A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning Essay

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    thatcher

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    1. G. M. Hopkins, “The Windhover”, “I wake and feel the fell of dark…” 2. William Shakespeare, Sonnets 1-7 3. John Donne, “Valediction Forbidding Mourning”, “The Flea”, “Hymn to God, My God in my Sickness” 4. George Herbert, “The Collar”, “The Altar”, “Love III” 5. Andrew Marvell, “To his Coy Mistress” 6. T.S. Eliot, “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”, “Journey of the Magi” 2. Poems for individual reading: 1. William Shakespeare Sonnet 73 (“That time of year…”) 2. John Donne, “Holy

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    The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald created a modern masterpiece in his work The Great Gatsby, despite the novel's earl ill reception. The work is a complex piece which tries to make sense of a strange concept of modernity within a classical sense of history. In the work, Fitzgerald illustrates the importance of allusion in the creation of character building, but also as a way for Fitzgerald to stray away from previous literary techniques and create motifs and themes that were entirely his own

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    descriptions of the mysteriously feared death. Both John Donne and Dylan Thomas write these poems based on the loss of a loved one. Although they both let death affect them, how it affects them is contradicting. Although John Donne’s “A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning,” was sympathetically caring, the theme of death displayed by a personal lesson, imagery, and repetition can also be seen in the aggressively abrasive poem “Do not go gentle into that good night” by Dylan Thomas. Both authors have different

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    John Donne's Poetry

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    In “A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning,” Donne compares two lovers to the points on a compass. This is surprising because Donne was not using the conventional Petrarchan conceit to make comparisons like his colleagues. A metaphysical conceit requires a more introspective way

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    Since definition of love and its representation varies person to person and in the past it has already been represented in various ways, which leads one to presume that language is insufficient to represent love. However, it is evident that the language has proved to be sufficient enough to not only analyze, dissect and explain the feelings of love from so many angles including biologically. Subversions of conventions of love is not the matter of insufficiency of language but a matter of how a poet

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    unorthodox usage of a banal concept such as love in another Metaphisical poet: John Donne. Donne in his poems also uses very unconventional ways to describe love, and also was criticized by Jonson for his unconventional method. In his poem "A Valediction Forbidding Mourning", he uses ideas from the world of mathematics and geography (a compass) in order to describe the two lovers. For Jonson it is a “combination of dissimilar images, the most heterogeneous ideas are yoked by violence together." Namely, he

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    English Lit 1302

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    Homework Questions Homework 1 1. Discuss “Cathedral” in terms of James Joyce’s theory of epiphany (in the fiction section). What is the epiphany in the story? Who has it? How does the epiphany relate to the title? 2. Discuss the importance of tone in the story “Cathedral,” particularly the narrator’s tone. How does the tone affect the reader’s perception of theme? How does it enhance the epiphany? 3. Why is the meeting between Mala and Mrs. Croft in “The Third and Final Continent” a significant

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    of the Jonestown people relinquish control of their emotions due to the use of persuasive language. Also another example of how language plays a major role in emotion is in literature, more specifically poetry. In John Donne’s poem A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning the language that he uses creates a very light and open feeling inside of me when I read it. It sounds very elegant and beautiful to read and makes me feel very happy inside. “Our two souls therefore, which are one, Though I must

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    The first invention of the term “Metaphysical Poetry” by Samuel John as he pertained to the group of writers in the beginning of the 17th century continues to give an impertinent impression for this kind of works were made by men of high intellect. Presenting new ideas and marveling through the art of conceit, imagery, and allusion surprises every reader and challenges them to the wonders of the poet's learning. The metaphysical poets are the known writers for their originality. They were all

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    Despite the differences in context, a comparative study of the poetry of John Donne and Margaret Edson’s play, ‘W;t’, is essential for a more complete understanding of the values and ideas presented in ‘W;t’. Discuss this with close reference to both texts. When deconstructing the text ‘W;t’, by Margaret Edson, a comparative study of the poetry of John Donne is necessary for a better conceptual understanding of the values and ideas presented in Edson’s ‘W;t’. Through this comparative study

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