Name : Hai Yu Tuttle Creek Lake After dinner I drove to Tuttle Creek Lake. When I reached here‚ I walked on a flat road. The road ahead was hazy and sides grew tall and dense trees and lush grass‚ put on a little bit of green energy for the night. There was some insects chirp in the grass‚ which brought a little life for the night. The hung moon in the sky is so dim and the night seemed so lonely. When I walked in the secluded path
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Beautiful Day There is this place just a few blocks away from my house where I like to go to get away. It’s called The Rock in Pawnee Rock. Early in the morning it can be so peaceful and quiet with beautiful wet dew still on the grass. As the sun comes up you see the colors surrounding the bright sky. Nothing more radiant as the sun on a bright morning. As I look around I can see every house in this small town‚ plus the long stretch of highway from great bend to larned. You see cars buzzing by on
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Aristophanes Views on Love In the Symposium‚ a most interesting view on love and soul mates are provided by one of the characters‚ Aristophanes. In the speech of Aristophanes‚ he says that there is basically a type of love that connects people. Aristophanes begins his description of love by telling the tale of how love began. He presents the tale of three sexes: male‚ female‚ and a combination of both. These three distinct sexes represented one’s soul. These souls split in half‚ creating
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Shakespeare’s View on Love Shakespeare’s plays are very drastic with how he ties love into them. Shakespeare always adds comedy or tragedy to any romance that might be taking place. For example in Twelfth Night‚ As You like It and Romeo and Juliet there is romance but he also puts comedy in there so love is not that easy. In the play Othello he makes it into a tragedy which makes the love even harder to take place. Shakespeare has always found a way to make love as complicated as he can which
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Rockwell’s The Love Song has captured my attention time and time again with its expressive and intriguing narrative. Sylvan Barnet tells us that in the critique of a work we must ask ourselves‚ “What is my first response to the work?” Barnet goes on to say that we may eventually change our understanding of the work or revoke our initial response completely. Regardless of our conclusions‚ our first impressions weigh heavily on our perception of a piece. My first response to The Love Song was one of
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most beautiful things on this black earth‚ but I say it is whatever you love." Sappho obviously thought that beauty was something to be sought out‚ and she states here that love is the most beautiful thing of all. Sappho’s love is about beauty‚ desire‚ and sacrifice. She speaks of epic loves‚ gods and goddesses‚ and her own feelings. Throughout her poetry Sappho continues a theme of love and beauty. She clearly deems love to be just as‚ if not more‚ important than courage in battle‚ or even one’s
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around the subject matter of love. Plato writes about seven different views on love. All of the different views come from the speakers that attended the symposium in honor of Agathon. Eryximachus suggests that each guest should make a speech in admiration of the g-d of Love. The most irrational view on love is provided by Aristophanes’ speech. Aristophanes decides to explain love in the form of a legend. Aristophanes spoke about a myth in order to explain his view on love. He claims that long ago there
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(Love song‚ with two goldfish.) The poem‚ “love song‚ with two goldfish” by Grace Chua is about a romantic relationship of two goldfish that unlike a lot of love stories does not result in a happy ending. It seems as though in this poem‚ humans have been replaced with two goldfish; a man and a woman with very different wants and needs which ends in the woman leaving the man for ‘something more’‚ something that he cannot offer. The title of the poem‚ ‘love song…’ straightaway informs the
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Modern Language Studies "Till Human Voices Wake Us and We Drown": Community in "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" Author(s): James C. Haba Reviewed work(s): Source: Modern Language Studies‚ Vol. 7‚ No. 1 (Spring‚ 1977)‚ pp. 53-61 Published by: Modern Language Studies Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/3194154 . Accessed: 18/03/2013 05:36 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use‚ available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms
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Mad Girl’s Love Song‚ by Sylvia Plath‚ is a modern poem of love‚ loss‚ and distress. Sylvia’s intended purpose of this particular poem was to express the narrator’s dismay of a lost love. After awaiting his return‚ and finally giving up‚ she begins to wonder if she had only made him up on the whims of her imagination. Sylvia expresses the meaning of her poem through the use of a unique rhyme scheme‚ repetition‚ and a religious allusion. Sylvia’s rhyme scheme throughout this poem is called a “villanelle
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