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    Ode to the West Wind

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    Shelley’s “Ode to the West Wind” The eighteenth century was a time of revolution in Europe; the French Revolution. It introduced a new era of enlightenment and individual freedom. This revolution led the poets to explore freedom‚ independent ideas and limitless imaginations on poems. This movement was called Romanticism and it was characterized by stressing new ideas of nature and change. Percy Bysshe Shelley took up these revolutionary ideas in his poems. In “Ode to the West Wind”‚ Shelley

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    Ode to Buffalo Chicken

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    Ode to Buffalo Chicken A succulent puddle of sauce‚ Tangy to the tongue‚ Yet‚ burning spice that runs down my throat. With my weapons to fight the flames‚ My fork and knife‚ I slice through the juicy‚ tender White meat‚ Like an axe chopping through An old oak tree. To cool my mouth from the Fire‚ I dunk my boneless‚ soft‚ orange meat Into a pool of ranch‚ Ranch‚ quenching my throat. Balancing the sharp flavor with the Refreshing dressing. This is obviously a gift from the devil

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    The Art of Early Autumn

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    The art of “Early Autumn”   With the advent of the Harlem Renaissance in the 1920s‚ strong black voices‚ writing with African-American rhythms and cadences‚ broke out all over the country. Of this remarkable creative outpouring‚ one voice rose among all of the rest. This was the voice of poet Langston Hughes. Langston Hughes was a well known poet‚ novelist‚ journalist‚ and playwright‚ and was nicknamed the "Poet Laureate of Harlem”. During the Harlem Renaissance‚ Langston Hughes gained fame

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    The names Keats and Wordsworth are to a certain extent tantamount to Romanticism‚ especially from the perspective of modern academics. To many‚ Wordsworth and Coleridge are seen as the fathers of English Romanticism as they were the first to publish literary works that were seen as romantic with Lyrical Ballads in 1798. Yet although John Keats was only born in 1795‚ he still contributed much to the Romantic Movement and is in essence regarded just as highly as William Wordsworth. One can argue

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    Shelley’s "Ode To the West Wind": Analysis In "Ode to the West Wind‚" Percy Bysshe Shelley tries to gain transcendence‚ for he shows that his thoughts‚ like the "winged seeds" (7) are trapped. The West Wind acts as a driving force for change and rejuvenation in the human and natural world. Shelley views winter not just as last phase of vegetation but as the last phase of life in the individual‚ the imagination‚ civilization and religion. Being set in Autumn‚ Shelley observes the changing of

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    The Mid-Autumn Festival

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    The Mid-Autumn Festival is a Vietnamese festival in which the children carry bright lanterns and play with alacrity until the midnight. There would have been no problem with me‚ an eighteen year-old who just wanted to gather my team to play a zealous soccer match on that day‚ if the principal had not decided to hold the Mid-Autumn Festival at high school. We students felt ridiculous about the idea‚ and the announcement seemed to be a joke rather than a serious idea. When our head teacher came and

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    Celebrated for centuries‚ the Mid-Autumn Festival (中秋節‚ zhōngqiū jié) is a harvest festival celebrated on the 15 day of the eighth month of the lunar calendar. What Is the Mid-Autumn Festival‚ and Why Is the Mid-Autumn Festival Celebrated? The Mid-Autumn Festival is derived from the tradition of praying to Chang-e‚ the Moon Goddess‚ in the autumn for a plentiful harvest. According to a legend from the Han Dynasty‚ Chang-e was the wife of divine archer Hou Yi‚ who shot down one of 10 suns that appeared

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    The Ode of Heroine: Mulan

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    The Ode of Heroine: Mulan Many ladies have ever imaged a different life they would have if they were men. Some of them would like to do some real men’s things‚ challenging the task which they impossibly accomplished as a lady. But there is a young maiden called Mulan whose surname is unknown in the history of Ancient China‚ who disguised herself as a man to attend fight in an army replacing for her father. Frankly‚ Mulan was a brave maiden and her romantic life was written in a ballad named as

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    they know‚ the answers they get‚ and they know that all questions cannot be answered. In William Blake’s "The Tyger" and "The Lamb‚" nature is discussed in two opposing forms‚ where the question of who created the creatures is asked. In John Keats’ "Ode to a Nightingale‚" different questions are asked‚ but in the same nature as those in Blake’s poems. The three poems are all similar in discussing nature; however there are differences in the negative capability of them. In both "The Lamb"

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    John Keats Love Death Fame

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    Death‚ Beauty & Fame : Life experiences and feelings of John Keats as they influenced his writing. John Keats was born in 1979‚ the son of Horse-stable keeper. Keats was an orphan by the age of fourteen; he was an apprentice of a surgeon for certain time but decided to move on to poetry instead. His early works were famously savaged by the critics‚ but Keats remained assured in "drive" that eventually be "among the English poets". Keats ’s longed for marriage to Fanny Brawne was prevented by the

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