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    Enjambment In Poems

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    I personally agree with the above statement. I strongly think that the theme of journey can also be used as a metaphor for life choices or the loss of innocence and that metaphor is an extremely vital vessel of poetry. My comparison, will be targeting three main points, including how the theme of journey firstly impacts and links in with life choices, secondly the loss of innocence and youth and finally the strong, yet overlooked, aspect of enjambment. The two poems , A and B that I will be comparing

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    consider kinds of aspects before the action, they may think about their own preferences, self economy condition, the quality and the price of the product, and also the age, they would think whether it is suitable for them etc and finally make a best choice. However, Psychodynamic is quite different from the economic man, it is another factor which is influenced by consumers’ mentalities rather than the external environment. The willingness of customers’ decision is from the depth of their heart not

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    two, but in his mind he is aware that he will never be presented with the same opportunity again. Therefore, it was wishful thinking of the traveler to believe that he had traveled on the path that was less traveled, and he planned to justify his choice with the original descriptions that he shared with the reader. Overall, the imagery in the poem executes the idea that it is a behavioral trait of humankind to prove that a past decision was valid because the two passageways are depicted differently

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    times a day do you make choices? Too many to count some would say, you made a choice just now to think about if you wanted to count how many times you made choices. Sometimes you have a choice and other times you do not. Most times you only get stuck with one choice and you have to deal with it. In addition, it might not be the choice or decision you would have hoped for but you go with it. A choice is making a decision between two or more possibilities. In the poem, Choices by Nikki Giovanni she writes

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    The Giver Response Essay

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    color was or that it even existed. Their society was hue less, hopeless, and everything was the same until the new receiver of memory changed that for everyone. In our world choice is a big part of our everyday lives we make many choices a day, do I want this or that, green or blue, this shirt or that shirt? But in The Giver choices were made for them, what they wear, how they act, what they say, what they eat, and what they do for a living. Imagine all that stuff being chosen for you. Everyone would

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    test, or even shower before, or after homework. Deciding is hard for me because it feels irreversible, and I cannot do anything about it after I chose one way or the other. In previous essays, I’ve written about the importance of choice, and how life is made of choices. This idea scares me, even though I see it as true. Since this idea frightens me, I think of the future effects, which creates more pressure on the little decisions I make day to day. Although this is not a major flaw, it greatly

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    Bigger Trees Near Warter

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    Analysis of Bigger Trees Near Warter David Hockney's painting from the series Bigger Trees Near Warter features two roads.One seems straightforward, simple, and full of life, while the other seems more mysterious and unknown. Through his use of color and line, Hockney allows the viewer to think upon and contemplate two different directions. Hockney allows the viewer to question the directions of the roads. Where will each road take me? David Hockney’s painting from the series Bigger Trees Near

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    The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost is an infamous poem written in 1916. In this poem, the persona is faced upon a significant decision. The setting takes place in the fork of a road in the middle of the forest, and the character must decide which path is most beneficial. It is quickly evident that as desirable as it may be, both paths cannot be traveled, and so the decision that is taken must be done with utmost consideration. After weighing in the aspects of each path, Robert Frost emphasizes that

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    The Analogy of Life and Choice We all look at life in many ways both positive and negative outcomes. We approach this huge endeavor of life on two separate roads, either going on the road that represents the best things of life or heading to a road full of uncertainties eventually becoming succumbed by this obstacle. Looking at Robert Frost’s two poems “The Road Not Taken” and “Nothing Gold Can Stay”, these poems stuck based on the life and the choices that any individual takes. The reason I say

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    Robert’s “The Road Not Taken” is based on the aspect of choice since it indicates on the way one decision can change the entire life of an individual. The speaker of the poem chose one path over another, and that, he says, “has made all the difference.” The fact that the speaker always says “I,” implies that he is Robert Frost himself. However, the poet always said that the poem was based on a friend of his named Edward Thomas who thought a lot on the way our decisions impact our lives. Thus, the

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