"Emily dickinson walt whitman compare contrast" Essays and Research Papers

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    those that will come after. Whitman talks about the journey of life in “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry”‚ as he is taking a ferry ride. He illustrates the similarities of his life to those that will take the same trip through the visions and emotions that he ponders while on his voyage. Walt Whitman speaks to not only the physical aspects of going through life‚ but also the emotional and spiritual struggles that one must reconcile through the course of one’s life. Whitman takes his readers on a journey

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    In the poem “Fame is a Bee” by Emily DickinsonDickinson gives the world her opinion on fame. By using her unique style‚ she is able to give her opinion in a way nobody did during her time. This poem highlights the different parts of being famous. By personifying fame and her word choice‚ she leaves her reader with a new view of being famous. Her unique writing style makes her readers think more than any other poet of her time. In “Fame is a Bee‚” Dickinson explains to the readers that fame has

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    Emily Dickinson is one of America’s most recognized female poets of the nineteenth century. Dickinson’s unique style of writing is what set her apart from most poets of her time. Her compressed and forceful wording made it possible for her to place more meaning into fewer words; this is seen in Dickinson’s poem‚ “Much Madness is Divinest Sense.” At first glance‚ Dickinson’s poem seems misleadingly short and simple with only eight lines and an obvious theme of madness versus sanity; however‚ on

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    I sit and look out” by Walt Whitman echoes all miseries and atrocities of life that rose to the surface in the wake of capitalism. 19th century witnessed a sea change in the lives of people as rat race for materialistic possession became more prominent and principles were relegated‚ concerns and emotions were sidelined from inside of human beings. The poet pen pictures such a sad tale of human life by attempting to pose as onlooker who watches everything but does nothing to alter situations. In

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    Several Emily Dickinson poems describe the nature of mental pain and anguish. Dickinson illustrates a formless‚ internal entity that is unable to be revealed to others through mere outward signs and manifestations. She sets up the speaker within a uniform and synchronized external reality that becomes complicated by the temporally nonuniform experience of pain. Dickinson uses images and metaphors to expand or contract the operations of the speaker’s mind and consciousness to portray how the speaker

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    The Taoist Dickinson: Nobody and Somebody Life is like a river and a person can either go with the flow or obstruct it. Taoists strive to be the flowing water‚ while Westerners become obstructive rocks. Both deal with the individual‚ but their ideas on the individual vary greatly. The difference between the two is set up perfectly in Emily Dickinson’s poem “I’m nobody! Who are you?”. In the poem‚ the Nobody and the Somebody are opposite beings. The Nobody lives on the fringes‚ while the Somebody

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    Posing as a deceased woman looking back on her own passing‚ Dickinson metaphorically compares her death to a pleasant carriage ride through the countryside. In addition‚ the sonnet personifies death‚ comparing it to the genteel driver of the carriage that transports the speaker to her grave. By incorporating a soothing undertone throughout‚ Dickinson calmly communicates the reality that death acts as nothing but a temporary "sleep" to pass the time until

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    Soto November 27‚ 2012 Walt Whitman and His Strange Obsession With God Walt Whitman was an egotistical‚ self-absorbed‚ wild heretic. “I celebrate myself‚ and sing myself” (Songs of Myself 1). Multiple times in his books and essays he claims to be better than the masses. “I am as bad as the worst‚ but‚ thank God‚ I am as good as the best” (Preface to a Leaves of Grass). Henceforth I ask not good fortune. I myself am good fortune (Songs of the Open Road). Walt Whitman is often thought of as an

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    narrator is remembering his childhood memories and desperately wants to remember them. Page 439 Question 4 – the first one. Think of all the ways Dickinson extends the metaphor. How is hope’s song endless? How does it keep you warm? By using a large amount of em dashes and alternating between iambic pentameter and iambic tetrameter‚ Emily Dickinson is able to make

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    meaning when you allow your soul‚ your inner self‚ to look inside itself‚ to truly be "with" itself‚ you’ll understand the true nature of solitude‚ of being truly alone‚ without the illusion of being "with" any one or anything thing. Dickinson is being metaphysical here‚ dealing with a sense of solitude‚ whether from someone close to her dying‚ leaving‚ or simply ignoring what she thinks‚ says or does. She deals with it by analyzing what being alone is all about‚ and ends with

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