"3 stanza poems" Essays and Research Papers

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    When we hear about death we imagine something scary‚ such as The Grim Reaper. In our minds The Grim Reaper is a tall‚ dark figure who’s wasting no time on bringing you along with him. However in the poem I’m going to talk about in this paper views death in a different perspective. In Emily Dickinson’s poem‚ Because I Could Not Stop for Death‚ the speaker describes death as a gentleman‚ and how he took her on a nonstop journey. Besides death being talked about as a person‚ the speaker also goes through

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    Furthermore‚ to enhance this effect‚ alliteration is used within the poem: “For I fear those guns will fire” (14). In this line‚ the three F sounds‚ “for‚” “fear‚” and “fire‚” are strung together and nearly imitate the forceful sound of a gun firing. The use of alliteration is also seen in line 26 when the reader discovers

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    is eternal‚ and regardless of her death‚ their love will last forever. This poem was described with many elements that help illustrate a tragic fairy tale love story. Imagery‚ word choice‚ and alliteration are all poetic elements that helped shaped this poem. Edgar Allan Poe wrote Annabel Lee in 1849 and died shortly after. Later that year it was published and left everyone asking who this poem was about? Was this poem autobiographical? It is a known fact that Poe married a woman named Virginia

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    “The Lotos-Eaters” “Courage!” he said‚ and pointed toward the land‚ “This mounting wave will roll us shoreward soon.” In the afternoon they came unto a land In which it seemed always afternoon. All round the coast the languid air did swoon‚ Breathing like one that hath a weary dream. Full-faced above the valley stood the moon; And like a downward smoke‚ the slender stream Along the cliff to fall and pause and fall did seem. A land of streams! some‚ like a downward smoke

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    that would be left on the field. One of the main weapons used on the battlefield was machine guns in which we are aware of after reading stanza 3. The soldiers where ‘told to walk‚ not

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    weak‚ decrepit and unable experience the adventures we had once planned to. Many poets recognised this cycle in their own lives‚ expressing their regret and fear through beautiful words strung together in a poem. Broadcasting an episode on Get Poetic about life and disappointment

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    The poem begins with the speaker asking a fearsome tiger what kind of divine being could have created it: “What immortal hand or eye/ Could frame they fearful symmetry?” Each subsequent stanza contains further questions‚ all of which refine this first one. From what part of the cosmos could the tiger’s fiery eyes have come‚ and who would have dared to handle that fire? What sort of physical presence‚ and what kind of dark craftsmanship‚ would have been required to “twist the sinews” of the tiger’s

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    Hunting snake is the poem written by Judith Wright‚ an Australian environmentalist‚ who shares her amazing encounter with a great black snake. The main theme of the poem is nature. Here‚ the description that the poet gives about “the great black snake” is pretty much similar to the red bellied black snake which was found in the writer’s hometown in New South Wales. In this poem‚ the persona or the voice is that of the poet herself. The poem is written in a quatrain‚ i.e four stanzas altogether and each

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    In the two poems‚ The Magpies by Denis Glover and Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley a common theme is that of man’s immortality. In The Magpies this theme is made especially apparent through the comparison of the immortality of Elizabeth and Tom with nature’s ability to remain constant due to its continuous regeneration. Meanwhile‚ in Ozymandias a king has a statue built however just like him the statue does not survive and is actually left abandoned and forgotten in the desert. This theme of immortality

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    April 6th‚ 2013 Poem Explication – “For The Union Dead” The first stanza speaks of an old aquarium‚ one that has obviously been abandoned and left to the elements. The second stanza speaks of lost memories‚ perhaps fond ones‚ of the author and the old aquarium when it was still open. The third stanza speaks of lost time and of time marching onto a new (and more often than not‚ not exactly better) tomorrow‚ with new things going up where old things once were. The fourth stanza speaks of the old

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