Metaphor

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    In this essay I will be analyzing the poem “Same Song” by the writer Pat Mora.In this essay I will be using the Historical Criticism literaly lense to analyze this poem.In order to use this lense correctly I will need information about when the poem was written or I can use clues in the poem to help with that if it cannot be found clearly.After that information is found then I need to show how this period in time has an effect on the poem. When using this lens to analyze the poem I researched…

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    Happy Risks Authors use genres and characters to develop a theme. Sometimes different main characters can be used to build the same theme. In the poem, “the lesson of the moth,” poet Don Marquis uses the main character, a moth, to teach the narrator Archy, a cockroach, what it is like to have a dream worth dying for. Similarly, Daniel Keyes, author of “Flowers for Algernon,” uses the protagonist Charlie Gordon, a mentally challenged person, who longs to be more intelligent, to develop the idea…

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    Sasha Maharaj has used a personal tone to convey emotions underlying her feelings about relationships in the poem, “Worthless’’. In this essay, I disclose how poetic devices, diction, syntax and other language functions have been utilized to reveal feelings/emotions of the writer in regard to relationships. Taking into account the title of the poem, one cannot put a figure on what or who is worthless. Nevertheless, it is known that worthless is an adjective; meaning something that has no use or…

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    In life, there is that tendency to ruin the good things one has going on in their lives when they become more successful than they already are. People become inundated with the joy and achievement that they begin to act irresponsibly. A great thing such as winning the lottery can bring cheerfulness and satisfaction into one’s life but, on the other hand, this great thing can also become a complete nightmare. In most cases, when one goes from being extremely poor to being exceptionally rich, it…

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    Emily Dickinson Comparison essay Emily Dickinson was an American poet born in Amherst, Massachusetts. Dickinson was an introverted person, who usually kept to herself. Emily Dickinson’s style of writing was a combination of romantic and realist. As many of her poems show, she refers upon her romantic ideas. While in other forms of writing, she refers to realistic ideas through her use of harsh and true to life settings. She wrote on various topics that included: mortality, the natural world,…

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    In the poems “To Paint a Water Lily” by Ted Hughes and “Introduction to Poetry” by Billy Collins the audiences notice similar patterns throughout them and end with a similar theme in the end. Both poems have a wave of rhythm with highs and lows at various points which mirrors the ways of teaching. Hughes’s poem tries to teach that nature is too complex to be captured and painted. Collin’s poem is a teacher talking to his students trying to get them to enjoy the poetry and admire the complexity…

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    Before examining the characters and the effect decadence had on them it is crucial to put together a working definition of the genre. However, this is no easy task due to the inherent paradoxical nature of decadent literature. In the introduction to Decadence: An Annotated Anthology by Jane Desmarais and Chris Baldick a concise yet basic definition of the form is given to the reader. “Decadence represented a hedonistic embrace of self-destructive indulgence and a glorification of our ephemeral…

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    Archaic Torso Of Apollo

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    Rainer Maria Rilke’s poem, “Archaic Torso of Apollo” conveys the theme of appreciation as the speaker examines the broken statue of the Greek god Apollo. Rilke’s poem uses figurative language to demonstrate the theme of appreciation of art throughout the poem. Throughout the poem, Rilke frequently uses similes to support his overall theme of his appreciation for the art. A simile is a figure of speech that creates a comparison by showing similarities between two different things. The first…

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    Figurative language is used throughout writing to help illustrate the author’s writing. One common form of figurative language is irony. When using irony in a poem, the reader may stop to reflect on the writing. This gives the reader a moment to determine if what they are reading has more than one meaning. Emily Dickinson uses irony throughout her poems in order to help get her point across. “I stepped from Plank to Plank” is an example of how she uses irony in poems. She talks about moving…

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    In Thomas C. Foster’s How to Read Literature like a Professor, Foster writes an entertaining guide of how to dig deeper into the metaphorical meaning of every piece of literature in hopes to inspire the minds of tomorrow not only to grow in their understanding of symbols but also to trust themselves and the knowledge they already have. In relation to Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Namesake, Foster lends understanding to such common symbols like sex not being at all about the actual act but representing the…

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