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    [pic] ANALYSIS OF “FUNERAL BLUES” And “IN MEMORY OF W.B YEATS” BY W.H AUDEEN   SUBMITTED BY 1620624 ŞÜKRÜ ÖZ 1620251 AHMET OKKAN FUNERAL BLUES BY AUDEN Stop all the clocks‚ cut off the telephone‚ Prevent the dog from barking with the juicy bone. Silence the pianos and‚ with muffled drum‚ Bring out the coffin. Let the mourners come. Let aeroplanes circle moaning overhead Scribbling in the sky the message: “He is dead!” Put crepe bows around the white necks of the public doves

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    opening stanza of “The Wild Swans at Coole”‚ Yeats contrasts the environment which surrounds him with the brimming water of the lake. He describes the setting as being late autumn‚ a period where natural things are in the process of dying and notes that “the woodland paths are dry”‚ perhaps symbolic for how Yeats felt about this stage in his life. On the other hand‚ the lake is the complete opposite: full of life and movement. Where the environment symbolizes Yeats growing old and weary‚ the lake and its

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    Sailing to Byzantium

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    I believe that Yeats’s is the older man that is in “Sailing to Byzantium”. In a way he was writing this poem to reflect his own life. He wanted to take the reader on a journey through the process of life and death. Yeats lived from 1865 to 1939 and this poem was written in 1926. Yeats has an obsession with the past both the distant past and that of his personal life and these things are symbolic of his fear of growing old or aging and a persistent fear of death. He uses imagery‚ symbolism‚ and figurative

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    Wwi Poetry Analysis

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    Compare and Contrast the the poems “An Irish Airman Foresees his death”- W.B Yeats and “The Death Bed”- Siegfried Sasson. Compare the poems to the critical analysis‚ “Trauma Theory.” The poems‚ “An Irish Airman Foresees his death”- W.B Yeats and “The Death Bed”- Siegfried Sasson share various qualities and differences. The similar qualities that the poems share includes a complementary theme of war‚ thoughts of a comrade in the war and the thoughts that run through the soldiers mind before

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    No Second Troy Analysis

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    violent ways refers to Irish nationalists drawn to both her beauty and her nationalistic tendencies. That Yeats refers to them as ‘ignorant’ implies Maud’s intelligence. My favorite line of the poem is: Or hurled the little streets upon the great‚ where ‘little streets’ is a reference to Irish nationalists and commoners rising up against the strength of a great British Empire. Yeats‚ it seems‚ has little confidence that the level of what they desire- an autonomous Ireland- would be met

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    QUESTION ONE A Merger can be defined as a Voluntary amalgamation of two firms on roughly equal terms into one new legal entity. Mergers are effected by exchange of the pre-merger stock (shares) for the stock of the new firm. Owners of each pre-merger firm continue as owners‚ and the resources of the merging entities are pooled for the benefit of the new entity. If the merged entities were competitors‚ the merger is called horizontal integration‚ if they were supplier or customer of one another

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    Breaking Down “A Prayer for my Daughter” ABOUT THE AUTHOR William Butler Yeats (b. June 13‚ 1865‚ d. Jan. 28‚ 1939) was a celebrated Irish poet‚ prose writer and dramatist. In 1889 he met a woman named Maud Gonne‚ who was brilliant‚ passionate and beautiful‚ and instantly fell in love. This love‚ however‚ was not reciprocated. His marriage proposal was turned down several times‚ yet he still joined the Irish nationalist cause with her because of her passion for Ireland and conviction. In 1903‚ she

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    Analysis of A Prayer for my Daughter by W.B. Yeats‚ Stanzas 9-10 Stanza 9: Yeats states that if hatred is ridded off‚ “the soul recovers radical innocence.” Hatred causes sin and violence; hence to be rid of it is to be innocent of these crimes. Innocence is beautiful in women. “Innocence” is radical because it is rooted in the soul. “Considering that‚ all hatred driven hence‚ / The soul recovers radical innocence”. A radical is a term for a root. In another perspective‚ the “innocence” is “radical”

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    The Song of Wandering Aengus (By: William Butler Yeats) This poem is written by William Butler Yeats‚ an Irish poet who embraced the idea of nationalism which states that one takes pride in his/her nation. W.B.Yeats is distinguished for his resistance to the English influence on Ireland at his time ‚he has been classified as a poet of resistance. The 18th century - also known as the Victorian Age- was the time when England took control of Ireland and tried to smudge its culture and place

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    When You Are Old

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    Amanda Jessen Professor: Jason Meier English 1118-54 Online 19 October 2014 Explication of “When You Are Old” by William Butler Yeats When you are old and grey and full of sleep‚ And nodding by the fire‚ take down this book‚ And slowly read‚ and dream of the soft look Your eyes had once‚ and of their shadows deep; How many loved your moments of glad grace‚ 5 And loved your beauty with love false or true‚ But one man loved the pilgrim soul in you‚ And

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