Monika Pietrzykowska Emily Dickinson and Civil War in selected poems Emily Dickinson was very much affected by the American Civil War. During the four years of conflict (1861-1865)‚ she wrote nearly 850 poems. This number amounts to almost half of her entire works and more than four times what she had written before this period. Emily Dickinson wrote four poems directly influenced by the war: "They dropped like Flakes"‚ "It don’t sound so terrible—quite as it did" ‚ "It feels a
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My reaction of Happy Endings and A Rose for Emily. Happy Endings is a quite interesting short story. Margaret Atwood is such a great author of her peers. She has put a different twist in literature. I was quite impressed with this‚ since I have not read anything quite so unique. The short stories that I have read have always been the same type of reading. They all have a straightforward beginning‚ middle‚ and end. With Happy Endings‚ it has many different scenarios that can possibly happen before
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Analyzing Emily Dickenson In the poem‚ "Because I could not stop for death‚" Emily Dickenson personifies death as a gentleman who had stopped to pick her up in his horse-driven carriage (18th century). She relates her death and funeral procession to that of a carriage ride with the man‚ death himself. It is really interesting how in this first stanza she rhymes the two words "me" and "immortality‚" for she is immortal and the entire theme of this piece is foreshadowed with this literary technique
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his beloved and keep his love sacred; if he does not‚ his lover have told him that she is going to disappear. Personally‚ I loved the story very much and although it was not similar‚ it reminded me of a book I read titled “Jane Eyre” by Charlotte Bronte.
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EMILY ZOLA (1840-1902) French novelist and critic‚ the founder of the Naturalist movement in literature. Zola redefined Naturalism as "Nature seen through a temperament." Among Zola ’s most important works is his famous Rougon-Macquart cycle (1871-1893)‚ which included such novels as L ’ASSOMMOIR (1877)‚ about the suffering of the Parisian working-class‚ NANA (1880)‚ dealing with prostitution‚ and GERMINAL (1885)‚ depicting the mining industry. Zola ’s open letter J ’ACCUSE on January 13‚ 1898‚
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Women writers use their personal lives as stimulus when writing works of fiction. As seen in the classic author Charlotte Brontë and her novel Jane Eyre (1847) and also for the contemporary author Kathy Reichs. While Jane Eyre is a novel telling the life story of its title character‚ it is mostly based upon aspects of Brontë’s life. Kathy Reich’s uses her life and personally traits to develop the main character and her life in her novels as well. There are a few reasons why women use this technique
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Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte describes the justices and injustices that were shown in the Romantic period that it was written. The character that was most influenced in the novel was Heathcliff‚ the byronic hero‚ by the injustices he faced as a child and growing up. He seeks revenge against Hindley at first and later Edgar Linton because of the treatment he receives from the both. Heathcliff is not only affected by the characters in the novel but also the setting which is Thrushcross Grange
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The desperation of Emily Grierson In “A Rose for Emily‚” William Faulkner tells the story of Miss Emily‚ an aristocratic woman that is greatly respected by people of the town in Jefferson‚ Yoknapatawpha County‚ Mississippi. People look at her as “a tradition‚ a duty‚” and a “monument.” The story starts off sorrowfully at Emily’s funeral‚ but ends up terrifyingly when people discover her unspeakable secret. She poisons Homer Barron. She even keeps his rotting corpse on her bed and sleeps
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The Frozen Time of Emily Grierson In this paper‚ the story of William Faulkner “A Rose for Emily”‚ I will illustrate how Emily Grierson was living in the past. Firstly‚ in the beginning of the story‚ the author’s detailed characterization foreshadowed the irony at the ending of the story. Secondly‚ Emily’s whole life and faith was controlled and twisted by her father’s selfishness and when her father died‚ she refused to give up her father’s dead body. Thirdly‚ she ignored all the public notice and
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creepy and a bit scary. In his “A Rose for Emily”‚ he includes Miss Emily Grierson or Miss Emily is portrayed as the creppy woman of the town in Yoknapatawpha County. In Faulkners “That Evening Sun” the Compson family and their slaves Nancy and Jesus should be feared for their actions and way of life. Faulkner’s use of Southern Gothic writing puts fear into his readers through his characters in his stories. In Faulkner’s “A Rose for Emily‚” Miss Emily is suspected of acting the way she‚ because
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