To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell is a love poem from the period of the renaissance. The poem appears in rhyming couplets which is different than the typical love poems‚ seen in sonnet form that we are used to from that time. The rhyming couplets are our first clue that this poem is not your typical love poem. Through his approach of theme‚ tone‚ and his use of language‚ Marvell criticizes the love poetry tradition as it existed in his time in order to argue that we must seize the moment and
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Hamlet’s soliloquy on “To be or not to be‚” Hamlet reflects upon struggle and elaborates upon the common struggle regarding love among all people‚ and that teenagers in particularly may relate to. The two key symbols amidst this soliloquy are the metaphors of life and afterlife; referencing life with sleeping‚ and afterlife with dreaming. Life seems to be the safe choice with certainty behind a regular‚ possibly conflicted‚ life‚ while afterlife seems to be the courageous‚ brave choice that has no
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This anger elevates into hatred and thoughts of rebellion. Hughes begins his poem in a questioning tone: "What happens to a dream deferred?" (Hughes "A Dream Deferred" 1st stanza) He quickly answers this question through a series of similes and metaphors to accentuate feelings of anger. For instance‚ Hughes uses a simile to describe a dream deferred "Does it stink like rotten meat?"(Hughes "A Dream Deferred" stanza 6) Here‚ Hughes uses the morbid example of rotten meat to symbolize the failure of
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Open University‚ pp.103-123 Cook‚ G (2006) Reading B: ‘Why play with language?’ in Maybin‚ J and Swann‚ J (eds) The art of English: Everyday Creativity‚ Basingstoke‚ Palgrave Macmillan/Milton Keynes‚ The Open University Cameron‚ L (2006) Reading C: ‘Metaphor in everyday language’‚ in Maybin‚ J and Swann‚ J (eds) The art of English: Everyday Creativity‚ Palgrave Macmillan/Milton Keynes‚ The Open University
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Quotes Act I 1. Scene 5 (Line 76) The speaker is Lady Macbeth and she is instructing her husband to put on a façade of kindness upon Duncan arrival but to be stealthy when committing the murder. This is an example of imagery because she uses a metaphor by telling her husband to become a flower and snake. The quote also develops Lady Macbeth manipulative character. 2. Scene 3 (Line 39) This quote is said by Macbeth after his victorious battle and right before he encounters the witches. The
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translation better than another (Hatim and Mason 1990b: 1) More concern with understanding how translated texts work (rather than with traditional cponcepts of quality) and seek to define the translator’s method (Vilikovsky) and purpose (Newmark: 1998: 75) There is discussion about whether evaluation should take into account the Source Text : Toury notes that comparisons between translations and originals often lead to an enumeration of errors and a reverence for the original (1978: 26) Most critics
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information that they need to know‚ and find it germane for medical reconnaissances from the doctor for participation in sports. If you feel you caught a cold‚ or you hurt yourself in gym‚ or you’re about to pass out because we provide no air conditioning in 75% of the classrooms here‚ do not hesitate to go to the nurse‚ as the door will always be open. Huck‚ I always say with a full heart that wisdom affects your education and your education affects your future. (aphorism) We hope our great environment
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“Inside the Works of Plath” Silvia Plath writings are considered to the first and best examples of confrontational and confessional poetry of her time. Plath had the uncanny ability to take real life events and turn them into surreal metaphor with in her poetry. Even though Plath poetry was unique for its time‚ her work shows the thumbprints of other poets that help to influence this distinctive style. One of those writers was T.S. Eliot. By time Plath was coming into her won as a poet‚ Eliot
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[pic] KOLEJ GEMILANG HUMAN AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES (DSP 1306) LESSON PLAN SEMESTER : JANUARY – MAY 2013 LECTURER : Cr. SITI HALIMATUN SAADIAH S. SAID |TIME |CHAPTER |LEARNING OBJECTIVES | |WEEK 1 |UNIT 1 |By
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64-65). Plath was talking about how her husband had replaced her father from the emotional abuse and pain that she suffered. Just like Kurt Cobain wrote‚ “And all the animals I’ve trapped/Have all become my pets” (lines 3-4). Cobain wrote this as a metaphor for his self-destructive relationship with Courtney Love. Cobain wanted to unconsciously keep the abusive relationship because all he had even known was pain‚ it was familiar to him. Just as with Plath all she had ever known was pain from her father
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