transitions from topic to topic. His main focus was the basic building block of all matter: the tiny atom and how it makes YOU. Those simple particles‚ bonded together in such a unique way that it can only create one individual: You. The author says‚ "To begin with‚ for you to be here now trillions of drifting atoms had somehow to assemble in an intricate and intriguingly obliging manner to create you. It’s an arrangement so specialized and particular that it has never been tried before and will only exist
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once about it‚ until I lost my cousin. When I first heard of my cousin dying‚ I went into denial. I was 10 or eleven‚ not old enough yet to understand‚ why god would take someone so special to you away from you . I was crushed when it happened. It was like a part of me was missing‚ like someone had ripped my heart out and set fire to it. When I learned he had died. I kept thinking that it was a dream and I was going to wake up and see him‚ but yet this wasn’t a dream. Everywhere
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How do I see myself five years from now? By year 2018‚ instead of being an astronaut which I cannot fail to remember as my ambition when I was little just like any other kid of my age‚ I shall have been an alumnus of CvSU getting my certificate in electrical technology. I also see myself in the corporate world applying the skills and knowledge I have in my chosen field and along with the stable job I have is the wellbeing of my family. In the first place‚ who would not want to help their family
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What initially drew me to this poem was the title‚ and how it was written to be read as the first line of the poem. The title also drew me in because I have a connection to the material‚ my father died when I was ten. Not many lines about the speaker’s father draw direct parallels to my father‚ but never the less I was drawn to the work and felt a since of deep melancholy as I read. This since of melancholy‚ even though the speakers father differs from my own‚ is largely due to the non-standard metaphors
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Bishop wrote numerous poems throughout her career as a poet. Two of her more popular poems include “One Art” and “The Fish”. Both of these poems are loaded with a plethora of symbolism. Bishop utilizes the symbolism to artistically convey her central message‚ or theme‚ to the reader. In “One Art”‚ Bishop uses symbolism such as material objects‚ art‚ homes‚ and places. In “The Fish”‚ Bishop uses symbols such as the fish to help highlight her main points. In both of these poems‚ Bishop conveys concepts
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How to Write Diamond Poems This is another way to be creative when it comes to writing poetry. For those of you who like to write poetry‚ here is a good example of a type of poem that when you’re finished‚ the words will form a diamond shape. I learned this lesson in a creative writing class I had taken last year. In fact‚ when I substitute teach‚ I use this as a creative writing lesson. The students love it‚ and when they are finished writing their poems‚ I allow them to use the computer because
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“First Poem for You” by the use of symbolic words. Water and lightening are two words that have a symbolic meaning for the poem. “Lines of lightening pulsing just above your nipple‚ can find‚ as if by instinct‚ the blue swirls of water on your shoulder where a serpent twists‚ facing a dragon” (Kennedy‚ 601). Though symbols can have more than one meaning to them‚ the poem helps to point out the specific meaning behind the relationship. The girlfriend‚ of the guy with the tattoos‚
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When You’ve Got to Cut Costs A practical guide to reducing overhead by 10%‚ 20%‚ or (wince) 30% by Kevin P. Coyne‚ Shawn T. Coyne‚ and Edward J. Coyne‚ Sr. 74 Harvard Business Review May 2010 HBR.ORG Kevin P. Coyne (kevin@ thecoynepartnership.com) is a professor at Emory University’s Goizueta Business School and a former senior partner at McKinsey & Company. Shawn T. Coyne (shawn@ thecoynepartnership.com) is a consultant specializing in innovation‚ marketing‚ and organizational leadership
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Compare how poets present World War 1 in ‘Mametz Wood’ and one other poem you studied Sheers wrote ‘Mametz Wood’‚ reflecting on the death and remains of solders in World War One contrasted to Hughes who wrote’ Bayonet Charge’ after war but set it during war‚ presenting the uncertainty of the soldiers. Having the two poems set in different times‚ contrasts how World War 1 is presented both during and after. Bayonet Charge has many examples of similes to give vivid detail to the reader‚ helping
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When You Do Work You Give it Energy! Holly Beech Professor Evans SCI 110 Holly Beech Professor Evans SCI 110 31 January 2010 Whenever You Do Work You Give It Energy How would one know that working creates energy? Well the definition of energy might give a clue. “Energy can be defined as the ability to do work” (Tillery‚ Enger‚ and Ross‚ 2008‚ p. 59). If one were to think about this statement unscientifically‚ it might evoke the picture of some one being to tired‚ having no energy‚
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