Edna

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    In Edna St. Vincent Millay’s poem “Childhood Is the Kingdom Where Nobody Dies”, she compares how childhood to a place where no one necessarily dies as a metaphor. That in short, that the innocence which comes with childhood and youth is where no one really dies. For instance, yes family pets, elderly people, but not much of people that play an important role in one’s life. Especially not your immediate family, such as a child 's parent and so forth. In the lines 25-28, visually you can imagine a…

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    and having pride in who you are. This includes things such as living in the present, moving past racism and redefining gender roles. Examples of this theme can be found in many works written around the 1920’s, including The Great Gatsby, poetry by Edna St. Vincent Millay, Hills Like White Elephants, Harlem Renaissance poetry, and Respectable Woman. For many, this period was a time of pushing boundaries, especially for African-Americans who had migrated north looking to get away from the harsh…

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    1.) Edna Bonacich and Blalock introduce their view of what the middleman minority theory is and it is discussed in Bonacich’s article, “A Theory of Middleman Minorities.” Blalock 's defines a middleman minority as racial groups who come to a new country and are placed in the middle between producers and consumers; an overall status gap. Bonacich does not necessarily agree with Blalock. She describes these racial groups as people who do not necessarily want to settle down permanently. This means…

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    Everyone can suffer, even those who seem to have nothing but strength. In the poem “An Ancient Gesture” by Edna St. Vincent Millay, the speaker compares herself to Penelope, the wife of the great hero Odysseus, and shows that even she felt pain, and that it is not a weakness, but a necessity. The poem compares the two using brief, simple sentences and short comparisons. Rather than use overly drawn out descriptions, Millay instead writes using short sentences and stanzas. Despite the fact that…

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    ‘Oh, Oh, You Will Be Sorry’ by Edna St. Vincent Millay is a poem telling a story about the sexist expectations set for women in the 1900s. This was a time in which women’s roles were rapidly and immensely changing due to them performing traditionally male tasks and occupations as the men were fighting in the war. Consequently, women started to realise that they too could work, provide and be educated and so many gained feminist ideas and resentment for the patriarchy. A lot of them defied their…

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    Memories and stories simultaneously provide a catalyzing impetus and stagnating constraint to the lives of characters in Edna O’Brien’s The Little Red Chairs. Early in the novel, the dualistic power of memory is placed on full display as a group of immigrants share their stories with one another. A beautiful Lithuanian waitress named Hedda reluctantly laments her unlucky history in love, as she begins by saying, “Milos and me, we work in the same dining room in Country Waterford and get to know…

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    Edna St. Vincent Millay’s “What lips my lips have kissed, and where, and why (Sonnet XLIII)” explores the tragedy of inevitable loneliness. Much of poetry is considered self expression, and with that notion in mind, and for the sake of this analysis, I will assume that Millay is documenting her own feeling or experience even though it is definitely in the realm of possibility that Millay is speaking from the point of view of an third-party character or separate persona. “Sonnet XLIII” divulges a…

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    Love Is Not All

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    Blood or Love What keeps us alive, blood or love? In the poem “Love is Not All” written by Edna St. Vincent Millay, the author talks about two different perspectives on love and if it is needed for people to survive. In the first part, she talks about how love cannot keep a person alive or protect them from danger. But in the middle of the poem, she realizes that maybe love is desirable to fill a person’s heart with happiness. At the end of the poem, Millay questions herself about if love is…

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    Many poets changed the way that modernist poems were written in the early 20th century. Edna st. Vincent Millay was a famous modernist poet who wrote poetry as a political act. Millay wrote topics on how to deal with many different important issues in society, and Millay often thought on how to change those issues. The poet also wrote her poems based on freeing women from the roles society has set them, and also many of her poems talked about women’s sexuality as a way for it to be celebrated…

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    The great amount of respect and admiration a child has for their mother’s courage is abundantly evident throughout Edna St. Vincent Millay’s, “The Courage That My Mother Had.” Simultaneously, the poem conveys feelings of betrayal. Millay’s poem, through strong associations with equality as strong words, such as “rock” and “granite,” infers the general theme of the poem and the amount of titular courage the poem’s mother possessed. The narrator uses several different types of figurative language…

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