William Austin Dickinson

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    In this essay I will be comparing famous poets, Walt Whitman Emily Dickinson and comparing their themes, background experience in style which contain the literary elements with some examples of that are imagery and their format literary movements and I will analyze these two poets. What women and Emily Dickinson may seem very different, but are much the same and have some similarities as I will explain in the following essay. In many ways these two things were different in Walt Whitman's…

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    Caesar Rodney is on the back the Delaware quarter in the middle of his famous ride, yet not very many people know anything about him. This shows that he was very passionate about something, which could have been anywhere from the Delaware militia to early politics. Therefore, Caesar Rodney was a marvelous leader because he had great political ideas, military positions, and was extremely passionate for his causes. First off, Caesar Rodney did amazing things in politics, so he was able to become…

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    Metaphor Of Vision

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    Emily Dickinson, an american poet, uses the metaphor of vision in her two poems titled “Before this I Got My Eye Put Out” and “We Grow Accustomed to the Dark”. She was born in Amherst, Massachusetts in 1830. She was a private poet and only had a few of her poems actually published. When her close friend grew ill and died from typhus, she became very sad. She wrote a lot during this time and also spent a lot of time in solitude. In Before I Got My Eye Put Out, Dickson talks about her…

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    For this fieldwork project, I have decided to analyze a poem. Out of the many poems that I have read in my entire life, I can’t recall one that really caught my attention and made me want to keep reading. That is, until now. Emily Dickinson’s poem, “My Life Has Stood A Loaded Gun,” is one heck of a masterpiece that I just have to talk about it. First, I would like to say that each stanza in this poem, had me feeling some type of way. Each line, brought a mess of imagery in my mind. Every dash I…

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    In “Because I could not stop for Death” by Emily Dickinson, Death is ready to claim the speaker’s soul, but just before she leaves they strove through memory lane. The speaker doesn’t seem scared at all because she called Death’s action “kindly”, making Death seem friendly. The figures of speech of anaphora, imagery, and personification were presented in this poem to help create a certain effect and reveal the true meaning of this poem. The message is to enjoy life as long as you can because…

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    poem “XIV” Emily Dickinson shines a light on the rising search for independence, jurisdiction, and escaping the tyranny of conformity. Motivationally stating that she has “stopped being theirs,” (1) Dickinson awakens the need for individuals, most importantly women, to stand up against the fate chosen for them by society and to fight to forge and discover their own path to take in the ever winding road of life. Wielding a swift amount of metaphors, Diction, alliteration, and Dickinson calls…

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    the edge. In the short story “The Tell-Tale Heart” by Edgar Allan Poe and “I Felt a Funeral in my Brain” by Emily Dickinson, death is the central idea for both works. In Poe’s story, the narrator goes down the path of insanity over the eye of an old man and would plan the latter’s murder. In Dickinson’s poem, she uses death to portray the deterioration of her sanity. Poe and Dickinson both use the concept of hearing voices and death along with repetitive words and phrases to further develop…

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    I can remember going to Bay Beach with my family and thinking that the small wooden roller coaster was so impressive. However, as I grew up, I rode better and better roller coasters. Only then did I realize how much the one at Bay Beach pales in comparison. The funeral also shows this idea that our views of the world are not always correct and are subject to change . in "The Funeral" by Gordon Parks, the speaker changes their perspective of the world as their life goes on . Gordon Parks uses…

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    being is because they are different but alike as well. “The noiseless patient spider” is written by Walt Whitman. This poem is about a spider who cannot find a home, and allows the wind to find the perfect location. The second poem, written by Emily Dickinson, discusses a soul watching over an empire to see if she admires what she observes, if so, she will “shut the door”, or in other words get a host and live in that empire. There are many ways to compare the two poems, but this essay will only…

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    As someone with a rather intimate and longstanding connection to death, it is no surprise that Emily Dickinson often used poetry as a medium to explore her ever-developing relationship with mortality. Her literary investigation of as much is incredibly diverse in content, her poems often highlighting her attempts to cope with the death of loved ones, or perhaps portraying her endeavors to deepen her understanding of herself and the world around her. Wrought with complexity, Dickinson's poetry on…

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