white noise, and listen more intently
to hear the true intricacies of poetry. Readers fail to realize that poetry can hold the sweetness of
honey as well as clear colorful imagines as seen through a slide. In the third verse paragraph, the
speaker is telling the reader to visualize a mouse being placed into
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Marianne Moore 's The Fish Essay
Marianne Moore's nature and artistic background contribute to her modernist style and is prominent
in her poem "The Fish." Marianne Moore wrote in the 1930's, a decade of change. Moore is
characterized as a writer who uses overall nature, art, life, modesty, and humor. Her writing is
recognized by its descriptions, and observations of people, places, animals, and art. Her poems
reflect the relationship between common and uncommon ("Marianne Moore" Poetry Foundation).
Marianne Moore's biographical background contributes to her symbolic writings. Moore's mother is
the person who most inspired her. She came from a divorced home and lived with her mother and
her grandfather. He was a presbyterian pastor. Her father was absent in her life due to the fact that he
was also institutionalized. Moore's early jobs inspire the nature part of her writings. After college,
she was in charge of the commercial department of the United States Indian School at Carlisle. She
taught subjects such as bookkeeping and typing to young Indians. In 1918, she decided to move to
New York where she taught at a private school. Three years later she was an assistant at the Hudson
Park branch of the New York Public Library (Garrigue 194). Moore's early career choices to be a
painter and interest in biology influenced the scientific and artistic aspect of her poetry. She wanted
to be a painter like Carlos Williams. She decided to study medicine and caught an interest for
biology. In an interview she
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Emerson Defines Beauty in The Poet Essay
Emerson Defines Beauty in The Poet
Just what is beauty? We all have our own definition of beauty because everyone has there own
distinctive style and attractiveness. Therefore, we must respect why some people find beauty in
things while others would not simply because beauty is truly in the eyes of the beholder. Now we all
are attracted to all sorts of things, but have you ever asked yourself why? Is it simply because it is
beautiful or does the meaning go beyond that? I tend to believe the latter is true so lets take love for
example. It is the most beautiful thing in the world because you get a sense of being, are likely
attracted to the person you are in love with, it stimulates you and you probably feel complete.
However, beauty ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Secondly, when he refers to himself as a man of Beauty makes you ask the question, well why is he
a man of beauty? Emerson believes that he is due to the fact that only a poet can put what he
observes and sees into a beautifully crafted text. He restates this theory throughout the text and
makes a case based solely on the belief that only a poet has the tools and intelligence to do this.
However, I believe that Emerson was wrong to say that only poets had the vision and ability to write
because we all have our own unique thoughts or perspectives on nature or life. It is almost as if
Emerson believed that he and other poets had some kind of God given talent and were the chosen
ones to perform these kinds of tasks. He even argues that he is right by saying, "For the world is not
painted, or adorned, but is from the beginning beautiful: and God has not made some beautiful
things, but Beauty is the creator of the universe." Therefore the poet is not any permissive potentate,
but is emperor in his own right ( The Poet, 1648)." So basically Emerson in these two lines in trying
to draw a picture that when God created the universe it was beautiful but everything was not created
beautiful so it is up to the poets to paint the picture and make it beautiful. In
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Marlowe As A Tragic Villain
On the Differences between the Ultimate to the Sympathetic Villain
In John Milton's Paradise Lost, Satan represents the ultimate villain, a genuine representation of the
dark side. For this reason, Milton's Satan characterized with great decisiveness, lack of remorse
whatsoever, and a bold disobedience against God the all mighty. For this reason Satan remains
throughout the poem in the evil side, without the ability to make even a temporary transfer from the
dark side to the opposite heavenly side; hence, Satan stays confined in the evil realm. On the other
hand, in Christopher Marlowe's play The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus ,
Mephistopheles character represents a different kind of villain, of one that is somewhat easy to
sympathize with and even at times to feel his genuineness. Consequently, Marlowe's Mephistopheles
is capable to represent the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In this dialogue, it seems that what Engle calls the ludicrous exchange, when he is referring to the
dialogue between Faustus to Mephistopheles, actually it may be implied to the fact that there is
more than just the verbal dialogue between the two, that is, the exchange between Mephistopheles to
Faustus also symbolizes the shift in Mephistopheles' character which now speaks in favor of
repenting. For this reason, it seems that there is a role reversal between Mephistopheles the fallen
angel, to Doctor Faustus the human being; because although it seems suitable for Mephistopheles to
speak in favor of hell, instead he chooses to express his deep and sincere remorse for being deprived
out of heaven. Accordingly, in this dialogue, Doctor Faustus answers in vain to Mephistopheles in
order to encourage Mephistopheles not to lament about the loss of the joys of
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Figurative Language And Appreciation Of The Jade Flower...
Ashley Wisniewski Mrs. Synder English III 17 November 2017 "Flower Jade Palace" Famous
Chinese Poet, Tu Fu advocates appreciating the loveliness one could be surrounded by while it
exists because he believes beauty may not earn its deserved value. The poet was born into a life of
wealth and familial connections until his life was changed by a rebellion in 755. When the T'ang
dynasty's days of glory came to an end, the artist spent his days on the road. Towards the end of his
life, Tu Fu was in poor health and suffering from many hardships. Tu Fu's poems reflected his life;
he did not appreciate the luscious life he had until it was gone, and Tu Fu's work was not
appreciated until he passed away (Elements of Literature 873). Tu Fu's "Jade Flower Palace" utilizes
figurative language and sound devices to portray his negative feelings of uncertainty about the
future. In one of Tu Fu's younger works, "Jade Flower Palace," the poem goes into the deeper
meaning of appreciating beauty and how important it is to cherish loveliness during its lifespan. Tu
Fu is standing in the ruins of a palace, observing what is left of the destroyed and no longer stunning
building. The artist believes the palace was not appreciated for its charm while it was standing in
one piece. Tu Fu's wish is that the lovely surroundings could be truly valued because one can not
determine what can happen to elegance in the future. The poet's work has a deeper meaning than
what it originally displays,
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Guess What I M Thinking Essay
Poetry, what first comes to mind? If your anything like me, poetry can seem somewhat monotonous,
rather like a locked door exclusive, complicated, and hard to understand. I think poetry tends to be a
big game of "Guess what I'm thinking!" and I hate that game. I'm not a mind–reader. I think a lot of
people who get excited about poetry are really pretentious. This possibly comes from believing that
they actually can guess what other people are thinking. When we think poetry, we tend to know
poetry by it's traditional forms of having sonnets, ballads, often rhyming (but not always) and they
tend to have a specific and symmetrical structure (APA). Throughout this essay I wanted to consider
poetry through different explorations and how subverting the traditional conventions of poetry might
be an effective way of engagement or in an opposing way of demotivating the reader.
Looking into the explorational work of a highly regarded New Zealand poet and scholar, Selina
Tusitala–Marsh, we truly get an insight of someone who goes against the traditional conventions of
poetry. Her collection of poems called Dark Sparring is about "...the journey of Marsh's feelings
about her mother's death – wars declared, lists made, a "Mantra" written, even a printed Ransom
Note. Other poems explain how Marsh took to Muay Thai kickboxing to cope with her grief
following the death of her mother" (APA). Looking closely at the poem Ransom Note, it gives the
effects of using an excessive number of
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Haroun and the Sea of Stories
Haroun and the Sea of Stories
SALMAN RUSHDIE
Novel, 1990. Summary.
In this story we encounter storytelling as a means of saving your identity, your relationship with
your family, and perhaps even your life–which means that, in a sense, you are saving a world. The
British–Indian author Salman Rushdie (b. 1947) had to go underground after the publication of his
novel The Satanic Verses in 1988. The book was considered blasphemous to Islam by the
fundamentalist government of Iran, which issued a death warrant against him. He says that he
reached a point where he was so distressed he wasn't able to think of any stories to tell. But he
worked himself out of his depression, and Haroun and the Sea of Stories, a book for children and
other ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
So now the moment for wishing has passed, and he must try something else. But the Water–Genie is
now distracted, because a problem has come up: Someone is polluting the Sea of Stories, and he
suspects the leader of the Land of Chup, a land in perpetual darkness on the other side of the moon.
The leader's name is Khattam–Shud. Going with the Genie to Gup City, Haroun finds, to his
surprise, that his father is already there–he has made use of a home brew to travel to faraway places
and is now being accused of being a spy for the Chupwalas. Rashid is able to explain the situation
because he landed in the Twilite area and heard interesting things, and now they learn about the evil
intent of Khattam–Shud: Not only is he opposed to stories and fantasies, he also wants to do away
with speech altogether and has enforced strict Silence Laws. Haroun and a few helpers from Gup
now travel into the twilight and on to the dark land of Chup, where shadows have acquired a life of
their own, and through many dangers and adventures they reach the heart of the Chup empire, a
Factory Ship that makes poison to spill into the Sea of Stories. Khattam–Shud's plan is to block the
very source of stories with a plug and spread silence and darkness. Finally they see Khattam–Shud
himself, and Haroun is rather surprised: He is a scrawny, skinny, weasly type, and he looks a lot like
Mr. Sengupta, who stole his mother away. And when he
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Allusions In Haroun
Salman Rushdie is a British–Indian author famously known for the allegories used in his novel,
Haroun And The Sea Of Stories. It is about a young child by the name of haroun , who goes on an
adventure to help his father Rashid to tell stories again. On this adventure haroun is faced with
mystical places, situations and people all throughout the book. This gives the novel a light hearted
,childish tone. You could almost say the book was written by a child. Even "as both a bedtime story
for his son and as an allegorical response to his situation" Even with the fantasy, make–believe, and
mystical aspects of this book, a deeper meaning can be found for the readers to seek out. Haroun and
the sea of stories is also written for adults because ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Through these serious topics rushdie uses allegory and allusions in which he in a way disguises
them throughout the book for example. The names of the main character within the novel Haroun
and Rashid are from a character who appears in many of Arabian Nights tales.In addition the title
"Haroun and the Sea of Stories" is very similar to that of "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" the
idea of going on an adventure to gain something of some sort. Fturemore Aladdin. In the novel
Haroun and the Sea of Stories Haroun is swept away on Butt the Hoopoe with Iff the Water Genie
and taken through the Twilight Strip. A connection to the story of Aladdin and the similarity to the
magic carpet used to travel. Lastly an teh the Journey itself. The speed of Haroun's journeys in the
mail coach (rushid 35) is nearly an imitation of the fast traveling one could even call it scurrying of
dorothy in the wizard of oz in a tornado. And many more aspects. In conclusion exploring all these
underlying concepts allows the reader to grasp a deeper sense of what is trying to be explored in the
novel. Which can not be done my a child who merrily is looking for a "bedtime
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Walt Whitman's Influences
There have been many influential writers that left their own unique mark on American history; one
in particular that has made a significant impact is Walt Whitman. His writing styles evoke different
nontraditional methods that did not coincide with the traditions of more "mainstream" American
writers. He did this by establishing a pattern that utilized a lot of free verse compared to the more
natural rhyme of poems, and also by describing his subject with emphasis to make the story as real
as possible. He tried to subject his characters to a variety of situations, and seemed to establish a
connection between body and pen. It could be said that Walt Whitman was the most influential
writer during the 1900's and contributed the most to the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Changing jobs from newspaper to newspaper was not a problem for Whitman. He was able to find
an occupation regardless of the economy. He relocated from New Orleans due to the slaves that
were being auctioned in the newspaper. He could not bear the thought of such an appalling act. This
newspaper published highly radical opinions and controversial topics for the time period, such as
removing laws that allowed for the enslavement of African Americans. After the Civil War, he also
published many pieces advocating for the equal treatment of African Americans, and an end to the
discrimination they were facing. Due to his radical ideas were
During the course of his career Walt Whitman struggled with his career trajectory. While he was an
exceptional writer, his work was never fully appreciated until his death. Walt Whitman's trial and
tribulations led him to write of his experiences such as in "The Mississippi at Midnight," which
describes how the river captured his attention. His observations created a beautiful piece of literature
that encompasses the river. One of the verses that reinforces his writing style is "Oh tireless waters!
Like Life's quick dream onward and onward even hurrying like death in this midnight hour you
seem, life in your chill drops greedily burying"( Whitman, The Mississippi), stating that life is too
short and that it can be extinguished ever so quickly. Being captivated by the Mississippi river,
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Summary Of Song Of A Citizen
The purpose of this assignment was to reflect on the poem Song of a Citizen using critical analysis
to understand the complete meaning of what Milosz has written within the text. The poem Song of a
Citizen is an illuminating reflection on the abominable conditions of the Jewish people and the
suffering they have endured wrapped into a piece on how a prisoner is separated from the natural
world, connected by Milosz's incredible writing ability.
The poem Song of a Citizen is an open book that allows the reader a deep view into the inner
character of its speaker. Firstly, we see many of the speaker's views reflected in the poem's
numerous verses. For example, in verse 9, he says that " it is better to be a live dog than a dead
lion", which shows how he has felt and acted in this perilous situation. This could even be taken so
far as to say that, because of the horrors he faced during the war, the speaker feels that it is better to
be living than even to die a courageous death. Additionally, another revealing verse was from 20–25,
which symbolized his continuing relationship with the world. He mentions a "copper–leaved
garden", which can be seen as a parallel to fall or winter trees, as well as a "heart of metal", which
could describe the heart of manufacturing combined with nature. This shows the speaker's character
as we see how he connects nature to freedom and beauty, running a parallel to countless prisoners
and captives(including the Jews) who were separated from nature
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Alfred Lord Tennyson, Langston Hughes And Walt Whitman
Three of the most well known Western genii of poetry are Alfred Lord Tennyson, Langston Hughes
and Walt Whitman. All of these men have exemplary traits and attributes in their respective sectors
of poetry. Tennyson, Hughes and Whitman all played a major role in the world of poetry and many
factors of theirs' are still influencing prose to this day. Despite being among the most influential
poets of the American canon, Walt wasn't born quoting Shakespearean poetry. He was born in New
York to a poor family and was the second of nine children. After concluding formal schooling at the
age of eleven, Walt started to work for the local printer. He became an active member of his local
library, joined a public speaking club, and started watching theatrical performances. At his local
library, he studied history, theatre, literature, music, geography, and many other sciences. At the age
of thirteen Walt anonymously published his first ever poem in the "New–York Mirror". After a
temporary collapse of the printing industry and variety of different jobs, Whitman started to indulge
in freelance fiction and poetry writing.
Despite the fact that Walt Whitman may have seemed simple–minded, he had a major role in the
world of poetry. Walt Whitman established a new kind of poetry called free verse. Never before was
a poet able to write a rhythm–free poem without having his/her poetry pushed away. Poetry is still
known today as being rhythmic, but Walt Whitman changed
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An Analysis of “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” and “Out of the...
An Analysis of "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" and "Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking" By Austin
Cooley ENGL 2027 – 007 In "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" the story follows the narrator's experience
with life as he takes a beautiful ferry ride. The man talks about the meaning of his life to other
people. In this crowd he brings together all of the strangers and finds a connection. His journey
through "space and time" is focused on the people. In the first sections, Whitman sets the scene by
describing his surroundings. He personifies a few objects, thus, making them more relatable to the
people he is surrounded by. He feels connected to a pattern larger than himself, and how the past and
the future resemble each other. And so he gets into the real ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
The things that gave him pleasure were in fact the sensory pleasures. What he saw in the world, the
voices and sounds of the people, the accomplishments that he felt, and memories that he made were
his justifications for living. Living his life to the fullest and cherishing the things that he did for
himself gave him an identity. There is a key difference between living a meaningless life and a
leading a rewarding life with a purpose. In the first case, the goal in life is to work hard to be
accepted by the standards of others. As a result, a life will most likely wasted on work that gives no
meaning or reward to the person. In the second case, a person can live for their own standards and
behave in a way that is enjoyable to themselves. "I too had receiv'd identity by my body, That I was
I knew was of my body, and what I should be I knew I should be of my body. . . . About my body for
me, and your body for you. . ." The interiority as Whitman describes, guarantees that an individual
can find meaning in life without comparing themselves against others and bringing out the evil and
deceitful qualities of humans. In an ideal model of Whitman's social behavior, everyone would be
content and there would be no evil in the world. The final two lines of the poem set his conclusion
regarding the importance of interiority its results on the world. You furnish your parts toward
eternity, Great or small, you furnish your parts toward the soul. Whitman himself ignored the
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W.B. Yeats and History Essay
Yeats in Time: The Poet's Place in History
All things can tempt me from this craft of verse:
One time it was a woman's face, or worse––
The seeming needs of my fool–driven land;
Now nothing but comes readier to the hand
Than this accustomed toil.
In these lines from "All Things can Tempt Me" (40, 1–5), Yeats defines the limitations of the poet
concerning his role in present time. These "temptations" (his love for the woman, Maude Gonne,
and his desire to advance the Irish Cultural Nationalist movement) provide Yeats with the
foundation upon which he identifies his own limitations. In his love poetry, he not only expresses his
love for Gonne, he uses his verse to influence her feelings, attempting to gain her love and ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The sword signifies his words, which he holds in the "upstairs" of his mind. This metaphor gives the
words great power. Either on a page or spoken, they can be called upon for battle to violently disrupt
the world. However, Yeats is not concrete in presenting this perception as accurate. The last two
lines highlight the questioning ?Did not? which begins the previous acclamation of poetic influence.
Here the speaker gives a different perspective, saying, "Yet would be now, could I but have my
wish, / Colder and dumber and deafer than a fish." (9–10). Now, Yeats's vision of the poet is cold,
completely lacking passion. He is dumb and therefore unable to influence others with his words. He
is deaf and therefore unable to be influenced by the words of others. Many levels of interaction in
the present world are taken away from the poet by this image; but, the sense of sight remains. Just as
the fish can only survive in water, the poet can only function as an observer.
In "The Lake Isle of Innisfree" (15), Yeats takes this purely perceptive role and places it in the
context of time. In the last three lines, the poet says (in the present tense), "I hear lake water lapping
with low sounds by the shore; / While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements gray/ I hear it in
my deep heart's core." (11–12). Throughout these lines, the poet stands completely stationary upon
the lifeless pavement, never interacting with his environment. Unlike the deaf fish described in the
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The Satanic Verses By Salman Rushdie
Salman Rushdie is a passionate novelist and essayist known for his magical realism, who expresses
his beliefs and influences through his works. Rushdie has frequently described himself as a
"historian of ideas," and many of his novels are "novels of ideas" rather than narrations centered on
a plot or character. 1 Furthermore, Rushdie's pessimistic views of religion are seen in his writings,
from The Satanic Verses to recent essays like, Out of Kansas. I will also discuss the fatwa' calling
for his assassination and resulting in him being put under police protection by the British
government. To begin, Rushdie was born into a Muslim family. Although Rushdie was a student of
Islam, he claimed to be a lapsed Muslim. Ultimately, he expressed that he did not believe in
supernatural entities, whether Christian, Jewish, Muslim or Hindu. Rushdie's outspoken work, The
Satanic Verses caused great controversy in the Islamic world because of what was seen by some to
be an irreverent depiction of Muhammad. Rushdie is the author of 11 novels, 4 books, shorts stories
and many essays. In addition, many of his books focus on the role of religion in society and the
effect and conflict. Rushdie believed, "Religion, a medieval form of unreason, when combined with
modern weaponry becomes a real threat to our freedoms." 2 Also, "Religion is a story, and it seems
to me that a definition of any living, vibrant society is that you constantly question the stories. That
you constantly argue about
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Lycidas Poem Analysis
The Crisis of Lycidas' Absent Body
"Lycidas" is a pastoral elegy in which the speaker, a shepherd, mourns the death of his friend
Lycidas, a fellow shepherd and talented poet, who had drowned at sea. However, as the poem
progresses, the figure of Lycidas fades into the background as the writing of the poem becomes
overwhelmed by the various crises that the speaker experiences and other poetic voices – those of
Phoebus and St. Peter, for instance – interrupt. The ninth verse paragraph of "Lycidas" marks the
poem's return to its elegiac intent as the speaker experiences another crisis in which he laments
Lycidas' absent body, a recurring element which, when addressed by the speaker directly, allows the
speaker to properly mourn and accept Lycidas' death.
The ninth verse paragraph begins with a plea, "Return, Alpheus" (132), Alpheus being a river in
Arcadia whose waters mix with the fountain Arethuse, referenced earlier in the poem to represent
Greek pastoral poetry. The speaker persuades Alpheus to return by stating that "the dread voice is
past" (132) the dread voice being St. Peter, who in the previous verse paragraph interrupted the
speaker's voice with a vicious condemnation of shepherds. The verse paragraph before was taken
over by Neptune's herald, and the one before by Phoebus. As the poem progresses, it begins to move
away from Lycidas to the point that the ninth verse paragraph is the first one since the fifth that
mentions Lycidas, or "Lycid" (151), by name. By calling on Alpheus and the "Sicilian Muse" (133),
the speaker recognizes that the elegy has veered from its original intent and he wishes to return to it.
The speaker first does this by invoking the "Sicilian Muse" to "call the vales" (134) to gather a
plants and flowers to adorn Lycidas' dead body. The speaker specifically calls for "primrose,"
"crowtoe," "jessamine," pansies, violets, "woodbine," "cowslips," "amaranthus," daffodils, and
laurels. (142–47,149–150)The laurels are significant as an emblem of poetry and its presence on
Lycidas' "hearse" (151) praises him for his poetry, but there is a sense of sadness and grief
embedded within the floral imagery. When the speaker mentions the "rathe primrose" (142), a
flower that blooms early
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Tonight I Can Write By Pablo Neruda Summary
Have you ever lost someone you loved? "Tonight I can write" was written by Pablo Neruda. Pablo
Neruda was born on July 12th, 1904. He passed away on September 23rd, 1973. Neruda WAS a
nobal prize winner. He wrote in an immense amount of styles, including surreal, historical, political,
autobiography, and love poems. One of his many poems is "Tonight I can write" this poem
expresses the author's pain from a lost love. "Tonight I can write" relates with his readers showing
he is also feels loss and pain, this shows his readers that he is human and relatable which makes the
poem enjoyable to read. This poem is a free verse and has no rhyme scheme. Tonight I can write the
saddest lines. Write, for example, 'The night is shattered and the ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
In the poem "Tonight I can write" the main theme in the poem is the emptiness caused by the
authors heart break in this vastly complex thing we call life. The two ideas of love and life are tied
closely together in "Tonight I can write". This idea is shown clearly when he writes "the night wind
revolves in the sky and sings" or "the night is shattered and she is not with me". The night is eerie
and dark, full of sadness and pain, the same way his soul feels. His soul is not accepting that "it has
lost her." In vast world full of people, his eyes and heart still search for her. Starry The speaker of
"Tonight I can write" is Neruda. "I loved her, and sometimes she loved me too." A poem expressing
feelings of love or sadness cannot be written from others feelings or thoughts. "Tonight I can write
the saddest lines" He repeats these lines to put emphasis that the lines he is writing could be the
saddest he's ever written. In the poem "Tonight I can write" the main theme in the poem is the
emptiness caused by the authors heart break in this vastly complex thing we call life. The two ideas
of love and life are tied closely together in "Tonight I can write". This idea is shown clearly when he
writes "the night wind revolves in the sky and sings" or "the night is
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Summary Of 'The Most Dangerous GameAndPorphyria's Lover'
Intro "From the beginning men used God to justify the unjustifiable." –Salman Rushdie, The Satanic
Verses. Salman Rushdie points are truly stated and are seen in literature work. The two stories "The
Most Dangerous Game" and "Porphyria's Lover", both portray the characters, General Zaroff and
Porphyria's Lover, as murderers who think they have done nothing wrong. The authors Connell and
Browning use conflict and characterization to convey that some find it easy to justify murder.
DP 1 Through the use of external conflict between Zaroff and Rainsford's hunting prowess, and
Porphyria's Lover strangling Porphyria, the authors show how each can easily justify murder.
Rainsford, the main character, fell off his boat and swam ashore a mysterious island. When he
arrived he came across a fortress of sorts, and meet the man incharge, General Zaroff. Zaroff is
talking to Rainsford about his past and the island he lives on. Zaroff tells Rainsford about his
hunting experiences when he says "Hunting was beginning to bore me! And hunting, remember, had
been my life(33)." This is when Zaroff's internal conflict arises, suffers from ennui in hunting and
wants something more of a challenge to kill. He has been hunting for as long as he can remember
and every beast he has faced, he overcame and killed it, until there was no animal he couldn't kill.
This is what caused Zaroff to want a challenge, something that . "'must have courage, cunning and,
above all, it must be able to reason.
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Forbidden Books: Why Books Be Banned?
Forbidden Books: Why banning books is never a good idea.
Numerous books have been prohibited by various people and countries all over the world, however,
is it really intelligent to do so? At the very least, I personally believe that it's a completely ridiculous
idea and that an approach of such likes should be lost. Everybody, regardless of their background or
living status, have a right to read what they desire for. Without question, books are one of the great
human inventions which originate from the will to record one's ideas, findings and memories to pass
down to future generations.
First of all, the possession of someone's freedom and the right to choose and read is essential else
they'll just become part of the silent majority, therefore the banning of particular books, to me, is
nonsense. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Considering the fact that information nowadays spreads like dust spread by volcanic eruptions,
wouldn't it be better to just leave challenged books be since they're going to attract less attention that
way? In this era, it is much easier to start campaigns about objections due to the anonymity on the
internet. That's my other reason for stating why books shouldn't be banned. Furthermore, samizdat
versions, which are illegitimate copies which were clandestinely published, of taboo books would be
traded illegally between people because of their increased rarity. An example of a banned book
would be "Lady Chatterley's Lover" by D.H. Lawrence. This book was originally published in 1928
in Florence, nevertheless was banned in England due to its explicit content about adultery and a love
affair, saying it was too obscene and corrupted to be viewed by the population. Consequently, it can
be said that the prohibition of books only trigger illegal
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Bruce Dawe's Poetry
Several poems by Bruce Dawe surround the subject of loneliness and oppression, a matter that many
people face in today's society and also a matter that relates to his interests; his fascination with the
'underdog' character and how he provides a voice for certain individuals. 'The Raped Girl's Father',
'The Family Man' and 'The Sadness of Madonnas' are three poems by Bruce Dawe that relate to the
themes, portraying realism in how loneliness and oppression affect people in the world. An example
of a poem related to the subject of loneliness and oppression is 'The Raped Girl's Father'. The poem
is about a girl who had been raped and, as a consequence, is constantly abused by her father. From
the title, the poem is centred on the father, who ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
For example, 'the rifle's eye is blank' and 'rumours flower over his absence...' symbolise how the
reason for the family man's death is 'blank' and because of that, his workmates made assumptions as
to why he killed himself. Dawe also uses imagery to symbolise the man's walk away from life and
how he kept it to himself; for example, 'from the table of humdrum cares and dream and walk...over
the edge of dark and quietly lie...' which clearly explains that the man turned away from life. The
imagery and symbolism in 'The Sadness of Madonnas' is similar; its purpose is to create an image of
oppression through the mother and child. For example, 'the xylophone rib–cage and the wasted
music of leg–bones' and 'the thousands lying silent in the dirt, the dehydrated children's skin as
tough as leather' present a powerful picture of the Ethiopian people and how the famine is making
them suffer and slowly leading them to their deaths. The language Dawe uses in 'The Raped Girl's
Father', such as metaphors, alliteration and repetition create a dark and powerful atmosphere to the
poem. The words used are chosen to reflect the father's heartless rage and his daughter's shock
during her darkest hours. An example of repetition and alliteration is 'eaten by the dark...and in that
darker dark in which she lay', which emphasises the 'hell' that the girl is experiencing in her dark
bedroom and her vulnerability. Metaphors in the poem
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Satanic Verses Analysis
In The Satanic Verses, numerous symbols illustrate how human nature is the source of the evil.
Furthermore, the symbolic significance that pertains to the main character also shows how all
individuals have both good and bad qualities. A repeating motif in the book is the reference to the
play "Othello". Skapearses famous play follows the life of the Moor Othello after is marriage to
Desdemona. Iago, a loyal friend of Othello, was furious that the Moor overlooked him for a
promotion, sparking his lust for revenge. Iago devised a plan to persuade the King that his had been
having an affair with his trusted friend Cassio. Iago's actions resulted in the Moor killing
Desdemona. After learning the truth, Othello committed suicide. The references to the play
foreshadow the ending of the novel but also gives further explanations to the actions of Gibreel. The
first mentions of "Othello" only occurred to criticize Shakespeare because he "couldn't spell" (256).
The primary reference occurs when Gibreel wondered about the creation of evil, "why it grows, how
it takes unilateral possession of a many–sided human soul. Or, let's say: the enigma of Iago" (439).
Gibreel continues by denying his allegations saying he's, "no match for the moor" (439). Gibreel
turns out to me more naive than the moor because the events that occur in "Othello" are mirrored in
the novel. Gibreel assumes the role of Othello, Saladin Iago, and Gibreel's love interest Allie Cone,
Desdemona. Gibreel inherited the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Taking a closer read at Haroun and the Sea of Stories
1. Identify & explain 5 symbols found in text.
Although Haroun and the sea of stories is a children's literature, symbols which overlap as
archetypes are used to make this novel contain a deeper meaning and be just as enjoyable for adults.
Weather in this story symbolizes the current feeling or emotion of the characters. Dull, gloomy days
often occurred when the character is depressed: "this sudden mist positively stank of sadness and
gloom" (47). This symbol is clearly evident when Haroun traveled to Moody land, "the sun would
shine all night is there were enough joyful people around, and it would go on shining until the
endless sunshine got on their nerves; then an irritable night would fall a night full of mutterings and
discontent, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
An example is the June 9th, 1985 student demonstration at Tian An Men square in China. The
government attempted to stop the media from exposing this event to the public; they also attempted
to wipe out any written records of this afterwards. This is similar to how certain Chupwalas in
Haroun stitched their mouths, or vowed to remain silent under the orders of Khattam Shud who tried
to stop the relay of information in his "kingdom" so to speak.
3. Detail 3 instances in the text where the power of story is alluded to. Explain
The power of story is often referred to in this novel. For example, on page 72, "the stories were held
here in fluid form, they retained the ability to change, to become new versions of themselves, to join
up with other stories and so become yet other stories...It was not dead but alive." This means that
there are many variations to one idea or one story. Old tales combined with imagination can be made
into new pieces of work. "no story comes from nowhere; new stories are born from old––it is the
new combinations that make them new."(86) There is an endless possibility and no limitations on
what the story is about because new ones can always be made.
Whether it's the adventure or the escape from reality that stories provide, or that fact that it takes
your mind away from tension, some people, and personally I believe that stories have the ability to
relieve stress. The power of story is implied in Haroun: "you can offer [Story
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Haroun and the Sea of Stories Closed Reading
So Iff the Water Genie told Haroun about the Ocean of the Streams of Story, and even though he
was full of a sense of hopelessness and failure the magic of the ocean began to have an effect on
Haroun. He looked into the water and saw that it was made up of a thousand thousand thousand and
one currents, each one a different colour, weaving in and out of one another like a liquid tapestry of
breathtaking complexity; and Iff explained that these were the Streams of Story, that each coloured
strand represented and contained a single tale. Different parts of the ocean contained different sorts
of stories, and all the stories that had ever been told and many that were still in the process of being
invented could be found here, the Ocean of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The passage personifies the ocean by talking of its playful nature of the currents "weaving in and out
of one another" and its ability to change, as it has a mind of its own. The last sentence within the
passage states "it was not dead but alive" the use of short sentencing emphasised its point and
indicates its importance. However this short verse changes the mood of the passage, the reader is
confronted by the abrupt word "dead" this single word changes the tone of the sentence and explores
that along with the capability to be alive there also is the capability to be dead. This foreshadows the
next passage and the future of the ocean.
Within the passage the metaphor of the ocean being a library is emphasised, it states that it is "the
biggest library in the universe" this metaphor is used to try and example the extent of the sea and
how many stories it possesses, connecting it to a familiar idea for the reader. However the metaphor
is later contradicted renouncing the oceans likeness to a library of books due to the fluid form of the
stories and their changing nature and ability to become new versions and to join up with other
stories. It presents the ocean to be much more. This is revisited throughout the novel, exampling
how the ocean is "much more" and how it is a health source to plentimaws fish, directly impacting
them as the ocean becomes more toxic, as well as a way of life to all members of gup city.
In the passage
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Haroun And The Sea Of Stories Short Story
Michael A. Rodriguez
Ms. Ramirez
British Literature 1600
30 November 2017
Haroun and the Sea of Stories: Magic Meets Real World Haroun and the Sea of Stories is a
children's novel, written by Salman Rushdie, who is one of the prominent authors of magical realism
in English literature. The novel brings together real world elements and features of magic or the
supernatural. Using elements of literature such as made–up words and rhyming throughout Haroun
and the Sea of Stories, Rushdie showcases why he is a distinguished author of magical realism.
(Warnes) The novel begins by introducing the city in which the main character lives. Rushdie calls it
the "sad city" because the citizens are so depressed, they have forgotten the city's actual name.
Haroun and his parents are the only people not depressed. Rashid, Haroun's father, is a famous story
teller. The depressed citizens solely care about facts and see no purpose in these made–up stories.
Haroun's upstairs neighbor, Mr. Sengupta, is always complaining to Haroun's mother about these
stories and eventually runs off with her. This leads to the main conflict of the story, Rashid
becoming so sad he forgets how to tell his stories. (Rushdie, 12–26) Rashid needs to perform stories
for multiple politicos, but draws a blank. After angering the politicos, they send him to Valley of K.
Haroun and his father go to the bus station so they can ride to the Valley of K, and eventually
convince a psychotic bus driver, Mr. Butt, to take
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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The Defeat Of Many By One Essay

  • 1. The Defeat of Many by One Essay The Defeat of Many by One In The Moor's Last Sigh, Salman Rushdie uses the complex and changing character of the Moor to represent a complex and changing image of India. By making the eclectic family history of the Da– Gama Zogoiby family the central theme in the first two parts of the novel, Rushdie portrays India as a culturally and religiously pluralistic society. This pluralistic society is layered by violence caused by the corruption of multiplicity by various characters and the threat of Hindu fundamentalism. As pluralism is defeated by fascism in Part Three of the novel, the nature of the violence changes drastically and is symbolized by the Moor's significant character change: "The Moor whose tragedy–the tragedy of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Zogoiby's diverse history entails attempts to embrace many of these ideals. The eclectic cultural backgrounds of the Zogoiby family are representative of pluralism in India. The Da–Gamas are Portuguese Catholics while the Zogoibys are Moorish Jews. All of the Moor's ancestors blatantly reject religion and embrace secularism: an arguably important component of pluralism. When Camoens went to see Gandhi speak, he told his wife Belle, "I hear nothing. I had seen India's beauty in that crowd with its soda–water and cucumber but with that God stuff I got scared" (Rushdie 55). Another example of pluralism within the Zogoiby family is Aurora's artwork, especially her childhood paintings in which she strives to represent the variety and multiplicity in the vision of the world and the vision of India. As Aurora ages, however, her childhood visions of pluralism are significantly changed. Although Aurora's later paintings also embrace pluralism, they reveal possible catastrophe: A place where worlds collide, flow in and out of one another, and washofy away. Place where an air–man can drowno in water, or else grow gills; where a water–creature can get drunk, but also chokeofy on air. One universe, one dimension, one country, one dream, bumpo'ing into another, or being under or on top of. Call it Palimpstine" (226). " This image of "Mooristan" shows the danger of multiple worlds ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. Analysis of a Horses by Edwin Muir Essay Analysis of a poem– Horses by Edwin Muir It is said that one should forget the past and live in the present It is said that one should forget the past and live in the present. However, Edwin Muir's 'Horses' is a poem of past memories only. The interesting part is that it deals with many conflicts and issues which are prevalent even today. It is thus a bridge between the past and present and is expressed in the form of a piece of literature. Muir himself said that in writing about horses in this poem, he was reflecting his childhood view of his father's plough horses, which must have seemed huge, powerful and mysterious to a boy of four or five. Some of his poems, including 'Horses', have a close equivalent in passages from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Under the "great hulks" of these creatures he sees is however another truth. The way these symbols of "power" trod, allows the reader to infer another thought. Muir talks about the "ritual" of trodding hooves turning the field beneath to brown. This can relate to the nuclear tests taking place, the desire for power and how it would destroy the earth just as the horses' trodding was literally destroying the earth underneath. The line, "Gleamed with a cruel apocalyptic light," has an even greater significance when he talks as if an apocalyptic war has taken place and the world has come to an end. In Muir's time, this could obviously refer to the World War or perhaps a civil war and maybe future wars as well. The manner in which the poet expresses great anguish at the fact that this anger and blind hatred has left nothing in its wake, throws light on where the world is headed. The third verse also suggests subjugation of the powerful and privileged over the Underprivileged. The "conquering hooves" show the might of the powerful class who dominate the suppressed and force them into subservience. Muir is depicting the power struggle and hegemony that will always be prevalent in the world despite opposing views of Charles Edward Markham. The latter, states in his poem, 'Man with the Hoe', after the "Silence of centuries", how the oppressed took back their power ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4.
  • 5. Tipis Chapter Summary Introductory The book is about the transformation of tipis from past to the present day. The book mentions the first culture that made tipis which was the "Clovis" and a brief background of their culture. After the introductory into the Clovis' history the book will go into the reasons behind the making of the tipis and how we view them in the modern day. Introductory Into Clovis History After the Gravettian Culture split up to travel to search for more food after the food they hunted started to run low, the Gravettian's mostly hunted Mammoths. New cultures developed around the world after the Gravettian Split up and spread around the world. In America the new culture called the Clovis developed. 80% of Native Americans in the present day in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Dogs didn't live very long due to the way they lived. They weren't allowed to live in the Tipi so they were exposed to the weather and were only given food what the Native Americans could spare, sometime the food that was given to the dogs was inedible for humans can't eat. Due to the dogs not living long, the Native Americans made temporary tipi like structures to shield the dog them from the weather. Due to the compactor and the pieces of the tipi being easily, it was easily transported using horses. Horses allowed tribes to travel further than they could before. If there wasn't any ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. Essay On Masculinity In Huck Finn Since the Frontier era in American history masculinity has evolved from simply being an advanced Neanderthal, someone who is an adventurous, strong, outdoorsman that provides for, and protects his family to that of a well–mannered, kempt aristocrat by the end to turn of the 19th century. While reading many early Romanticism, Transcendentalism, and Realism works have you ever noticed authors views are predominantly parallel with the society and time in which they lived? American authors (men/woman) where thought of as revolutionary with their popular, well noted works, but their gender ideals stem from society's views rather than their own perceptions. Without societies stipulations, these early authors could have been even more significant and influential than they already are thought to be. The most well noted early American authors all have one big, sometimes unrealized bias. That bias is gender. Authors such as Mark Twain, Walt Whitman, and Henry James all follow this unintentional norm in the way that they have represented masculinity through their works. The most popular frontier author, Mark Twain, represents an early and more simplistic male view through his work "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn". Through Huck's adventures Twain is able to capture the early, simplistic forms of masculinity. Huck was always exploring "But the next day I went exploring around down through the island. I was boss of it; it all belonged to me, so to say, and I wanted to know all ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. In What Ways do the Poets Studied Write about Childhood... In What Ways do the Poets Studied Write about Childhood Experiences? "Discord in Childhood" by David Herbert Lawrence "Piano" by David Herbert Lawrence "Fern Hill" by Dylan Thomas "Death of a Naturalist" by Seamus Heaney The poets studied all write about their childhood in their poetry, but there are subtle differences in the way that the poet has expressed himself and in how the poem comes across to the reader. The view of the poets' changes between the three, and the setting of the poem have both similarities and differences. All four poems are written about childhood, but there are differences in structure and format between each poet. Each poem is written about the poet's childhood, but they are not all written ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He uses phrases like "mammy frog" and "slime kings" which are childlike in their use. He also makes references to things like a child – he talks about telling the weather from the frog's colour. "Fern Hill" however, is written in a more grand style similar to that of an adult expressing in words a memory which he could not have described previously as a child. Dylan Thomas tells his poem in a much more elaborate manner to try a get across an idea that he could not do before. Childhood is often referred to by many writers as the happiest times of your life. Seamus Heaney's and Dylan Thomas's poems show that they believe in that principle. However, DH Lawrence's poems show that he did not have a happy childhood and he makes that point abundantly clear. In "Death of a Naturalist", Heaney shows that he once had a love of nature but, after one incident, he lost that love forever. The structure of the poem shows his change of opinion: the first verse uses adjectives and nice images that infer that the subject he is talking about is one that he likes; but the style of language changes in the second verse where the vocabulary used shows the reader that the poet now does not like his poem subject at all. Words like "rank", "coarse" and "obscene" are used as negative adjectives in the second verse, so enforcing the view that he has now lost his love for nature. The first half of the
  • 10. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11.
  • 12. The Song Essay The Song Many of John Donne's poems are on the subject of love and equally as many on the subject of sex. As a love poet, especially when Donne writes vividly on his wife he is very much concerned with his subject (his wife) however he can appear selfish and cold in the more sexual referenced poems. To fully make my point I have studied two poems, which I believe show his character as less self–absorbed as in the sexual referenced poems. This poem is written for his wife and is essentially saying goodbye as he is leaving her 'physically' but arguing that she mustn't be sad of his departure and instead arguing that they are not really parting and each verse is a different 'image' or argument for this. I feel that this poem ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This is an effective metaphor as when compared to the distance of the world that the sun has to travel to return, his distance seems small and therefore not as bad, and combining his feelings with the relatively small distance, this reassures that there is every chance of him returning. When thou sigh'st, thou sigh'st not wind, But sigh'st my soul away; When thou weep'st, unkindly kind, my life's blood doth decay. When she sighs or weeps, he says he feels worse. This is his way of asking her to not be sad at his leaving and uses the paradox unkindly kind, which means that she is being cruel to him by being upset as it is hurting him inside (his blood doth decay – decaying away inside, the blood). In a way he is selfish in his love, as he doesn't like to see her upset over him so uses his 'power' he has over her to stop her from making him feel worse. If she really loved him then she would not break him up as she is and waste his life. (It cannot be, that thou lov'st me, as thou say'st, If in thine my life thou waste) Let not thy divining heart Forethink me any ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13.
  • 14. Marie Howe : What The Living Do Marie Howe: What the Living Do In What the Living Do, Marie Howe finds trauma and suffering rooted from an abusive childhood and the loss of her many loved ones. We follow young Marie Howe from 1950's New York to womanhood and her journey with identity, sexuality, family dynamic, and the death of her beloved brother John in this elegiac collection. The first section explores an adolescent Marie Howe and her role as the oldest girl of a large Irish Catholic family. As the assistant mother, she complies with the strict gender roles of this era, despite brief moments of "boyish" superiority. We further explore themes of gender awareness and identity in addition to sexuality in the poem "Practicing" which opens: I want to write a love ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It's apparent how much Howe adored and loved her brother in "The Attic"; she calls him the "exiled grown prince" and encourages us to "Praise him". Yet, this poem does present a key theme of immense emotional pain appropriate for an elegy, whether it be the speaker or her loved ones. She addresses this from the perspective of John: I don't know if he knows he's building a world where I can one day love a man–he sits there without saying anything. Praise him. I know he can hardly bear to touch me. The portrayal of suffering is especially strong in these couplets, with John's silence speaking volumes; Howe poetically uses prolonged pause in these lines to emphasize this silence and melancholy. This poem is much more abstract than Howe's other works in this collection in which there is something very artistic about the language and imagery in "The Attic"; the reader is literally placed within the drawing board where John is building an imaginary world for his sister, one "where I (Howe) can one day love a man" and "with so many doors it's finally quiet, / so that when our father climbs heavily up the attic stairs, he doesn't / at first hear him". This poem among others suggest a quite dysfunctional relationship with their father, a chronic alcoholic– "his fingers trembled like a girl's" just days sober (from "Two or Three Times"). The lines "he barely hears the springs of my bed / when my ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15.
  • 16. Multiculturalism : A Multicultural Perspective On Or A Way... In 1970, the emergence of multiculturalism began, first in Canada and Australia, and then in the United States as well as others. Multiculturalism is the diversity of two or more cultures in a region or country. According to Bhikhn Parekh, the author or Rethinking Multiculturalism, best understands multiculturalism as a "perspective on or a way of viewing life." Bhikhu Parekh in his novel, Rethinking Multiculturalism, argues for a pluralist view on cultural diversity. He brings upon many explanations on why a pluralistic society should be allowed to thrive in a single society. In his reading Parekh, explains in depth the reasons behind why cultural differences should be respected and tolerated. The main point of Parekh's essay is how multicultural societies are bound to create situations of disagreement between communities and create crisis. Parekh's essay involves weighing in on particular cultural traditions against the values of the larger multicultural society, that is, the balancing of diverse forms of "thick" and "thin" considerations. Parekh, suggests that much the the "acimony could have been avoided if the parties had, had access to a public forum where perceptions and emotions could have been tried and mutually tested." This paper will focus on the Muslim religion and provide information of the misunderstanding of the religion. More importantly, this paper will explain Parekh's conceived theory of multiculturalism and the challenges that politics, religion and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17.
  • 18. Compare the ways in which the poet presents people in... Compare the ways in which the poet presents people in night of the scorpion and one other poem? Night of the scorpion is a poem about a woman getting stung by a scorpion and the events that follow it. The poem two scavengers... is about the comparison between two garbage men and a couple going to work. Although the two poems sound totally different, they both convey the message about equality in society. In night of the scorpion the people are peasants. They are religious people. The crowd of peasants have a different religious belief than us. They believe that if they chant about god then this will help cure the mother. They believe that chants will help cure the mother, this is shown by when the peasants said, "with every ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He even poured a little paraffin upon the bitten toe and put a match on it." Although the father does not believe in the religious side of the society he tried all of them at the thought of loosing his wife. After all of the events that happened she only was grateful that it took her and not one of her children. The author does not clearly state his opinion of this, but he is clearly affected by it or he would have not mentioned it. The poem two scavengers... only has descriptions of the two sets of people for comparative purposes. These being the garbage men and the cool couple. The poet might prefer the garbage men, this is due to the words he uses to describe the garbage men. "The garbage men up since four a.m. grungy from their route on the way home." This shows that the author feels sympathy for the two men, having to do the hard tasks that they do. The final verse suggests that the two sets of people should perhaps not be treated so differently. The cool couple are treated as special people and have it easy where as the Garbage men have hard tasks to do but are treated much worse than the couple. This conveys the point that there should be equality in society. The language used in night of the scorpion has a very religious aspect to it. This shows the peasants beliefs in god. The break in the structure before the last 3 lines shows the impression of the child watching the mother, this could be the poet or maybe just an idea, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19.
  • 20. Why Is Forbidden Books Banned Forbidden Books: Why banning books is never a good idea. Numerous books have been prohibited by various people and countries all over the world, however, is it really intelligent to do so? At the very least, I personally believe that it's a completely ridiculous idea and that an approach of such likes should be lost. Everybody, regardless of their background or living status, have a right to read what they desire for. Without question, books are one of the great human inventions which originate from the will to record one's ideas, findings and memories to pass down to future generations. First of all, the possession of someone's freedom and the right to choose and read is essential, therefore the banning of particular books, to me, is nonsense. However, it is understandable that many books consist of uncomfortable explicit content which ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This book was published in 1988 and was banned for its content, which offended countless Muslims due to the fact that it portrayed Islam as a deceptive religion which was sexually deviant. It is also known how there were many gruesome incidents situated around the problem concerning the book. Examples include a Japanese translator of the book being stabbed to death as well as an Italian translator encountering yet another assault, which resulted in a serious injury. Clearly, it can be seen how easily the antagonism developed into an irreparable situation. Therefore, allow me to affirm how books should not have the option of being banned to avoid predicaments likewise. In the end, I find books to be a valuable source of information and beliefs that cannot, and should not, be bound by the chains of selfishness. Furthermore, people are privileged to read and express their thoughts in freedom. Thus, I believe that a person's choice of books should never be affected by anyone and should be chosen accordingly by the person ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21.
  • 22. Analyse the poem 'The Eolian Harp' by Samuel Taylor... The Eolian Harp by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, can be described as the musings of a man thinking about his love for his wife Sara, the beauty of nature and about the wonder of God in providing him with both nature and Sara. The voice of the poem is Coleridge himself as it refers to Sara, his wife at the time of writing. It is a Romantic poem as it deals with a mixture of traditional Romantic themes: those of strong feelings, the importance of the imagination and the idea of the sublime, and the natural world. The Eolian Harp is written in blank verse and has an irregular split into two verse paragraphs, one long, one short. The form is lyrical as it deals with a mans thoughts and emotions but it is often written in a conversational style, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The end of each line needs and makes more sense once the next line has been read. In opposition to this quickening of pace is the use of caesura to cause a sudden thought provoking stop in the middle of a line:The stilly murmur of the distant SeaTells us of Silence. (l.11–12)The effect of using this technique at this point brings the thought to mind that we only truly hear the noise of the sea when all else is silent. This sudden stop and silence seems a perfect way to introduce the main theme as from this point on Coleridge talks about the Harp that is to dominate the tone of the poem until the end of the first verse paragraph. Coleridge uses a wonderful section of continuous alliteration from lines 17–20 in order to give depth to the Harp:And now its stringsBoldlier swept, the long sequacious notesOver delicious surges sink and rise,Such a soft floating witchery of sound' (emphasis added) (l.17–19)The effect of this continuous use of the s sound creates the effect of a gentle, flowing and moving sound much like the long, delicious, floating sound that Coleridge tries to describe the harp as having. The actual effect of this alliteration is to create a sensual, relaxing tone at this point in the poem. Another technique of emphasis used throughout the poem is the use of imagery. Coleridge personifies the nature around him by comparing it to abstract nouns – the white flowerd Jasmin represents Innocence, the broad–leavd ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23.
  • 24. Tim Winton Good morning sir and fellow students. Significant events are pivotal in enriching ones understanding of their identity, which leads to an understanding of where they belong in the world. This is shown through our prescribed text "The Simple Gift" composed by Steven Herrick; as well as Tim Winton's "The Turning". | Steven Herrick's free verse novel explores this value of events that shape a persons identity and hence their sense of belonging in their world. The cause of his alienation appears to be physical and psychological abuse from his father, lack of caring from his school and his run down neglected neighbourhood with its "deadbeat no hoper... downtrodden house in Longlands Rd, Nowheresville". | The symbolism and scatological imagery ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Herrick induces us to feel empathy rather than antagonism to the protagonist. This is accomplished through the intimate use of language, changing perspectives and personal anecdotes. | Growth in maturity is shown as both Billy and Old Bill show signs of growth as they help each other. Billy's growth is demonstrated as he becomes a 'different' individual from the beginning of the narrative poem showing positive thinking "sure there's hope in the world...even for hobos like us". | Herrick also represents this change through his use of natural imagery and pathetic fallacy; exemplified in the poem "Hobos like us", "Sit in the sunshine". Old Bill's view of the world slowly starts to change, as the protagonist reduces his consumption of alcohol and ventures to move on with his life. This is done through Herrick's use of Motif throughout the novel of Old Bills alcoholic nature. | While Old Bill demonstrates the symbolism of 'A Simple Gift' when he gave his keys to his old home to Caitlin and Billy symbolizing his final pivotal moment enriching Billy's, Caitlin's and Old Bill's understanding of their identity, which leads to their understanding of where they belong in the world. | Tim Winton's "The Turning" also explores this value of events that shape a persons identity and hence their sense of belonging in their world. The short story "The Turning" tells the narrative of Raelene, which reveals the notion ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25.
  • 26. The Main Theme of Tennyson's The Charge of the Light... The Main Theme of Tennyson's The Charge of the Light Brigade From the first few lines of 'The Charge of the Light Brigade,' Tennyson plunges you into the poem, creating an awesome, in depth feeling of reality. His words are so powerful, that they make you feel as if you are one of the Light Brigade. With this war language he uses he gives the reader a feeling of heroism and bravery, an inexorable feeling. 'Charge for the guns! Into the valley of death rode the six hundred.' This illustrates the great irony or war, as they are marching into the valley on a misinterpreted command. The actual command that was given was to ret rite from the valley and not to go into it. 'Forward the Light ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In verse three it exclaims that there was a; 'Cannon to the right of them, Cannon to the left of them Cannon in front of them.' This is an audio image of bombardment, which almost allows you to hear the cannons being set off. This draws the reader in, making them think as if they were there. 'Into the jaws of Death, into the mouth of hell'. In this line I have come across personification, as the valley has been brought to life by being given human attributes. This highlights the horror, torture and suffering the soldiers uncovered and shows the wicked darkness of war. In verse four there is a dramatic pause, 'All the world wondered.' This line suggests that the whole world knew of their bravery and that they would be always remembered as heroes of their era. 'Reeled from the sabre–stroke,' in this short line you can nearly hear the sabres slashing through the air violently. 'Shattered and sundered' tells us that they were beaten, but beaten as warriors of war.
  • 27. 'Then they rode back, but not, Not the six hundred'. This statement is very emphatic and stark, which makes the reader dwell on their unfortunate defeat. In the next verse Tennyson uses repetition of the cannons this brings them to life and makes the reader reflect back on the previous verse in which ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. How Tenyson Describes The Eagle How Tenyson Describes the Eagle In verse 1, line 1 he describes the eagle as being harsh, violent and rough by using alliteration in the words 'clasps', 'crag', and 'crooked'. He uses onomatopoeia also in these words to get over the violentness of the bird and also its rough environment. When using the phrase 'crooked hands' Tenyson is describing how the shape of the claws are crooked but when he used the word 'hands' instead of claws this is implying the eagle has god like qualities. The phrase 'close to the sun' has connotations of the bird being god–like (because some religions worship the sun like a god). The sun also has connotations of energy and strength implying the bird has these ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In line 5 Tenyson says 'he watches from his mountain walls'. Tenyson describes the walls as 'his' making it sound as if the eagle owns the mountains and its 'his' territory. This furthers the idea of the eagle being powerful. In the last line of the poem Tenyson says 'And like a thunderbolt he falls' This is saying how the eagle can fall effortlessly like a thunderbolt, which shows how much power the eagle holds. What did Cowper think of Tiney? Cowper is obviously very fond of his pet hare, Tiney. He is very protective over it; this is shown in verse 1 of the poem – "Here lies, whom hound did n'er pursue, Nor swifter greyhound follow, Whose got ne'er tainted morning dew, Nor ear heard huntsman's 'hallo' " ================================== Cowper is saying that his hare has never been let into danger, and his feet have never even touched the 'morning dew'. This shows that Cowper cares for Tiney and will not let him come to any harm.
  • 30. In the second verse Cowper describes how he raised the hare like one of his children, but even though Cowper was trying to raise the hare like he was the hare still had a wild streak in him. "Old Tiney, surliest of his kind, Who, nursed with tender care, And domestic bounds confined, Was still a wild ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31.
  • 32. Midnight's Children and Satanic Verses The western world often touts multiculturalism as an ideal for society. However, only nations with centuries of cultural integration realize this goal. With the advent of the postmodern Earth, however, young nations are striving headstrong into the practice of cultural unification to cope with the massive influx of interconnectivity between nations, cultures, and peoples. In doing so they neglect people's cultural that have stood for hundreds of years. Salman Rushdie, a man exposed firsthand to cultural hubs all over the globe, writes using dream–like magical sequences to allow him to explore the inner–workings of the transcultural man. In doing so, he uses the cultural connotations of the images to convey the chaos and surrealism of the modern world. In Midnight's Children and Satanic Verses, Salman Rushdie aptly applies magical realism and religious parallels to convey the internal struggle of reconciling self–determination with cultural heritage. Through the character Saladin Chamcha's arc in The Satanic Verses, Rushdie illustrates the internal turmoil that results from denying one's cultural roots in favor of a self–determined identity. Chamcha, an Indian–British citizen, is molested at the age of thirteen and has an estranged relationship with his father. In an effort to distance himself from these experiences, he abandons his Indian lifestyle by changing his gestures and accent to create an English identity. Decades later, traveling from England to India to visit ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33.
  • 34. Analytical Analysis Of Frost At Midnight By Samuel Coleridge Analytical essay of "Frost at Midnight" by Samuel Coleridge People think that nature brings a sort of calmness, happiness or peace, which is why most people travel to places with beautiful sceneries, or build houses near beaches, or have a plant in their surrounding or even just a painting of a tree, flower or mountain. The importance of nature is subjective as it nature touches people in different ways. The poem "Frost at Midnight," Samuel Coleridge, is a monolingual conversation between the speaker and his sleeping infant. It is written in blank verse, with little or no rhyme but in iambic pentameter. In this poem, the speaker emphasises the importance of nature by equating it to God, he also speaks about the ability of nature to create treasured memories, which he wants to use to plant himself in his child's future, therefore, he his rallying against modernization because of this. The speaker stresses the importance of nature by comparing it to God, he says that his child will be far from God because he will not be able to hear God's voice which apparently is, "The lovely shapes and sounds intelligible / Of that eternal language..." (65–66). I believe that this comparison is quite different as most religions such as Christianity do not equate God with earth but instead suggests that God created earth (New International Version, Gen. 1.1). This sentence makes me think that God can mean different things to different people. The thing or person we worship the most or respect the most can be a god, money can be a god, a popular music artist can be a god, and a tyrannical president can also be a god. The speaker's definition of a God involved the ability to: "from eternity doth teach Himself in all... Great universal Teacher!" (67–69).The speaker's definition of God entails the ability to be able to teach one's self and be able to mold spirits. Thereby nature is important in this way because it can mold people's spirits and lives. Another way in which the speaker stresses the importance of nature is by stating benefits from nature. He is sitting at home and staring out through the window, looking at the fluttering object and listening to the owl while the rest of the residents in the house are asleep. He is in his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35.
  • 36. Essay on Understanding Poetry: Billy Collins, Introduction... Understanding Poetry: Billy Collins, Introduction to Poetry Billy Collins uses dark rooms, oceans, hives, color slides and mouse mazes to describe his poem "Introduction to Poetry", but also a way to analyze poetry in general. Growing up, students are advised by teachers how to analyze poetry. The speaker of Introduction to Poetry, Billy Collins, attempts to guide the readers by teaching them a unique and appropriate way to analyze poetry. The use of personification and imagery, by the author, gives the readers a new perspective to interpret and find the significance in poetry. In this particular poem, the speaker does not want the reader to listen to the teachers of the reader's past, "tie the poem to a chair with rope and torture a ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The speaker wants the readers, who take up the roll of students of the poem, to envision poetry as a color slide. The speaker wishes the reader to understand that he cannot see the full detail of the slide if it is not held into light. When thinking of this in a metaphorical way, the speaker is asking the reader to examine poetry and see all of its beauty and self–interpreted meaning. Most readers tend to base their interpretation on methods they have been taught, but what the speaker wants the reader to do is to use their own mind to illuminate the poems meaning, much how you use you're to eyes to decipher visual imagery. The sense motif continues into the next verse switching from visualization to hearing. The metaphor shifts from the reader's eyes looking through a slide, to ears listening pressed up against a beehive. Just as the speaker is asking the reader to hold up a poem to the light, he is also asking them to press their ears against a beehive, and listen to the bee's making the honey. The speaker wants readers to take something they perceive as white noise, and listen more intently to hear the true intricacies of poetry. Readers fail to realize that poetry can hold the sweetness of honey as well as clear colorful imagines as seen through a slide. In the third verse paragraph, the speaker is telling the reader to visualize a mouse being placed into ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37.
  • 38. Marianne Moore 's The Fish Essay Marianne Moore's nature and artistic background contribute to her modernist style and is prominent in her poem "The Fish." Marianne Moore wrote in the 1930's, a decade of change. Moore is characterized as a writer who uses overall nature, art, life, modesty, and humor. Her writing is recognized by its descriptions, and observations of people, places, animals, and art. Her poems reflect the relationship between common and uncommon ("Marianne Moore" Poetry Foundation). Marianne Moore's biographical background contributes to her symbolic writings. Moore's mother is the person who most inspired her. She came from a divorced home and lived with her mother and her grandfather. He was a presbyterian pastor. Her father was absent in her life due to the fact that he was also institutionalized. Moore's early jobs inspire the nature part of her writings. After college, she was in charge of the commercial department of the United States Indian School at Carlisle. She taught subjects such as bookkeeping and typing to young Indians. In 1918, she decided to move to New York where she taught at a private school. Three years later she was an assistant at the Hudson Park branch of the New York Public Library (Garrigue 194). Moore's early career choices to be a painter and interest in biology influenced the scientific and artistic aspect of her poetry. She wanted to be a painter like Carlos Williams. She decided to study medicine and caught an interest for biology. In an interview she ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39.
  • 40. Emerson Defines Beauty in The Poet Essay Emerson Defines Beauty in The Poet Just what is beauty? We all have our own definition of beauty because everyone has there own distinctive style and attractiveness. Therefore, we must respect why some people find beauty in things while others would not simply because beauty is truly in the eyes of the beholder. Now we all are attracted to all sorts of things, but have you ever asked yourself why? Is it simply because it is beautiful or does the meaning go beyond that? I tend to believe the latter is true so lets take love for example. It is the most beautiful thing in the world because you get a sense of being, are likely attracted to the person you are in love with, it stimulates you and you probably feel complete. However, beauty ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Secondly, when he refers to himself as a man of Beauty makes you ask the question, well why is he a man of beauty? Emerson believes that he is due to the fact that only a poet can put what he observes and sees into a beautifully crafted text. He restates this theory throughout the text and makes a case based solely on the belief that only a poet has the tools and intelligence to do this. However, I believe that Emerson was wrong to say that only poets had the vision and ability to write because we all have our own unique thoughts or perspectives on nature or life. It is almost as if Emerson believed that he and other poets had some kind of God given talent and were the chosen ones to perform these kinds of tasks. He even argues that he is right by saying, "For the world is not painted, or adorned, but is from the beginning beautiful: and God has not made some beautiful things, but Beauty is the creator of the universe." Therefore the poet is not any permissive potentate, but is emperor in his own right ( The Poet, 1648)." So basically Emerson in these two lines in trying to draw a picture that when God created the universe it was beautiful but everything was not created beautiful so it is up to the poets to paint the picture and make it beautiful. In ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 41.
  • 42. Marlowe As A Tragic Villain On the Differences between the Ultimate to the Sympathetic Villain In John Milton's Paradise Lost, Satan represents the ultimate villain, a genuine representation of the dark side. For this reason, Milton's Satan characterized with great decisiveness, lack of remorse whatsoever, and a bold disobedience against God the all mighty. For this reason Satan remains throughout the poem in the evil side, without the ability to make even a temporary transfer from the dark side to the opposite heavenly side; hence, Satan stays confined in the evil realm. On the other hand, in Christopher Marlowe's play The Tragical History of the Life and Death of Doctor Faustus , Mephistopheles character represents a different kind of villain, of one that is somewhat easy to sympathize with and even at times to feel his genuineness. Consequently, Marlowe's Mephistopheles is capable to represent the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In this dialogue, it seems that what Engle calls the ludicrous exchange, when he is referring to the dialogue between Faustus to Mephistopheles, actually it may be implied to the fact that there is more than just the verbal dialogue between the two, that is, the exchange between Mephistopheles to Faustus also symbolizes the shift in Mephistopheles' character which now speaks in favor of repenting. For this reason, it seems that there is a role reversal between Mephistopheles the fallen angel, to Doctor Faustus the human being; because although it seems suitable for Mephistopheles to speak in favor of hell, instead he chooses to express his deep and sincere remorse for being deprived out of heaven. Accordingly, in this dialogue, Doctor Faustus answers in vain to Mephistopheles in order to encourage Mephistopheles not to lament about the loss of the joys of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 43.
  • 44. Figurative Language And Appreciation Of The Jade Flower... Ashley Wisniewski Mrs. Synder English III 17 November 2017 "Flower Jade Palace" Famous Chinese Poet, Tu Fu advocates appreciating the loveliness one could be surrounded by while it exists because he believes beauty may not earn its deserved value. The poet was born into a life of wealth and familial connections until his life was changed by a rebellion in 755. When the T'ang dynasty's days of glory came to an end, the artist spent his days on the road. Towards the end of his life, Tu Fu was in poor health and suffering from many hardships. Tu Fu's poems reflected his life; he did not appreciate the luscious life he had until it was gone, and Tu Fu's work was not appreciated until he passed away (Elements of Literature 873). Tu Fu's "Jade Flower Palace" utilizes figurative language and sound devices to portray his negative feelings of uncertainty about the future. In one of Tu Fu's younger works, "Jade Flower Palace," the poem goes into the deeper meaning of appreciating beauty and how important it is to cherish loveliness during its lifespan. Tu Fu is standing in the ruins of a palace, observing what is left of the destroyed and no longer stunning building. The artist believes the palace was not appreciated for its charm while it was standing in one piece. Tu Fu's wish is that the lovely surroundings could be truly valued because one can not determine what can happen to elegance in the future. The poet's work has a deeper meaning than what it originally displays, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 45.
  • 46. Guess What I M Thinking Essay Poetry, what first comes to mind? If your anything like me, poetry can seem somewhat monotonous, rather like a locked door exclusive, complicated, and hard to understand. I think poetry tends to be a big game of "Guess what I'm thinking!" and I hate that game. I'm not a mind–reader. I think a lot of people who get excited about poetry are really pretentious. This possibly comes from believing that they actually can guess what other people are thinking. When we think poetry, we tend to know poetry by it's traditional forms of having sonnets, ballads, often rhyming (but not always) and they tend to have a specific and symmetrical structure (APA). Throughout this essay I wanted to consider poetry through different explorations and how subverting the traditional conventions of poetry might be an effective way of engagement or in an opposing way of demotivating the reader. Looking into the explorational work of a highly regarded New Zealand poet and scholar, Selina Tusitala–Marsh, we truly get an insight of someone who goes against the traditional conventions of poetry. Her collection of poems called Dark Sparring is about "...the journey of Marsh's feelings about her mother's death – wars declared, lists made, a "Mantra" written, even a printed Ransom Note. Other poems explain how Marsh took to Muay Thai kickboxing to cope with her grief following the death of her mother" (APA). Looking closely at the poem Ransom Note, it gives the effects of using an excessive number of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 47.
  • 48. Haroun and the Sea of Stories Haroun and the Sea of Stories SALMAN RUSHDIE Novel, 1990. Summary. In this story we encounter storytelling as a means of saving your identity, your relationship with your family, and perhaps even your life–which means that, in a sense, you are saving a world. The British–Indian author Salman Rushdie (b. 1947) had to go underground after the publication of his novel The Satanic Verses in 1988. The book was considered blasphemous to Islam by the fundamentalist government of Iran, which issued a death warrant against him. He says that he reached a point where he was so distressed he wasn't able to think of any stories to tell. But he worked himself out of his depression, and Haroun and the Sea of Stories, a book for children and other ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... So now the moment for wishing has passed, and he must try something else. But the Water–Genie is now distracted, because a problem has come up: Someone is polluting the Sea of Stories, and he suspects the leader of the Land of Chup, a land in perpetual darkness on the other side of the moon. The leader's name is Khattam–Shud. Going with the Genie to Gup City, Haroun finds, to his surprise, that his father is already there–he has made use of a home brew to travel to faraway places and is now being accused of being a spy for the Chupwalas. Rashid is able to explain the situation because he landed in the Twilite area and heard interesting things, and now they learn about the evil intent of Khattam–Shud: Not only is he opposed to stories and fantasies, he also wants to do away with speech altogether and has enforced strict Silence Laws. Haroun and a few helpers from Gup now travel into the twilight and on to the dark land of Chup, where shadows have acquired a life of their own, and through many dangers and adventures they reach the heart of the Chup empire, a Factory Ship that makes poison to spill into the Sea of Stories. Khattam–Shud's plan is to block the very source of stories with a plug and spread silence and darkness. Finally they see Khattam–Shud himself, and Haroun is rather surprised: He is a scrawny, skinny, weasly type, and he looks a lot like Mr. Sengupta, who stole his mother away. And when he ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 49.
  • 50. Allusions In Haroun Salman Rushdie is a British–Indian author famously known for the allegories used in his novel, Haroun And The Sea Of Stories. It is about a young child by the name of haroun , who goes on an adventure to help his father Rashid to tell stories again. On this adventure haroun is faced with mystical places, situations and people all throughout the book. This gives the novel a light hearted ,childish tone. You could almost say the book was written by a child. Even "as both a bedtime story for his son and as an allegorical response to his situation" Even with the fantasy, make–believe, and mystical aspects of this book, a deeper meaning can be found for the readers to seek out. Haroun and the sea of stories is also written for adults because ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Through these serious topics rushdie uses allegory and allusions in which he in a way disguises them throughout the book for example. The names of the main character within the novel Haroun and Rashid are from a character who appears in many of Arabian Nights tales.In addition the title "Haroun and the Sea of Stories" is very similar to that of "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" the idea of going on an adventure to gain something of some sort. Fturemore Aladdin. In the novel Haroun and the Sea of Stories Haroun is swept away on Butt the Hoopoe with Iff the Water Genie and taken through the Twilight Strip. A connection to the story of Aladdin and the similarity to the magic carpet used to travel. Lastly an teh the Journey itself. The speed of Haroun's journeys in the mail coach (rushid 35) is nearly an imitation of the fast traveling one could even call it scurrying of dorothy in the wizard of oz in a tornado. And many more aspects. In conclusion exploring all these underlying concepts allows the reader to grasp a deeper sense of what is trying to be explored in the novel. Which can not be done my a child who merrily is looking for a "bedtime ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 51.
  • 52. Walt Whitman's Influences There have been many influential writers that left their own unique mark on American history; one in particular that has made a significant impact is Walt Whitman. His writing styles evoke different nontraditional methods that did not coincide with the traditions of more "mainstream" American writers. He did this by establishing a pattern that utilized a lot of free verse compared to the more natural rhyme of poems, and also by describing his subject with emphasis to make the story as real as possible. He tried to subject his characters to a variety of situations, and seemed to establish a connection between body and pen. It could be said that Walt Whitman was the most influential writer during the 1900's and contributed the most to the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Changing jobs from newspaper to newspaper was not a problem for Whitman. He was able to find an occupation regardless of the economy. He relocated from New Orleans due to the slaves that were being auctioned in the newspaper. He could not bear the thought of such an appalling act. This newspaper published highly radical opinions and controversial topics for the time period, such as removing laws that allowed for the enslavement of African Americans. After the Civil War, he also published many pieces advocating for the equal treatment of African Americans, and an end to the discrimination they were facing. Due to his radical ideas were During the course of his career Walt Whitman struggled with his career trajectory. While he was an exceptional writer, his work was never fully appreciated until his death. Walt Whitman's trial and tribulations led him to write of his experiences such as in "The Mississippi at Midnight," which describes how the river captured his attention. His observations created a beautiful piece of literature that encompasses the river. One of the verses that reinforces his writing style is "Oh tireless waters! Like Life's quick dream onward and onward even hurrying like death in this midnight hour you seem, life in your chill drops greedily burying"( Whitman, The Mississippi), stating that life is too short and that it can be extinguished ever so quickly. Being captivated by the Mississippi river, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 53.
  • 54. Summary Of Song Of A Citizen The purpose of this assignment was to reflect on the poem Song of a Citizen using critical analysis to understand the complete meaning of what Milosz has written within the text. The poem Song of a Citizen is an illuminating reflection on the abominable conditions of the Jewish people and the suffering they have endured wrapped into a piece on how a prisoner is separated from the natural world, connected by Milosz's incredible writing ability. The poem Song of a Citizen is an open book that allows the reader a deep view into the inner character of its speaker. Firstly, we see many of the speaker's views reflected in the poem's numerous verses. For example, in verse 9, he says that " it is better to be a live dog than a dead lion", which shows how he has felt and acted in this perilous situation. This could even be taken so far as to say that, because of the horrors he faced during the war, the speaker feels that it is better to be living than even to die a courageous death. Additionally, another revealing verse was from 20–25, which symbolized his continuing relationship with the world. He mentions a "copper–leaved garden", which can be seen as a parallel to fall or winter trees, as well as a "heart of metal", which could describe the heart of manufacturing combined with nature. This shows the speaker's character as we see how he connects nature to freedom and beauty, running a parallel to countless prisoners and captives(including the Jews) who were separated from nature ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 55.
  • 56. Alfred Lord Tennyson, Langston Hughes And Walt Whitman Three of the most well known Western genii of poetry are Alfred Lord Tennyson, Langston Hughes and Walt Whitman. All of these men have exemplary traits and attributes in their respective sectors of poetry. Tennyson, Hughes and Whitman all played a major role in the world of poetry and many factors of theirs' are still influencing prose to this day. Despite being among the most influential poets of the American canon, Walt wasn't born quoting Shakespearean poetry. He was born in New York to a poor family and was the second of nine children. After concluding formal schooling at the age of eleven, Walt started to work for the local printer. He became an active member of his local library, joined a public speaking club, and started watching theatrical performances. At his local library, he studied history, theatre, literature, music, geography, and many other sciences. At the age of thirteen Walt anonymously published his first ever poem in the "New–York Mirror". After a temporary collapse of the printing industry and variety of different jobs, Whitman started to indulge in freelance fiction and poetry writing. Despite the fact that Walt Whitman may have seemed simple–minded, he had a major role in the world of poetry. Walt Whitman established a new kind of poetry called free verse. Never before was a poet able to write a rhythm–free poem without having his/her poetry pushed away. Poetry is still known today as being rhythmic, but Walt Whitman changed ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 57.
  • 58. An Analysis of “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” and “Out of the... An Analysis of "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" and "Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking" By Austin Cooley ENGL 2027 – 007 In "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" the story follows the narrator's experience with life as he takes a beautiful ferry ride. The man talks about the meaning of his life to other people. In this crowd he brings together all of the strangers and finds a connection. His journey through "space and time" is focused on the people. In the first sections, Whitman sets the scene by describing his surroundings. He personifies a few objects, thus, making them more relatable to the people he is surrounded by. He feels connected to a pattern larger than himself, and how the past and the future resemble each other. And so he gets into the real ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The things that gave him pleasure were in fact the sensory pleasures. What he saw in the world, the voices and sounds of the people, the accomplishments that he felt, and memories that he made were his justifications for living. Living his life to the fullest and cherishing the things that he did for himself gave him an identity. There is a key difference between living a meaningless life and a leading a rewarding life with a purpose. In the first case, the goal in life is to work hard to be accepted by the standards of others. As a result, a life will most likely wasted on work that gives no meaning or reward to the person. In the second case, a person can live for their own standards and behave in a way that is enjoyable to themselves. "I too had receiv'd identity by my body, That I was I knew was of my body, and what I should be I knew I should be of my body. . . . About my body for me, and your body for you. . ." The interiority as Whitman describes, guarantees that an individual can find meaning in life without comparing themselves against others and bringing out the evil and deceitful qualities of humans. In an ideal model of Whitman's social behavior, everyone would be content and there would be no evil in the world. The final two lines of the poem set his conclusion regarding the importance of interiority its results on the world. You furnish your parts toward eternity, Great or small, you furnish your parts toward the soul. Whitman himself ignored the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 59.
  • 60. W.B. Yeats and History Essay Yeats in Time: The Poet's Place in History All things can tempt me from this craft of verse: One time it was a woman's face, or worse–– The seeming needs of my fool–driven land; Now nothing but comes readier to the hand Than this accustomed toil. In these lines from "All Things can Tempt Me" (40, 1–5), Yeats defines the limitations of the poet concerning his role in present time. These "temptations" (his love for the woman, Maude Gonne, and his desire to advance the Irish Cultural Nationalist movement) provide Yeats with the foundation upon which he identifies his own limitations. In his love poetry, he not only expresses his love for Gonne, he uses his verse to influence her feelings, attempting to gain her love and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The sword signifies his words, which he holds in the "upstairs" of his mind. This metaphor gives the words great power. Either on a page or spoken, they can be called upon for battle to violently disrupt the world. However, Yeats is not concrete in presenting this perception as accurate. The last two lines highlight the questioning ?Did not? which begins the previous acclamation of poetic influence. Here the speaker gives a different perspective, saying, "Yet would be now, could I but have my wish, / Colder and dumber and deafer than a fish." (9–10). Now, Yeats's vision of the poet is cold, completely lacking passion. He is dumb and therefore unable to influence others with his words. He is deaf and therefore unable to be influenced by the words of others. Many levels of interaction in the present world are taken away from the poet by this image; but, the sense of sight remains. Just as the fish can only survive in water, the poet can only function as an observer. In "The Lake Isle of Innisfree" (15), Yeats takes this purely perceptive role and places it in the context of time. In the last three lines, the poet says (in the present tense), "I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore; / While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements gray/ I hear it in my deep heart's core." (11–12). Throughout these lines, the poet stands completely stationary upon the lifeless pavement, never interacting with his environment. Unlike the deaf fish described in the
  • 61. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. The Satanic Verses By Salman Rushdie Salman Rushdie is a passionate novelist and essayist known for his magical realism, who expresses his beliefs and influences through his works. Rushdie has frequently described himself as a "historian of ideas," and many of his novels are "novels of ideas" rather than narrations centered on a plot or character. 1 Furthermore, Rushdie's pessimistic views of religion are seen in his writings, from The Satanic Verses to recent essays like, Out of Kansas. I will also discuss the fatwa' calling for his assassination and resulting in him being put under police protection by the British government. To begin, Rushdie was born into a Muslim family. Although Rushdie was a student of Islam, he claimed to be a lapsed Muslim. Ultimately, he expressed that he did not believe in supernatural entities, whether Christian, Jewish, Muslim or Hindu. Rushdie's outspoken work, The Satanic Verses caused great controversy in the Islamic world because of what was seen by some to be an irreverent depiction of Muhammad. Rushdie is the author of 11 novels, 4 books, shorts stories and many essays. In addition, many of his books focus on the role of religion in society and the effect and conflict. Rushdie believed, "Religion, a medieval form of unreason, when combined with modern weaponry becomes a real threat to our freedoms." 2 Also, "Religion is a story, and it seems to me that a definition of any living, vibrant society is that you constantly question the stories. That you constantly argue about ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. Lycidas Poem Analysis The Crisis of Lycidas' Absent Body "Lycidas" is a pastoral elegy in which the speaker, a shepherd, mourns the death of his friend Lycidas, a fellow shepherd and talented poet, who had drowned at sea. However, as the poem progresses, the figure of Lycidas fades into the background as the writing of the poem becomes overwhelmed by the various crises that the speaker experiences and other poetic voices – those of Phoebus and St. Peter, for instance – interrupt. The ninth verse paragraph of "Lycidas" marks the poem's return to its elegiac intent as the speaker experiences another crisis in which he laments Lycidas' absent body, a recurring element which, when addressed by the speaker directly, allows the speaker to properly mourn and accept Lycidas' death. The ninth verse paragraph begins with a plea, "Return, Alpheus" (132), Alpheus being a river in Arcadia whose waters mix with the fountain Arethuse, referenced earlier in the poem to represent Greek pastoral poetry. The speaker persuades Alpheus to return by stating that "the dread voice is past" (132) the dread voice being St. Peter, who in the previous verse paragraph interrupted the speaker's voice with a vicious condemnation of shepherds. The verse paragraph before was taken over by Neptune's herald, and the one before by Phoebus. As the poem progresses, it begins to move away from Lycidas to the point that the ninth verse paragraph is the first one since the fifth that mentions Lycidas, or "Lycid" (151), by name. By calling on Alpheus and the "Sicilian Muse" (133), the speaker recognizes that the elegy has veered from its original intent and he wishes to return to it. The speaker first does this by invoking the "Sicilian Muse" to "call the vales" (134) to gather a plants and flowers to adorn Lycidas' dead body. The speaker specifically calls for "primrose," "crowtoe," "jessamine," pansies, violets, "woodbine," "cowslips," "amaranthus," daffodils, and laurels. (142–47,149–150)The laurels are significant as an emblem of poetry and its presence on Lycidas' "hearse" (151) praises him for his poetry, but there is a sense of sadness and grief embedded within the floral imagery. When the speaker mentions the "rathe primrose" (142), a flower that blooms early ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 66.
  • 67. Tonight I Can Write By Pablo Neruda Summary Have you ever lost someone you loved? "Tonight I can write" was written by Pablo Neruda. Pablo Neruda was born on July 12th, 1904. He passed away on September 23rd, 1973. Neruda WAS a nobal prize winner. He wrote in an immense amount of styles, including surreal, historical, political, autobiography, and love poems. One of his many poems is "Tonight I can write" this poem expresses the author's pain from a lost love. "Tonight I can write" relates with his readers showing he is also feels loss and pain, this shows his readers that he is human and relatable which makes the poem enjoyable to read. This poem is a free verse and has no rhyme scheme. Tonight I can write the saddest lines. Write, for example, 'The night is shattered and the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the poem "Tonight I can write" the main theme in the poem is the emptiness caused by the authors heart break in this vastly complex thing we call life. The two ideas of love and life are tied closely together in "Tonight I can write". This idea is shown clearly when he writes "the night wind revolves in the sky and sings" or "the night is shattered and she is not with me". The night is eerie and dark, full of sadness and pain, the same way his soul feels. His soul is not accepting that "it has lost her." In vast world full of people, his eyes and heart still search for her. Starry The speaker of "Tonight I can write" is Neruda. "I loved her, and sometimes she loved me too." A poem expressing feelings of love or sadness cannot be written from others feelings or thoughts. "Tonight I can write the saddest lines" He repeats these lines to put emphasis that the lines he is writing could be the saddest he's ever written. In the poem "Tonight I can write" the main theme in the poem is the emptiness caused by the authors heart break in this vastly complex thing we call life. The two ideas of love and life are tied closely together in "Tonight I can write". This idea is shown clearly when he writes "the night wind revolves in the sky and sings" or "the night is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 68.
  • 69. Summary Of 'The Most Dangerous GameAndPorphyria's Lover' Intro "From the beginning men used God to justify the unjustifiable." –Salman Rushdie, The Satanic Verses. Salman Rushdie points are truly stated and are seen in literature work. The two stories "The Most Dangerous Game" and "Porphyria's Lover", both portray the characters, General Zaroff and Porphyria's Lover, as murderers who think they have done nothing wrong. The authors Connell and Browning use conflict and characterization to convey that some find it easy to justify murder. DP 1 Through the use of external conflict between Zaroff and Rainsford's hunting prowess, and Porphyria's Lover strangling Porphyria, the authors show how each can easily justify murder. Rainsford, the main character, fell off his boat and swam ashore a mysterious island. When he arrived he came across a fortress of sorts, and meet the man incharge, General Zaroff. Zaroff is talking to Rainsford about his past and the island he lives on. Zaroff tells Rainsford about his hunting experiences when he says "Hunting was beginning to bore me! And hunting, remember, had been my life(33)." This is when Zaroff's internal conflict arises, suffers from ennui in hunting and wants something more of a challenge to kill. He has been hunting for as long as he can remember and every beast he has faced, he overcame and killed it, until there was no animal he couldn't kill. This is what caused Zaroff to want a challenge, something that . "'must have courage, cunning and, above all, it must be able to reason. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 70.
  • 71. Forbidden Books: Why Books Be Banned? Forbidden Books: Why banning books is never a good idea. Numerous books have been prohibited by various people and countries all over the world, however, is it really intelligent to do so? At the very least, I personally believe that it's a completely ridiculous idea and that an approach of such likes should be lost. Everybody, regardless of their background or living status, have a right to read what they desire for. Without question, books are one of the great human inventions which originate from the will to record one's ideas, findings and memories to pass down to future generations. First of all, the possession of someone's freedom and the right to choose and read is essential else they'll just become part of the silent majority, therefore the banning of particular books, to me, is nonsense. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Considering the fact that information nowadays spreads like dust spread by volcanic eruptions, wouldn't it be better to just leave challenged books be since they're going to attract less attention that way? In this era, it is much easier to start campaigns about objections due to the anonymity on the internet. That's my other reason for stating why books shouldn't be banned. Furthermore, samizdat versions, which are illegitimate copies which were clandestinely published, of taboo books would be traded illegally between people because of their increased rarity. An example of a banned book would be "Lady Chatterley's Lover" by D.H. Lawrence. This book was originally published in 1928 in Florence, nevertheless was banned in England due to its explicit content about adultery and a love affair, saying it was too obscene and corrupted to be viewed by the population. Consequently, it can be said that the prohibition of books only trigger illegal ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 72.
  • 73. Bruce Dawe's Poetry Several poems by Bruce Dawe surround the subject of loneliness and oppression, a matter that many people face in today's society and also a matter that relates to his interests; his fascination with the 'underdog' character and how he provides a voice for certain individuals. 'The Raped Girl's Father', 'The Family Man' and 'The Sadness of Madonnas' are three poems by Bruce Dawe that relate to the themes, portraying realism in how loneliness and oppression affect people in the world. An example of a poem related to the subject of loneliness and oppression is 'The Raped Girl's Father'. The poem is about a girl who had been raped and, as a consequence, is constantly abused by her father. From the title, the poem is centred on the father, who ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... For example, 'the rifle's eye is blank' and 'rumours flower over his absence...' symbolise how the reason for the family man's death is 'blank' and because of that, his workmates made assumptions as to why he killed himself. Dawe also uses imagery to symbolise the man's walk away from life and how he kept it to himself; for example, 'from the table of humdrum cares and dream and walk...over the edge of dark and quietly lie...' which clearly explains that the man turned away from life. The imagery and symbolism in 'The Sadness of Madonnas' is similar; its purpose is to create an image of oppression through the mother and child. For example, 'the xylophone rib–cage and the wasted music of leg–bones' and 'the thousands lying silent in the dirt, the dehydrated children's skin as tough as leather' present a powerful picture of the Ethiopian people and how the famine is making them suffer and slowly leading them to their deaths. The language Dawe uses in 'The Raped Girl's Father', such as metaphors, alliteration and repetition create a dark and powerful atmosphere to the poem. The words used are chosen to reflect the father's heartless rage and his daughter's shock during her darkest hours. An example of repetition and alliteration is 'eaten by the dark...and in that darker dark in which she lay', which emphasises the 'hell' that the girl is experiencing in her dark bedroom and her vulnerability. Metaphors in the poem ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 74.
  • 75. The Satanic Verses Analysis In The Satanic Verses, numerous symbols illustrate how human nature is the source of the evil. Furthermore, the symbolic significance that pertains to the main character also shows how all individuals have both good and bad qualities. A repeating motif in the book is the reference to the play "Othello". Skapearses famous play follows the life of the Moor Othello after is marriage to Desdemona. Iago, a loyal friend of Othello, was furious that the Moor overlooked him for a promotion, sparking his lust for revenge. Iago devised a plan to persuade the King that his had been having an affair with his trusted friend Cassio. Iago's actions resulted in the Moor killing Desdemona. After learning the truth, Othello committed suicide. The references to the play foreshadow the ending of the novel but also gives further explanations to the actions of Gibreel. The first mentions of "Othello" only occurred to criticize Shakespeare because he "couldn't spell" (256). The primary reference occurs when Gibreel wondered about the creation of evil, "why it grows, how it takes unilateral possession of a many–sided human soul. Or, let's say: the enigma of Iago" (439). Gibreel continues by denying his allegations saying he's, "no match for the moor" (439). Gibreel turns out to me more naive than the moor because the events that occur in "Othello" are mirrored in the novel. Gibreel assumes the role of Othello, Saladin Iago, and Gibreel's love interest Allie Cone, Desdemona. Gibreel inherited the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 76.
  • 77. Taking a closer read at Haroun and the Sea of Stories 1. Identify & explain 5 symbols found in text. Although Haroun and the sea of stories is a children's literature, symbols which overlap as archetypes are used to make this novel contain a deeper meaning and be just as enjoyable for adults. Weather in this story symbolizes the current feeling or emotion of the characters. Dull, gloomy days often occurred when the character is depressed: "this sudden mist positively stank of sadness and gloom" (47). This symbol is clearly evident when Haroun traveled to Moody land, "the sun would shine all night is there were enough joyful people around, and it would go on shining until the endless sunshine got on their nerves; then an irritable night would fall a night full of mutterings and discontent, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... An example is the June 9th, 1985 student demonstration at Tian An Men square in China. The government attempted to stop the media from exposing this event to the public; they also attempted to wipe out any written records of this afterwards. This is similar to how certain Chupwalas in Haroun stitched their mouths, or vowed to remain silent under the orders of Khattam Shud who tried to stop the relay of information in his "kingdom" so to speak. 3. Detail 3 instances in the text where the power of story is alluded to. Explain The power of story is often referred to in this novel. For example, on page 72, "the stories were held here in fluid form, they retained the ability to change, to become new versions of themselves, to join up with other stories and so become yet other stories...It was not dead but alive." This means that there are many variations to one idea or one story. Old tales combined with imagination can be made into new pieces of work. "no story comes from nowhere; new stories are born from old––it is the new combinations that make them new."(86) There is an endless possibility and no limitations on what the story is about because new ones can always be made. Whether it's the adventure or the escape from reality that stories provide, or that fact that it takes your mind away from tension, some people, and personally I believe that stories have the ability to relieve stress. The power of story is implied in Haroun: "you can offer [Story ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 78.
  • 79. Haroun and the Sea of Stories Closed Reading So Iff the Water Genie told Haroun about the Ocean of the Streams of Story, and even though he was full of a sense of hopelessness and failure the magic of the ocean began to have an effect on Haroun. He looked into the water and saw that it was made up of a thousand thousand thousand and one currents, each one a different colour, weaving in and out of one another like a liquid tapestry of breathtaking complexity; and Iff explained that these were the Streams of Story, that each coloured strand represented and contained a single tale. Different parts of the ocean contained different sorts of stories, and all the stories that had ever been told and many that were still in the process of being invented could be found here, the Ocean of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The passage personifies the ocean by talking of its playful nature of the currents "weaving in and out of one another" and its ability to change, as it has a mind of its own. The last sentence within the passage states "it was not dead but alive" the use of short sentencing emphasised its point and indicates its importance. However this short verse changes the mood of the passage, the reader is confronted by the abrupt word "dead" this single word changes the tone of the sentence and explores that along with the capability to be alive there also is the capability to be dead. This foreshadows the next passage and the future of the ocean. Within the passage the metaphor of the ocean being a library is emphasised, it states that it is "the biggest library in the universe" this metaphor is used to try and example the extent of the sea and how many stories it possesses, connecting it to a familiar idea for the reader. However the metaphor is later contradicted renouncing the oceans likeness to a library of books due to the fluid form of the stories and their changing nature and ability to become new versions and to join up with other stories. It presents the ocean to be much more. This is revisited throughout the novel, exampling how the ocean is "much more" and how it is a health source to plentimaws fish, directly impacting them as the ocean becomes more toxic, as well as a way of life to all members of gup city. In the passage ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 80.
  • 81. Haroun And The Sea Of Stories Short Story Michael A. Rodriguez Ms. Ramirez British Literature 1600 30 November 2017 Haroun and the Sea of Stories: Magic Meets Real World Haroun and the Sea of Stories is a children's novel, written by Salman Rushdie, who is one of the prominent authors of magical realism in English literature. The novel brings together real world elements and features of magic or the supernatural. Using elements of literature such as made–up words and rhyming throughout Haroun and the Sea of Stories, Rushdie showcases why he is a distinguished author of magical realism. (Warnes) The novel begins by introducing the city in which the main character lives. Rushdie calls it the "sad city" because the citizens are so depressed, they have forgotten the city's actual name. Haroun and his parents are the only people not depressed. Rashid, Haroun's father, is a famous story teller. The depressed citizens solely care about facts and see no purpose in these made–up stories. Haroun's upstairs neighbor, Mr. Sengupta, is always complaining to Haroun's mother about these stories and eventually runs off with her. This leads to the main conflict of the story, Rashid becoming so sad he forgets how to tell his stories. (Rushdie, 12–26) Rashid needs to perform stories for multiple politicos, but draws a blank. After angering the politicos, they send him to Valley of K. Haroun and his father go to the bus station so they can ride to the Valley of K, and eventually convince a psychotic bus driver, Mr. Butt, to take ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...