"Analysis of your poem identify figurative language and how it creates the emotion of the poem identify how the rhythm of the poem creates mood and emotion" Essays and Research Papers

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    Emotion and Poem

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    Explore the way writers present strong feelings to interest the reader. In the poem The Laboratory‚ written in 17th century by Robert Browning‚ there are many references to strong emotions that are felt. Robert Browning wrote this poem as a dramatic monologue. The main feelings throughout the poem are pain‚ jealousy‚ anger‚ hatred and loneliness. These themes are in each of the text‚ the Laboratory and Macbeth. Although both texts are written in different forms of literature - Shakespeare’s "Macbeth”

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    Shakespeare’s play Hamlet has endured for it’s classic speeches that are still quoted today and warns how a distorted perspective can create negative emotions. Emotions and experiences that readers can relate to. Hamlet’s various speeches are well known and often quoted. This phenomenon keeps Hamlet a classic play. “ To be or not to be” is one of the most well quoted phrases of Shakespeare. When someone references Hamlet this phrase is sure to surface. It is used all over the place. In titles

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    CHICAGO” Poem Questions 1.) It is hard to tell much about the speaker from this poem‚ but what is known is that the speaker is someone who loves Chicago and is very proud of it. It is then easy to conclude that the speaker is most likely a resident of Chicago. As far as characteristics go for the reader‚ we don’t know much gender-wise or really anything else‚ but the defining characteristics are pride‚ in celebrating the character of his/her home city‚ and joy at because the speaker is able to share

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    Emotions Fredericka Hibbs Joy made me love. It has awoken my heart to the ripe fruits of the earth‚ and a determination to taste every one. It makes me revel in life’s most basic privileges. I dance in the rain and wade through the mud. Joy has made me childish. Joy made me sip tea on summer mornings‚ and crave the smell of ink in decaying books. Joy has have me stare at the stars in the still‚ placid evening‚ and wonder ever so innocently. It made me a wild thing‚ with matted hair. It made me daring

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    How does Alagiah create emotion in this extract? In the extract‚ ‘A Passage to Africa‚’ George Alagiah appeals to the readers emotions through his sensitive writing style and insightful presentation of facts. He takes us on a roller coaster of emotions and allowing us to empathize with the difficulties faced by the Somalians.He uses effective language that creates an impact on the reader‚ which portrays the harsh conditions and reality of the ‘famine of quiet suffering and lonely death.’ The title

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    write an anthology on this poem because I liked how it focussed on a person’s imperfections rather than their strengths. The character in this poem‚ as he states in the first three stanzas‚ is weary and fatigued from his long swim; something I can relate to after countless swim practices. Another feature which caught my attention was the fact that the author chose to include his character fantasizing another life for himself‚ which was both sentimental and unusual. This poem‚ formatted into free verse

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    Explore how the Poet Creates the Scene in the Poem ‘In Romney Marsh’. This poem centres on the experiences of the poet in the place Romney Marsh. Right from the beginning‚ we can tell that this is not going to be just an ordinary description of a place‚ because had it been that‚ the poet would have just named it ‘Romney Marsh’. The addition of the word ‘In’ makes the poem sound like an account of things that have happened there. This is backed up immediately by the first stanza‚ which begins with

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    poem analysis

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    Response to Literature Poem Analysis Writing Guidelines Subject: Poem Form: Analysis Purpose: To explore meaning Audience: Instructor Sample Poem Read the poem below and think about its content‚ theme‚ organization‚ and use of poetic techniques. Then read student writer Stefano Giagregorio’s analysis. I AM THE PEOPLE‚ THE MOB By Carl Sandburg I AM the people--the mob--the crowd--the mass. Do you know that all the great work of the world is done through me? I am the workingman‚

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    beautiful poem that describes the beauty of nature and how it can inspire our lives. Wordsworth uses images to describe the scene to the reader‚ like a painting on a canvas; that explains vividly how the poet saw it. An example of the creativity is how the daffodils presented an almost human quality in the way they resemble dancers dancing in unison as if presenting a show. At the end of every alternate line of the poem there is a rhyming word‚ giving the poem both continuity and a sense of rhythm throughout

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    How To Read A Poem

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    How to Read a Poem Written by Edward Hirsch Contributor Page Year 2007 Reading poetry well is part attitude and part technique. Curiosity is a useful attitude‚ especially when it’s free of preconceived ideas about what poetry is or should be. Effective technique directs your curiosity into asking questions‚ drawing you into a conversation with the poem. Since the form of a poem is part of its meaning (for example‚ features such as repetition and rhyme may amplify or extend the meaning of a word

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