Janet King Professor Miller ART 1030 17 August 2010 The Glorification and Horrors of War through the Arts Artistes have always painted scenes of war from the Ancient worlds of Egypt and Greece. The relief inside the Abu Simbel Temple showing Ramses in the Battle of Kadesh and of his victory over the Hittites is an excellent example. The Athena Frieze depicting the battle of Greeks against the Persians‚ which are some of the earliest example of a specific historical event being‚ sculptured (Greek
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Musings On Immortality: Tennyson’s In Memoriam Lord Alfred Tennyson was so shaken by the death of his great friend Arthur Henry Hallam that he spent the next seventeen years composing poems of grief that later came together as one in In Memoriam. In a country so undisputedly Christian as England‚ there were very few Victorians who would denounce God or the church despite the great scientific discoveries that contradicted the Bible. While Tennyson did not denounce either‚ still he doubted. His
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Plato: Knowledge‚ and Immortality of the Soul Reading this selection was a bit confusing since Socrates is the one who is talking and not Plato himself‚ I quickly realize that Plato was a pupil of Socrates so it would only make sense to explain your beliefs through the words of the very person who instilled this truth within you. To start off‚ I would like to bring up “The Divided Line”. The diagram shown first divides‚ to my understanding‚ the world as it is from the world as we perceive it. It
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A Comparison of Blake‚ Wordsworth and Keats William Blake‚ John Keats and William Wordsworth all believe in the "depth" of the world and the possibilities of the human heart. However‚ each poet looks towards different periods in time to capture meaning in life. Blake looks towards the future for his inspiration‚ Keats towards the present and Wordsworth towards the past. Regardless of where each poet looks for their inspiration they are all looking for the same thing; timeless innocence. Each poet
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Analysis of “Ode to a Nightingale” and “To a Skylark” “To a Sklyark”‚ and “Ode to a Nightingale” 19th century English romanticism poems; written by Percy Shelley and John Keats. Keats and Shelley use allegory imagery of the bird to express an aesthetic expression‚ and their understanding of human nature. While Shelley’s impression of the bird gives him a positive aspect on life and death‚ Keats see’s the bird as a reminder of the mortality of human beings. In both poems the bird is perceived
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Ode to a Nightingale This ode was inspired after Keats heard the song of a nightingale while staying with a friend in the country. This poem was also written after the death of his brother and the many references to death in this poem are a reflection of this. Among the thematic concerns in this poem is the wish to escape life through different routes. Although the poem begins by describing the song of an actual nightingale‚ the nightingale goes on to become a symbol of the immortality of nature
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is nature. The tone of the poem is shown by the use of joyful adjectives such as “golden” or “fluttering” this allows the poem to be light-hearted .Although the main theme in this poem is nature‚ I believe another theme is relationships because Wordsworth seems to have an amazing relationship with nature ‚ in the way he describes the daffodils and when he thinks of the daffodils “his heart with pleasure fills and dances with the daffodils”. The imagery in this poem is bright and colourful due to
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(Claim) In the epic Gilgamesh‚ the hero Gilgamesh learns that immortality is unattainable for him and he gains wisdom because of his journey. (Evidence #1) At first‚ when Gilgamesh is adamant about contradicting mortality Utnapishtim (the mortal that turned into a god) brings forth a test to Gilgamesh and says‚ “I will show you that‚ like all human beings‚ you are weak… I want you to… stay awake for seven nights and six days” (212). (Warrant #1) Gilgamesh then flunks Utnapishtim’s test‚ consequently
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interested in the concept of immortality. If there is purpose to an ending life‚ a life that does not end must be supremely important. This idea is exemplified throughout time in stories both historical and fictional. The Epic of Gilgamesh is one such story. Gilgamesh deals with immortality on nearly every level‚ and at the same time points back to mortality‚ trying to extract a reason for living and dying. Ostensively‚ The Epic of Gilgamesh entertains the idea of immortality on a physical plane. The
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William Wordsworth and romantic Poetry In Wordsworth’s “We are seven”‚ characteristics of nature was included because beginning on line 41 the little cottage girl says” My stockings there I often knit‚ My ‘kerchief there I hem; And there upon the ground I sit- I sit and sing to them‚” this stanza shows how the girl enjoys the therapeutic quality of sitting outside by the church-yard tree with her brother and sister. The beautiful girl also discusses how she is one out of seven‚ even when she is
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