"Romantic poetry" Essays and Research Papers

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    metaphor‚ the one analyzed here‚ the ‘conceit’ owns its singularity to its main basis as an extended kind of metaphor‚ consisting on comparing two elements that otherwise would not have been considered any similar. Usually many conceits prevail in poetry and are used in other cases. What conceits do is mixing and transforming ideas and images in non-expected ways. In the case of the poem ‘Hope’ the conceit works as the central theme of the poem‚ consisting on a complex comparison between an abstract

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    John Donne Poetry

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    literary change into a simple succession ofmovements and ’reactions’‚ and to remind us that in periods of heightened vitality developments in different directions often exist side by side.1 By no means all of what we now consider typically Elizabethan poetry was in existence when Donne began to write. It remains true‚ nevertheless‚ that Donne chose to do something different from his predecessors and from those of his contemporaries who were still exploiting and developing the existing modes; and younger

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    Pros vs Poetry

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    PROS VS POETRY PART I Prose version: A woman stands on a mountain top with the cold seeping into her body. She looks on the valley below as the wind whips around her. She cannot leave to go to the peaceful beauty below. In the valley‚ the sun shines from behind the clouds causing flowers to bloom. A breeze sends quivers through the leaves of trees. The water gurgles in a brook. All the woman can do is cry. Poetry version The Woman on the Peak

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    Does Macbeth reflect the Renaissance age and in what way? Yes‚ Macbeth and the Renaissance are linked through Macbeths’ pursuit of power within in the play. The pursuit of power through vile and bloody means was a big thing in the Renaissance age. If you wanted a title‚ as in King‚ to get it you either waited for that person to die or‚ as is what happened with most‚ you murdered and littered your way to the throne with bodies. http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Does_Macbeth_reflect_the_Renaissance_age_and_in_what_way

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    Anne Bradstreet Poetry

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    Anne Bradstreet’s Poetry Anne Bradstreet was the Danica Patrick of poetry in the mid 1600’s‚ except she went unknown. She drove into the male-dominant field of poetry. In her time it was frowned upon for women to race in such an intellectual track. Bradstreet does not let the wall between the drivers and the spectators stop her‚ she pulls right up to the starting line with them. In fact‚ she uses this barrier of sexes to fuel her ideas. Anne Bradstreet writes using many different forms of figurative

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    Modernist Poetry: Effectiveness When it comes to opinions everyone has one. Saying that Modernist poetry has no specific structure or form and therefore means it is not as ‘effective’‚ is like myself saying curry is spicy‚ sweet and doesn’t fit in with my taste buds and therefore curry is the worst seasoning. Poetry is far too complex to reduce to a simple “effective” or “not effective” dichotomy. To object to an opinion maybe you need to understand where they are coming from. Taking a look

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    Judith Wright Poetry

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    Judith Wright’s poetry reflects her unique vision of Australia To what extent does this statement reflect your understanding of Judith Wright’s poetry? Discuss this question with detailed reference to two poems from the BOS prescribed text list. Judith wright is an Australian poet who has a distinctive way of capturing her unique vision of Australia throughout her poems. Good morning teachers and students‚ Judith wright is a well-known Australian poet who was born in Armiadale‚ Australia

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    Poetry and Ann Bradstreet

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    Puritans upbringing and they had hard lives. The Differences is Taylor had college experiences and politics and he saw his personal poetry as worship. Rather than Bradstreet she had a hard life she did experience politics but wasn’t as many as Taylor. She also wrote for herself in her poetry. 3) What two literary techniques are included in most of Edward Taylor’s poetry‚ and what are characteristics of these techniques? His literacy techniques where Conceit and Apostrophe‚ Conceit is an extended

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    Derek Mahon Poetry

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    and rejects the essence of his Northern Irish identity and cultural roots: the austerity‚ the coldness‚ the selfishness‚ the isolation and the abandonment. 2. Theme of place. There is a vibrant‚ evocative and varied sense of place in Mahon’s poetry. Places like Kinsale‚ Rathlin and Donegal are idealised‚ but there is a subtext of cruelty associated with all three places because of history‚ climate‚ nature or commerce. Other places are depicted as void of human activity‚ lonesome‚ glum and abandoned

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    "Endangered Masculinities in Irish Poetry" examines the dynamic response of early modern Ireland’s hereditary bardic professional poets to impinging colonial change. Having for generations validated the power of their patrons‚ policed communal norms and acted as self-conscious cultural custodians‚ these elite master-poets were both professionally obligated and personally motivated to defend both their community and their own way of life from renewed English aggression in the sixteenth century. Endangered

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