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    Colors

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    world of colors by painting everything it touches. Our plain and soulless furniture gains meaning. Our brown bookshelf‚ gray study table‚ green mug carpets‚ rugs‚ curtains the yellow wheat fields in the harvest picture‚ the blue china vase‚ our favorite brown sweater the striking green of a tree surrounded by concrete buildings‚ the blue sky‚ and the carousel of life that becomes worth living by being embellished with colors. Let’s travel through the wonderful world of colors. Each color conceals

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    Sonnet For Chaze

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    Cavalcanti. Dante believes here that Guido’s heart “[is] still marvelled at the beauty of this gentile Primavera [(Beatrice])” (Vita Nuova 759). The Sonnet for Guido reveals their “brotherly” love towards each other and the support they confined within each other’s lives. The “gaze” is quite proven by Dante’s summary of his own work following the poem‚ where he explains in warm-heartedness the “[happiness]...in [his] heart”‚ and how “love spoke to [him] in [his] heart”. For viewers their friendship

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    Sonnet 30

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    restored and sorrows end." But as soon as I think of you‚ my dear friend‚ all those wounds are healed‚ and my sorrows come to an end. Why is he saying it? Sonnet 30 is at the center of a sequence of sonnets dealing with the narrator’s growing attachment to the fair lord and the narrator’s paralyzing inability to function without him. The sonnet begins with the image of the poet drifting off into the "remembrance of things past" - painful memories‚ we soon learn‚ that the poet has already lamented

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    Features of a Sonnet

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    Structural features of a Shakespearean sonnet * The first twelve lines are divided into four lines each * There are fourteen lines * 3 quatrains and a couplet (last 2 lines) * A rhyme scheme of abab cdcd efef gg * Quatrain one - states the problem  * Quatrain two- elaborates on the problem  * Quatrain three- a solution  * Couplet- what happened at the end * Developed so that each quatrain progresses towards a surprising turn of events in the ending couplet What

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    Sonnet 104

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    Essay: Sonnet 104 Sonnet 104 is one of 154 sonnets written by the English poet William Shakespeare. It’s a member of the Fair Youth sequence‚ in which the poet expresses his love towards a fair friend. Each stanza expresses Shakespeare’s relationship with his beloved. The sonnet deals with the destructive forces of time as humans grow older and makes a commentary on the process of aging. In the first quatrain‚ the poet focuses on his beloved‚ exploring the theme of beauty and aging. The very

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    Sonnet 73

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    Sonnet 73 Marissa Brown Writing 122 In Sonnet 73 by William Shakespeare‚ he describes scenes of nature at a time of their endings to place pictures in mind of how he feels he is losing his youth. He feels his life has little time left like leaves on a tree towards the end of fall. In realizing this‚ he knows he doesn’t want to be completely gone such as the “sunset fadeth in the west”. He wants to be continued to be loved and remembered such as ashes that are left after a burning fire. As Shakespeare

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    Sonnet 116 “Let me not to marriage” This Poem by William Shakespeare talks about the immortal beauty of his beloved against the destruction caused by time. In the first line of the poem he propagates the union between two minds which is another different representation of love. In this poem Shakespeare talks about true love which in the poem is treated as a centre which the poet and his poetry orbit. “ It is an ever fixed mark” ‚ He refers to the solidity and steadfastness and the permanent centre

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    Sonnet 71

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    William Shakespeare sonnets are easily identified by the diversity of tones that he uses to express the speakers emotions to an audience‚ such is case of Sonnet 71 that contains lines that have totally different meanings among each other. According to the first 4 lines of this Sonnet it can inferred that what the speaker is trying to express to the audience is not to grieve for him when dies. “No Longer mourn for me when I am dead‚ Than you shall hear the surly sullen bell Give warning to

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    An Overview of Sonnet 130

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    Title: An overview of “Sonnet 130” Author(s): Joanne Woolway Source: Poetry for Students. Detroit: Gale. From Literature Resource Center. Document Type: Critical essay [Joanne Woolway is a freelance writer who recently earned her Ph.D. from Oriel College‚ Oxford‚ England. In the following essay‚ Woolway analyzes how‚ in “Sonnet 130‚” Shakespeare “succeeds...in turning traditional poetic conventions around.” She also takes a close look at the ways Shakespeare’s versification—his skill patterning

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    The Anglo-Saxon Sonnet: Rewriting a Shakespeare’s Sonnet “130” Through the Eyes of the Author of Beowulf My woman’s sight-seers shine like the sun; Her kiss-givers grant a great fiery glow; Her bone-house is a rare beast made to stun; The hairs on her head hang as soft as snow. Like a pollen-producer gleams garnet‚ Her cheeks blush‚ blinding any early man; Unlike a slimy serpent’s foul sweat‚ Her scent smells of fresh gold‚ or better than. Her voice flows like the whale-road‚ that I’m

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