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    Dickinson’s poem “510: It was not Death‚ for I stood up‚” explores the uncertainties of Death. The speaker attempts to define or understand her own condition to unwrap the cause of her suffering. The use of extended metaphor is utilized as the speaker uses the term “death” and that her life and state of mind‚ to her‚ resembles nothing other than death itself. The dominant effect would be the feeling of despair as the speaker represents this by saying “As if my life were shaven‚ / and fitted to a

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    To His Coy Mistress

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    To His Coy Mistress by Andrew Marvell‚ it’s a rollercoaster of emotions that starts with a slow romantic tone and then it takes a drastic change of emotions. It goes from a soft and romantic tone to a crude and strong one. It is a beautiful story that makes us realize how human and feeble our existence really is‚ that no matter how powerful and mighty we think we are‚ we are nothing compare to time. Just as the great empires of our history everything crumbles with time and eventually becomes dust

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    Keats and His Legacy

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    John Keats wrote many poems that had similar themes. Much of his work is considered to be a key part of Romantic Poetry. To understand one of his poems it is necessary to look beyond it to his other works and personal life. One poem worth just such a look is "Ode to a Grecian Urn". This poem contains not only aspects of his writing which are reflected in his other works but some certain stylistic elements that reflect aspects of his personal life. The stylistic elements mentioned also appear in

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    To His Coy Mistress

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    The poems "To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell and "To the Virgins‚ To Make Much of Time" by Robert Herrick exemplify youth‚ modesty and resistance. The topic of both poems indicates the negative consequences that can occur if one is hesitant to enjoy his or her youth; furthermore‚ each author expresses in words how youth is the prime of ones life‚ and only lasts for a small amount of time. Each piece differentiates in certain ways‚ while certain qualities are shared. Some ways in which these

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    His Coy Mistress

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    Marvell’s “To His Coy Mistress” is a love poem of seduction. The poem conveys biblical‚ historical allusions‚ and passionate imagery to express a young lover’s feeling that he does not have enough time to waste on the coyness of his mistress. In the first stanza the young lover is trying to seduce his mistress quickly‚ although he is married. He explains to her what their love would be like if they had years to spend together. He would “Love [her] ten years before the flood‚” this is a biblical

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    “In the Mercy of His Means” Innocence is often associated with being young‚ carefree and oblivious to the horrors of the world. While innocence is connected to purity and lack of knowledge‚ an experienced person is usually considered to be old‚ wise and accomplished. However‚ most people do not realize that experience can also bring disappointment and feelings of defeat. The shift from innocence to experience changes a person and can cause him or her to feel hopeless. Innocence allows for denial

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    english poem

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    William B Yeats (1865-1939) From The Wind Among the Reeds (1899) Men improve with the Years I am worn out with dreams; A weather-worn‚ marble triton Among the streams; And all day long I look Upon this lady’s beauty As though I had found in book A pictured beauty‚ Pleased to have filled the eyes Or the discerning ears‚ Delighted to be but wise‚ For men improve with the years; And yet and yet Is this my dream‚ or the truth? O would that we had met When I had my burning youth; But

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    Hamlet and His Problems

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    Dr. Richard Clarke LITS3001 Notes 09B 1 T. S. ELIOT “HAMLET AND HIS PROBLEMS” (1919) Eliot offers‚ as we have seen‚ what has come to be called an ‘impersonal theory of poetic creation.’ Eliot would not have denied either that poets have feelings or that poetry inspires certain feelings in the reader. He offers‚ rather‚ an account‚ centered around his notion of the objective correlative‚ of how such feelings enter the poem in the first place that differs significantly from the expressive model

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    To His Coy Mistress

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    “TO HIS COY MISTRESS” by Andrew Marvell THEME: Time‚ Love and Sex In his poem the author tries to convey that if there was enough time‚ he and his beloved could go on courting forever‚ but times goes by quickly. Therefore‚ as he wants her to have sex with him‚ he states that they must squeeze their joys to the present because there is no time to be coy and aloof. LANGUAGE: Figurative The poet uses figurative language to add feeling and mood to what he wants to say to his mistress. Many

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    To His Coy Mistress

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    early modern era parodies the traditional love poems ideals and gives the audience a more modern view. In the poem‚ “To His Coy Mistress‚” Andrew Marvell transforms images of time into a symbol of humanity to challenge traditional love poetry as it existed in this age. Marvell utilizes temporal imagery to protest the ideal love that poets of this age insisted on‚ as a means to argue that we are limited by our humanity. The speaker starts off by telling his lover that if there was enough time and enough

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