Spook, Omfg, did she ever fuckn tell you like it is or what!!!!! I almost pissed on myself lmao when Bull told me she fuckn told you how the cow ate the cabbage. How many, dude, how much fuckn times did I tell you Melinda had some fuckn guts. From what bull spirits thingies she was fuckn spot on!!!! Man, face it, from my point of view she pegged your ass to the goddamn wall about your fuckn lying and what's so fuckn pitiful is she right. You lie, she finds out, she confronts you, you…
.Faulkner writes about the Southern Gothic in his many short stories. The Southern Gothic genre deals with the grotesque realities of Southern life. It is specifically found in: “A Rose For Emily”, “Barn Burning”, and “That Evening Sun.” In “A Rose For Emily” Miss Emily is the last descendant of the esteemed Grierson family. She is the last remnant of the old south. The South lives in the past, always reminiscing about their glory days, and Miss Emily is no exception. She clings to the body of…
"Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" has gotten significant critical attention, generally positive. Writing in The Virginia Quarterly Review, James M. Cox (1959) states that this lyric contains "haunting rhythms" which are shaped partly by the "rationale of the rhyme conspire." This rhyme plot, he says, "is an expression of the growing control and determination" of the speaker. John T. Ogilvie (1959), in his article in the South Atlantic Quarterly, recommends that the lyric ends up plainly…
Stopping By The Woods On A Snowy Evening by Robert Frost Frost’s “Stopping by Woods” is a classic worshipped for it’s perfect structure of iambic tetrameter and lead rhymes, telling a tale of a horseback traveler trotting through an awe-inspiring wood at night on his way to a destination far away. However, this simple interpretation can be only derived from a first glance of the poem; after constant read through in trying to discover a deeper meaning, complexity is discovered in the story as…
"Stopping by Woods On a Snowy Evening” could be viewed as a normal poem, that seems as if he was just taking a stroll through the woods one night, but really underlies the true sadness that many had begin to feel. Frost sets the scene of this poem by creating a dark and dreary setting…
Are humans truly superior to the world that surrounds them? In the poem “Evening Hawk” Robert Penn Warren questions humanity's ultimate dominance of the world, and instead suggests that nature is the judge of humanity's errors. Through diction and imagery the author creates a dark apprehensive mood and shows the fragility of mankind before nature. In the poem Robert Penn Warren uses specific diction in order to develop a dark mood of unease. By using words like “black”, “scythes”, and…
individuals will undoubtedly transform them, where it be a positive or negative transformation. This can be seen in the poems by Robert Frost, namely ‘The Tuft of Flowers’ and ‘Stopping by woods on a snowy evening’, and also in the short story ‘Big World’ by Tim Winton. In ‘Stopping by woods on a snowy evening’ the speaker makes a discovery on his own perceptions of the world round him and how he must change in order to fulfil his responsibilities. Similarly, in ‘A Tuft of Flowers’, the…
so interesting is the idea that there is more than one way to interpret them. Frost’s poems are loved by many, but often misinterpreted as a result of their complexity and ambiguity, specifically The Road Not Taken and Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening. The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost, is one of his best known and most popular poems. However, it is also one of his commonly misunderstood poems. The Road Not Taken is about…
certain situation there is always something/someone that can make it better. In this case it was the Japanese gardener named Aritomo who helped sculpt Young Ling into the strong independent person she was at the end of the novel. The book The Garden of Evening Mists by Tan Twan Eng creates a theme of everything thing fades, and everything changes over time no matter what it is or who they are, by using literary elements such as tone to develop and create a complex read . Through the beginning of…
Frost. The two poems are “The Road Not Taken” and “Stopping by the Woods on a Snowing Evening.” “The Road Not Taken” was about the author who was walking in the woods one morning and there were two roads and they looked exactly the same so he just took one and the road looked like it hasn’t been walked on in awhile and because him taking that path, it changed his life. “Stopping by the Woods on a Snowing Evening” was about this man who was riding on his little horse and stopped in the woods and…