contrasting in this essay are two of William Shakespeare’s most famous sonnets. Sonnets numbered 18‚ ’Shall I compare thee...’ and 116‚ ’Let me not.’ Both of these poems deal with the subject of love but each poem deals with its subject matter in a slightly different manner. Each also has a different audience and purpose. In the case of ’Shall I compare thee...’ the audience is meant to be the person Shakespeare is writing the sonnet about. Its purpose is to tell the person it’s written about how the
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Introduction Marks & Spencer is a British retailer with over 800 stores in more than 30 countries around the world. It is the largest clothing retailer in the UK‚ as well as being a food retailer. Most of its domestic stores sell both clothing & food‚ and since the year 2000 Marks & Spencer have started to expand into other ranges such as home wares‚ furniture & technology. Marks & Spencer became the first British retailer to make a pre-tax profit of over £1 billion “BBC News online 1998” Though
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Sonnets from the Portuguese Sonnet 1: The focus of the first sonnet is the poet’s hopelessness; she talks about the unhappiness of the both past and present and was willing to submit to death until she was conquered by love. The tone of the first sonnet is one of melancholy and depression. Sonnet 13: The focus of this sonnet is on the poet’s inability to express her feelings for her lover‚ by using the metaphor of a torch in rough winds. She describes how she cannot risk herself in expressing
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"Araby" Backgrounds Introduction Ireland’s major religion‚ Roman Catholicism‚ dominated Irish culture‚ as it continues to do today although to a lesser extent. Many families sent their children to schools run by Jesuit priests (like the one the narrator in attends) and convent schools run by nuns (like the one Mangan’s sister attends). Catholicism is often seen as a source of the frequent conflict in Irish culture between sensuality and asceticism‚ a conflict that figures prominently in Joyce’s
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Bibliography: A+E Television Networks‚ LLC. “Franz Liszt.” A+E Networks‚ 2012. http://www.biography.com/people/franz-liszt-9383467. Fuller‚ John. The Sonnet: Italian Sonnet‚ 1. London: Methuen & Co‚ 1972. Grout‚ Donald Jay. A History of Western Music: The Nineteenth Century: Romanticism; Vocal music‚ 660. New York: Norton‚ 1988. Hamilton‚ Kenneth. The Cambridge Companion to Liszt‚ 135 – 137. Edited by Kenneth
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William Shakespeare ABOUT HIS LIFE William Shakespeare‚ by universal consent the greatest author of England‚ if not of the world‚ occupies chronologically a central position in the Elizabethan drama. He was born in 1564 in the good-sized village of Stratford-on-Avon in Warwickshire‚ near the middle of England‚ where the level but beautiful country furnished full external stimulus for a poet’s eye and heart. His father‚ John Shakespeare‚ who was a general dealer in agricultural products and other
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William Shakespeare was a famous play write and was widely known for his sonnets‚ plays and was considered as the greatest writer in the English language. He wrote many tragic plays‚ one of which was Hamlet. In Hamlet‚ there are many themes; one of the most pertinent themes is death. Throughout this play‚ Hamlet encapsulates the theme of death. Death is represented in the play when the late King Hamlet dies‚ by the hands of the villainous Claudius‚ Hamlets uncle. Hamlet is obsessed with the idea
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Paul Fussell begins the chapter by stating any poems two kinds of basic organization. The poem may either be stichic or strophic; in a stichic arrangement‚ line follows line without any formal or mathematical grouping of the lines into stanzas. In strophic organization‚ the lines are arranged in stanzas of varying degrees of logical complexity. A compromise between these two can be found in heroic couplets‚ which are best thought of as stichic‚ with a line of twenty‚ rather than ten syllables. Stichic
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library.umd.umich.edu/Find/alpha.php‚ library.temple.edu/databases/a-z‚ References 1. ^ Forker page 507 note 24 2. ^ Gurr (1990: 55) 3. ^ Shapiro‚ I. A. "Richard II or Richard III or..." Shakespeare Quarterly 9 )1958): 206 4. ^ The Riverside Shakespeare: Second Edition. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company‚ 1997‚ 845. 5. ^ Elliott‚ John R. "History and Tragedy in Richard II"Studies in English Literature‚ 1500–1900‚ Vol. 8‚ No. 2‚ Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama
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The speaker:- There is only one speaker in the poem who seems to be the poet himself. Paraphrasing :- First Stanza:- The poet gives to us homely details of the cold weather in winter. He said that water is freezing while it is dropping from the wall‚ so it is extremely cold. And people can’t stop working because the coldness of winter and they have to go out and work. Dick the shepherd has nothing to warm him just his breath because he is poor man so he is blowing his fingertips
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