Members
Member's Area
Subjects
American History
Arts and Television
Biographies
Book Reports
Creative Writing
Economics
Education
English Papers
Geography
Health and Medicine
Legal Issues
Miscellaneous
Music and Musicians
Poetry and Poets
Politics
Religion
Science and Environment
Social Issues
Technology
World History
|
|
Enter your query below to search our database containing over 45,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 1321 - 1330 of 2670 matching essays
- 1321: Nature Imagery in Adrienne Rich's "Twenty-One Love Poems"
- Nature Imagery in Adrienne Rich's "Twenty-One Love Poems" Author: Roger Naggar English 206 - Modern and Contemporary Literature Dr. Carstens In her "Twenty-One Love Poems," Adrienne Rich arranges a series of nature images in order to investigate the relationship between self and city, self and lover. Throughout ...
- 1322: Analysis Of Lorca’s Lament For Ignacio Sanchez Mejias
- ... arsenic bells” and “iodine”. These words create the effect of being inside a hospital. Also, the word iodine is associated with the cleansing of a wound. According to the Hispanic Literature Criticism, “at the height of his skill as a poet, he was in full controll of language, imagery, and emotional suggestion.”(p756) Lorca proved his control over imagery by writing ...
- 1323: Frost's Home Burial
- ... to name”. Although she tries to make overpower her husband, she really wants him in the end to comfort her. (male/female stereotype) BIBLIOGRAPHY Hunt, Douglas. The Riverside Anthology of Literature, 3rd Ed., Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1997.
- 1324: Analysis of “The Vietnam Wall”
- ... a visit to the Vietnam War Memorial. Rios portrays first-hand the powerful emotional effect the wall has on everyone who visits. “The Vietnam Wall” can be found in Discovering Literature edited by Hans Guth and Gabriele Rico pages 541-542. “The Vietnam Wall” is a one stanza poem with no apparent rhyming scheme. “ The Vietnam Wall” is a picture poem ...
- 1325: Dickinson's "Because I Could Not Stop For Death" and "I heard A Fly Buzz When I Died"
- ... into Eternity, possibly into an afterlife. It is just the exact opposite is Dickinson's other poem, "I Heard A Fly Buzz-When I Died," With this particular piece of literature, the clues which point to the disbelief in an afterlife are fewer and not as blatant, but are all still present. In this poem, a woman is lying in bed ...
- 1326: Humanity's Fall In The Garden of Eden In Paradise Lost
- ... bias way, instead he forces his view on the reader as if his opinion is the way it is. Works Cited Milton, John. Paradise Lost. The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Sixth Edition, New York: Norton, 1996.
- 1327: Emily Dickenson And the Theme of Death
- ... courteous to those who are worthy of heaven? Emily Dickenson had the rare talent to ingeniously transform death, a normally unwelcome subject matter, into creative and highly thoughtful pieces of literature. Dickenson's poems show us new ways of looking at death and its effects. Through inventive diction paired with graphic imagery and sometimes shocking perspectives, Dickenson captures our imaginations with ...
- 1328: Housman's "To An Athlete Dying Young"
- ... The Explicator, 1951. (185) Henry, Nat. "Housman's To an Athlete Dying Young." The Explicator, 1954. (188-189) Housman, A.E.. "To an Athlete Dying Young." The Bedford Introduction To Literature. Ed. Michael Meyer. Boston: Bedford Books Of St. Martin's Press, 1993. (967) Leggett, Bobby Joe. Land of Lost Content. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1970. Leggett, Bobby Joe. The ...
- 1329: The Works of Poet Carl Sandburg and His Effect on American Poetry
- ... on the poem's by Carl Sandburg. "The seeing eye- Mr. Sandburg has it to a superlative degree, and wedded to it, an imaginative utterance which owes nothing whatever to literature or tradition. It is a fascinating and baffling study this of examining how Mr. Sandburg does it....It is, more than anything else, the sharp, surprising rightness of his descriptions ...
- 1330: The Point of View in "Porphyria's Lover"
- ... one thing, and letting the reader know the reality of it all. Although his name is never mentioned, the lover is a unique and memorable character. Works Cited Barnet, Sylvan. Literature for Composition, Third edition. Harper Collins Publishers. New York, New York. 1992. pp567-568. Slinn, E. Warwick. Browning and the Fictions of Identity. Barnes & Noble Books. Totowa, New Jersey. 1982 ...
Search results 1321 - 1330 of 2670 matching essays
|
|