P. T. Barnum

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    Page 46 of 50 - About 500 Essays
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    Introduction: In The Museum of Ordinary life, Gabeba Baderoon states that, “In South Africa poetry has offered a ringing voice at a time of enforced silence, and a vision of prescence and complexity at a time when even the humanity of Black people was denied. Poets tell the secret histories of what happens in plain sight, and give voice to what is supressed. They register minute shifts in the air, in an era, and translate the orders of conciousness and the body into the delicate, powerful…

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    Wordsworth being a romantic poet has never shown this sort of a gesture as he has shown in this poem. This poem basically speaks about the lost connection to nature and everything worthy. Wordsworth wants to express how the world is moving further uncaringly losing humanity within, every passing day. The speaker wishes that he was a pagan who sees the world with the vision of divinity. Wordsworth is not able to accept this materialistic world filled with artificiality and therefore this poem is…

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    Loss Of Memory In Poetry

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    There are many allusions presented to us explicitely and implicitely in this poem. The poets apparent loss of memory throughout the poem implicitely alludes to the speakers decomposing body.In the first line,the speaker refers to himself as “me” but by the second quatrain he refers to himself as merely “the hand that writ” this poem.The speakers memory is reduced further in the third quatrain to “this verse” and by line ten resolves to “when I am perhaps compounded in clay”.The state of the…

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    Defamiliarization In Lewis Carroll’s “Jabberwocky” Jabberwocky (or The Jabberwocky) is a nonsense poem by Lewis Carroll that appears in the novel Through the Looking Glass (And What Alice Found There) which he published in 1871 (Niki Pollock, 2000). It is a prime example of how language can be used as tool for defamiliarization as he does with his use of nonsense words and imagery. Jabberwocky is a nonsense poem. That is no accident. It did not get mangled in the printer, it was not jumbled up…

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    T.S. Eliot’s The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, is a poem with no clear theme or intent. There are many ideas and problems presented making it difficult to speculation as to what exactly prompted the creation of such poetry. T.S. Eliot depicts the struggles of a middle-aged man by the name of J. Alfred Prufrock, as he reflects on his life thus far. A midlife crisis is often the term used when an individual has a transition in identity and becomes rebellious against the thought of growing old.…

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    The Pylons Poem Analysis

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    The Pylons is a poem written in five quatrains of free verse, and describes the conflict between country and city. The titular object, pylons are a metaphor for technology, which the poetic voice believes to threaten to bring destruction upon nature and country. The concrete poem structures the stanzas in a way that, along with the black font, resemble pylons. There is no regular meter but the first and last line of each stanza sometimes end with full rhyme and sometimes pararhyme. The poet uses…

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    In this essay I will be talking about a Modernist era writer. This writer mostly wrote poems, and his name was Robert Frost. Some of his most famous works include “Mending Wall”, “The Death of the Hired Man”, and “Birches”. All three of these poems were actually quite hard to understand and dissect, but after reading them a few times over i was able to do it. The first poem we will take a look at is “Mending Wall”, written in 1914. After that we will pick apart “The Death of a Hired Man”,…

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    Realism which deals with the presentation of things as they are in reality, has found immense presentation in the works of several poets and playwrights especially from the late 19th century to the present day. These writers are in a sense iconoclasts, who want to bring before man the real picture of life and society in their true hue and colour. For them life is never a bed of roses, in fact, they always intend to focus on the hardships and struggles of common man. The Romanticists have always…

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    Indian English poetry since 1970 has been characterized by failure, hopes and despair, immediacy and anger, search and struggle for identity, human relationship and growing sense of dissatisfaction. It is a kind of strong reaction against romanticism and idealism of its predecessors. It not only tries to establish individuality and reconceptualise values but also tries to redefine culture. Poetry consists of verbal and contextual features, choice of words (diction), syntactic and semantic…

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    Imagism was a literary movement that began in the early 20th century. This movement has its roots in the artistic world where its main aim was to avoid the old conventions and find new ways of creativity. Poets such as Ezra Pound, H.D. and William Carlos Williams tried to create a way of expressing the imagism in painting through words in poetry. This movement as contemporary art repudiates ‘beauty’ standards, and the Romanticism of the 19th-century while it admires the quotidian, the perceptual…

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