"Ode intimations of immortality" Essays and Research Papers

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    Browning and Tennyson

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    John Keats (1795-1821)                                  TO AUTUMN.                                             1.     SEASON of mists and mellow fruitfulness‚          Close bosom-friend of the maturing sun;      Conspiring with him how to load and bless          With fruit the vines that round the thatch-eves run;      To bend with apples the moss’d cottage-trees‚          And fill all fruit with ripeness to the core;              To swell the gourd‚ and plump the hazel shells      With

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    Area Of Study: Belonging

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    Advanced ENGLISH ___________________________________________________________ Area of Study: Belonging A study of Emily Dickinson (and related texts) Dr Selina Samuels‚ Ascham School 2 What is the Area of Study? The Area of Study is the exploration of a concept that affects our perceptions of ourselves and our world. Students explore‚ analyse‚ question and articulate the ways in which perceptions of this concept are shaped in and through a variety of texts. In the Area of Study

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    Aldrin

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    DRAMA >.a composition in prose or verse presenting in dialogue or pantomime a story involving conflict or contrast of character‚ especially one intended to be acted on the stage; a play. >.the branch of literature having such compositions as its subject; dramatic art or representation. >.the art dealing with the writing and production of plays. >.any situation or series of events having vivid‚ emotional‚ conflicting‚ or striking interest or results: the drama of a murder trial . 1. a

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    Even though “Ozymandias” by Percy Shelley and “Ode to a Grecian Urn” by John Keats sound like very different types of poems‚ they still share some of the same characteristics. In “Ozymandias‚” Shelley tells a story of how a man found a ancient statue of a king‚ with the words “My name is Ozymandias‚ King of Kings‚/ Look on my Works‚ ye Might‚ and despair!” The statue was broken into pieces‚ and the land was bare‚ with nothing to “look on” (11). In “Ode to a Grecian Urn‚” Keats is speaking to an ancient

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    Beethoven's 9th Music

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    the end of the tunnel‚ and then Beethoven continues onto exploding your emotions using sounds that bring feelings of extreme proudness and accomplishment. This end of the journey is a magnificent chorale using a modified version of Schilling’s poem Ode to Joy. A “healing note for a shattered nation” said by reporter Lucy Craft ("Beethoven’s 9Th Symphony Still A Hit In Japan")‚ “endlessly satisfying‚ interesting‚ and moving”‚ “music being the universal language almost comes true with

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    about nature in itself‚ Shelley tends to invoke nature as a sort of supreme metaphor for beauty‚ creativity‚ and expression. This means that most of Shelley’s poems about art rely on metaphors of nature as their means of expression: the West Wind in "Ode to the West Wind" becomes a symbol of the poetic faculty spreading Shelley’s words like leaves among mankind‚ and the skylark in "To a Skylark" becomes a symbol of the purest‚ most joyful‚ and most inspired creative impulse. The skylark is not a bird

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    a glass of overflowing water”-Pablo Neruda Ode to sleep. In both‚ quotes from Mary Oliver and Pablo Neruda‚ they convey an appreciation of nature to the reader by involving the reader. They convey the appreciation of nature by using a variety of figurative speech that is about nature and that is about the reader so that they stay interested. The two authors also use different forms of poems; In Sleeping in a forest‚ it’s more soothing and calm‚ while Ode to sleep is more serious‚ yet still relaxing

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    Beethoven, Symphony No. 9

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    Beethoven‚ Symphony No. 9 Ludwig Beethoven was not only one of the greatest composer & musician ever born- he is a wonderful study tool for me during exam week. My faithful study partner was born in a small town‚ Bonn‚ Germany on December 16‚ 1770 to a family of professional musicians. Beethoven learned violin and some other instruments from his father. His father wanted him to be perfect in music‚ and in that endeavor he violently scolded Beethoven whenever he made any kind of mistake during

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    Term Paper Submitted By: Afridiu Topic: Changing characteristics of poetry from Romantics to Modern Abstract: The characteristics of poetry changed with the changing of eras and literary periods. Romantics have their own features and writing style. Nature and beauty play very important role in Romantic poetry. Victorian poetry is different from Romantics

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    Romanticism. Shelley idealized humanity in the spiritual sense of being pure and having true beauty. This beauty of truth is found in Hymn of Intellectual Beauty‚ which is an ode. Shelley uses the word intellectual to mean nonsensible‚ which is part of mans experience to experience the natural world through his consciousness. This ode uses the imagination man has to sense the unseen. For example‚ in the first line of Hymn to Intellectual Beauty‚ Shelley introduces the mysterious: The awful shadow of some

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