Annotation

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    Annotation Within A Dream

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    In the first stanza of Edgar Allan Poe’s poem, “A Dream Within a Dream” it depicts the narrator kissing their lover farewell, as if they are parting ways, “[t]ake this kiss upon the brow! / [a]nd, in parting from you now…” (1-2). He then claims “[t]hat my days have been a dream” (5). As if he lives his life out as a dream. Further reading into the poem, in the second stanza, that narrator is being described as on the beach, holding handfuls of sand as they slip through his fingers falling into…

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    images are recognized as face annotation and now a day various techniques are introduced for annotation. Automatically tagging of images with proper tag or label without any human efforts is performed with the help of auto face annotation [1]. Facial annotation can also be apply for videos, such as facial image annotation from news video is done and then it displayed on television so that peoples can identify person in TV [2].Manually identification and annotation of weakly labeled images is…

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    Close Reading Annotations: 1. “Tis not alone my inky cloak, good mother,/ nor customary suits of solemn black, / nor windy suspiration of forced breath, / No, nor the fruitful river in the eye, / Nor the dejected havior of the visage, / Together with all forms, moods, shapes of grief, / That can denote me truly” (I.ii.77-83). Hamlet explains to his mother and Claudius that nothing can truly encapsulate the emotions he feels following the death of his father. Shakespeare’s use of “’Tis not…

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    Merchant of Venice Annotation Analysis: ACT IV External Conflict: External Conflict is marked by a characteristic involvement of an action wherein a character finds himself in a struggle without outside forces. Textual Evidence: “Hates any man the thing he would kill it?” (IV.I.67). Explanation: Shylock gained the desire to want to steal a pound of flesh from Antonio. As stated by the definition an external conflict, an external conflict is a struggle from the outside forces. An episode…

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    Grazing in the fields, roaring in the jungles, or wriggling in the dirt, “Nature’s People” are found everywhere. Throughout history, people have admired nature and its beautiful creations, especially animals, and Emily Dickinson is no exception. In “A narrow Fellow in the Grass”, Dickinson simply admires a snake, personifying it with interesting metaphors and unusual word choices. Although she respects a snake in her poem, she also feels as if he is a sly, chilling, and devious creature.…

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    Tell Tale Heart Annotation

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    My body shuddered in agony, as I desperately gasped for air. My mother awoke, as she noticed pus-filled, blood sacs on my abdomen. She shrieked, as it appeared the life was being pulled out of me. Immediately, my mother sprinted to the town doctor, who had recently flown in within minutes. The physician injected me with a clear substance, as my body became relaxed. The darkness continued to swallow the town, as I became conscious. The insect that injected me with its poison still remains…

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    In the first chapter (six sections) of A Tale of Two Cities Dickens shows us the backstory and events of what is going to be shaping the characters throughout the whole book. In the first paragraph of the whole book Charles Dickens already begins telling us the main theme of the book and how it is going to play out. He was doing this by comparing and contrasting certain concepts such as the best and the worst of times, or he was using an analogy like light or darkness. The reason that he was…

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    The short story Tell-Tale Heart, by Edgar Alan Poe is a first person narrative about the murder of an old man with a glass eye. The story begins with the narrator trying to convince the reader he is sane. He explains that his accuracy in killing him means that he could not possibly be insane. The message the narrator tries to convey is contradicted by the tone and intensity of how he tells his story. He states that the tranquility in which he will tell the story is proof of his sanity Although,…

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    Christopher Marlowe’ poem titled “The Passionate Shepherd to His Love” is a pastoral melodic, a manner of poetry that's illustrated in a peaceful and perfect way. Marlowe’s poem us written in a typical iambic tetrameter. The majority of the lines comprise eight syllables, easily elided syllables, and four substantial stresses. However, Lines 3 and 4, do not have eight syllables; which produces a particular effect. Though the 24th line, this regular meter continued, never making its way to…

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    Alighieri shows hostility towards Filippo Argenti, who was a Black Guelph and Alighieri’s political enemy, through Dante’s diction and reaction. Upon encountering Argenti while crossing the Styx, Dante asks who the sinner is, “But you, who are you, so fallen and so foul?’” (VIII, 35). Alighieri purposely chooses words with demoralizing connotations like fallen, which means degrading and immoral, and foul, which implies grossly offensive in a moral sense, to address his enemy, showing how much he…

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