can vary according to an individual’s historical‚ personal‚ cultural and social values and context. In Shakespeare’s play The Tempest we see both Miranda and Prospero develop as a result of their individual discoveries about humanity. Similarly in Sylvia Plath’s poem Daddy the narrator encounters personal discoveries which ultimately lead to her freedom. Sudden and unexpected discoveries can be confronting and transformative and are an integral part of an individual’s development and maturation.
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May 17‚ 2013 Sylvia Plath “I talk to God but the sky is empty.” Sylvia Plath was one of America’s greatest poets. She was best known for her dramatic‚ emotional poems inspired by deep continuous depression and multiple suicide attempts. Unfortunately‚ she succeeded in the early months of 1963. Sylvia Plath was born October 27‚ 1932 in Boston‚ Massachusetts; she had only one younger brother named Warren. From the very beginning Sylvia’s parents knew she was going to be special‚ Plath started talking
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"Good morning‚ Mr Rooster‚" is an excellent introductory song to start the day with children. There are no musical chords found in this song. Hence‚ the educator can play an audio as a background and encourage children to sing the song by making the following actions: The children can gather in a circle and hold hands. They then make a circle over their heads to indicate a rising sun; sway right and left with arms over their heads. When they sing‚ "good morning Mr Rooster‚" they can spread
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two poems “Daddy‚” by Sylvia Plath and “Annabel Lee‚” by Edgar Allan Poe. I found that these two particular poems have many similarities‚ as well as differences‚ but I feel that the similarities are more apparent. First‚ in both of these poems‚ the authors discuss how they want to be nearer to their loved one‚ even though they are not alive. Plath says “At twenty I tried to die / and get back‚ back‚ back to you. / I thought even bones would do” (58-60). Sylvia Plath is implying that when
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Harold C. Gardiner‚ S.J. wrote a very interesting article entitled‚ "Critical Commentary." He wrote his essay in the year 1948. Throughout his work‚ his main idea is to praise the book‚ "Cry‚ the Beloved Country"‚ written by Alan Paton. Gardiner is very satisfied with the book’s subject matter of tension between Negroes and whites. For the first part of Gardiner’s article he focuses on summarizing the novel. He explains that the book takes place in Southern Africa and he tells the reader
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Morning song ‘Love set you go like a fat golden watch’ time count down to the babies’ arrival. Precious and valuable ‘New statue’ ‘drafty museum’ Overwhelmed and afraid to touch their new child. Struggling to feel and adequate mother. ‘One cry’ mother is now in tune with her baby. Awakening at its cry’s. She has adopted her maternal traits. Other than the ‘bald cry’ the child was once acknowledged as. ‘Clear vowels rise like balloons’ optimise‚ Plath now finds joy in the melody of
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Critical Commentary Andrew Marvell’s ‘To His Coy Mistress’ embodies the male craving for intercourse‚ as in the poem the narrator tries to convince a woman to have sex with him. The poem is abounded with metaphysical conceits and really depicts the theme of carpe diem. With the exploitation of numerous motifs‚ compelling imagery and its rhythm‚ Marvell is able to construct a very influential argument. Initially‚ Marvell uses the metaphysical conceit to compliment the woman as a means of persuasion
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Everyone has a morning routine. Some people go for a morning walk‚ while some enjoy watching the neighborhood from their window. Just as there are a variety of morning routines‚ there are many different ways to view the surroundings of these activities. In “Five A.M.” William Stafford uses personification‚ alliteration‚ and tactile imagery to express the relaxed and carefree attitude of the speaker; while Elizabeth Bishop‚ in her poem “Five Flights Up‚” uses repetition‚ personification‚ visual
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The nature of the relationships throughout the poem seems to change from a seemingly equal sense of love from both goldfish‚ to a more one-sided relationship in the last stanza of the poem. In the first stanza the male character is said to be a “drifter”‚ this foreshadows the later stages of the poem as he slowly becomes ambitionless. He is bounded by his own infatuations so much so that he fails to realize what is happening in the present; this is signified in the second stanza where the idea of
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In the novel The Bell Jar‚ Sylvia Plath represents the idea of sexual double standards by introducing specific male characters into certain scenes. The main character‚ as well as the protagonist in the novel‚ Esther‚ portrays frustration when faced with the various social views that men have on women. Esther encounters one of the two‚ minor‚ male characters‚ Marco‚ who is a sadistic Peruvian man. Sylvia Plath describes Marco’s outlook on sex as demeaning to both men and woman‚ yet he proceeds to
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