HomeJoin Now!QuestionsContact Us
SEARCH Papers



PAPER Topics

• American History
• Arts & Movies
• Biographies
• Book Reports
• Creative Writing
• English
• Geography
• Health & Medicine
• Legal
• Miscellaneous
• Money & Finance
• Music
• Poetry
• Political
• Religion
• Sciences
• Society
• Technology
• World History

MEMBERS Login
Username: 
Password: 



Forgot Password


Cancel Subscription



Poetry Online Essays


Coleridge's "The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner
Number of words: 864 | Number of pages: 4

... will not understand the effect of the point of the tale. Coleridge's main point in writing the story was to get people to understand forgiveness by understanding the poem. The Mariner in the poem is telling his tale to a "Wedding Guest" who has no choice but to listen and to believe. The "Wedding Guest" in the poem represents "everyman" in the sense that "everyone" is to be at the marriage of the Mariner to life. That is, the reader is to follow, live, and participate with the idea of the poem. Coleridge tells of a Mariner on a ship who makes a sin against God and therefore is cursed. This curse, the killing of an Albatross - one of God's creatures, costs the entire crew on the sh ...

Dulce Et Decorum Est: Analysis Of Military Life
Number of words: 695 | Number of pages: 3

... if they relied on Owen's descriptive text alone concerning the way he saw his fellow soldiers in combat while describing his chimera, for they were "knock-kneed, coughing like hags"and "bent double, like old beggars under sacks". These words don't necessarily bring to mind a healthy 17-year old boy, does it? The other words he used- "drunk" "lame" and "blind,"- all showed soldiers' impaired state, and held both denotative meanings and connotative meanings in their vagueness, especially the word "blind," which, in my opinion, was ambigious because not only were they "blind" in the sense that they couldn't see because of the gas, night and fog, but also "blind" in the sens ...

Tumbleweed: Central Theme
Number of words: 758 | Number of pages: 3

... wire of life. This is another metaphor for the poet's difficult life. The poet and the tumbleweed are stuck in a painful, difficult situation. They are prisoners of their surroundings, helpless. “Like a riddled prisoner.” The words riddled prisoner are used to give us a powerful, painful, picture of the lost and hopeless feeling of the poet. He feels great pain at his situation, feels that there is no way out. He is hanging there on the fence, exposed for everyone to see. In the second stanza, the poet continues to use metaphors for his life. “ Half the sharp seeds have fallen from this tumbler, knocked out for good by head- stands and pratfalls between here and wherever it grew up.” The ...

Comparison Of Frost's Two Tramps In Mud Time And Stopping By Woods On A Snowy Evening
Number of words: 542 | Number of pages: 2

... road. He notices one road has been used many times and the other road looked hardly used "Because it was grassy and wanted wear"(8), he makes the choice to go down the one less traveled. This poem shows that nature can be beautiful by setting you free to letting you choice and to enjoy the view that nature has to offer. On the other hand, there are a few poems which show that Robert Frost was less in awe of nature and fearful of it. One of these is the poem "Design". It takes two of nature's most innocent characters, the moth and the spider, and then finds a tragic death in their lives. Why must the moth die? Why is nature so cruel? Frost questions how nature can be so beautiful, y ...

The Poetry Of John Keats
Number of words: 1473 | Number of pages: 6

... and immortalised as part of the natural cycle - which symbolise eternal and idealistic images of profound beauty. In Ode to a Nightingale, Keats uses the central symbol of a bird to exemplify the perfect beauty in nature. The nightingale sings to the poet's senses whose ardour for it's song makes the bird eternal and thus reminds him of how his own mortality separates him from this beauty. The poem begins: "My heart aches, and a drowsey numbness pains" (Norton 1845). In this first line Keats introduces his own immortality with the aching heart - a machine of flesh with a fixed number of life-giving beats. He also employs a common poetic device to indicate a visionary activ ...

The Power Of Images In Langston Hughes' Poems
Number of words: 592 | Number of pages: 3

... of a sore. Of course, it is painful to get a sore. Such an act or thought could equate to the struggle the blacks in-lets say the sixties went through during all those marches across the country. The pain and suffering they endured trying to become a part of the so-called "American dream". In many ways those efforts were null and void because we still are not equal, racial discrimination still exists. Black people still have one hand tied behind our back when we attempt to pursue what is rightfully ours. He further uses the sense of smell to express his disgust with the dream. For instance, the smell of rotten meat can make you sick to your stomach. The lack of progress achieve ...

Herrick Vs. Marvell
Number of words: 533 | Number of pages: 2

... speaking to all virgins. He never addresses anybody personally. In “To His Coy Mistress” Marvell is addressing his mistress personally. He wrote the poem for his mistress to convince her to become intimate with him. The difference makes a change because now Herrick’s poem affects the reader (depending on if she is female) since it refers to all virgins. However, Marvell’s poem does not since he is referring to one particular individual. The them of “To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time” and “To His Coy Mistress” is carpe diem. The carpe diem them states, “life is brief, so let us seize the day.” In “To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time” Herrick simply states: Then be not coy, but use y ...

Critical Analysis Of "The Eagle" By Lord Tennyson
Number of words: 186 | Number of pages: 1

... rhyme scheme is every last word in each stanza rhyme's. Some of the imagery is with sight and sound. For sight they are “Close to the sun”, “Azure world”, azure mean the blue color in a clear daytime sky. “ Wrinkled sea beneath”, and “mountain walls”. The only one that was imagery of sight & sound was “like a thunderbolt he falls”. The figures of speech are “wrinkled sea”, which means the waves in the ocean. And one simile is “like a thunderbolt he falls”, it is saying how fast a eagle dives. The poems theme is how an eagle can fly so high and dive so fast. And how free an eagle is. I thought that this was a nice poem. I like the way he uses the words. I think the rhyming sc ...

Analysis Of Bryant's "Thanatopsis"
Number of words: 570 | Number of pages: 3

... which adds depth and meaning to the poem. By using this strange metaphor I believe Bryant wishes to suggest his faith in an afterlife. While examining the differences and similarities of death and sleep the reader is left with some very thought provoking questions. The answers to these questions reassure some readers while confusing others. Sleep is a time of rest. It allows preparation for the next day or event, and by relating this definition to death Bryant gives new insight on one's fate after earthly existence. When identifying sleep with death Bryant gives death many characteristics of slumber. People generally wake from sleep, and Bryant expands this occurrence to death ...

Wild Ride
Number of words: 118 | Number of pages: 1

... with friends all around I was but a child with nothing to hide But now that I look he's nowhere to be found Now I wonder what's to become of me The future is uncertain and clouded People tell me that I soon will see That my eyes will no longer be shrouded In my youth I was my own guide But now i'm an adult along for the ride ...

Browse: 1 ... 17  18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  next »

Copyright © 2026 - Web Term Papers - All Rights Reserved