Sonnet 73 Essay

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    Various poems project vividness by the specific descriptive words that are written by the poets. These simple words not only create vivid scenes, but also have a lively breathe. From a bombing, to a glimpse of faith, to a rather strange situation, the words written in these poems will make the reader want to hold their breath. The mood in the poems “Ballad of Birmingham, “Since there’s no help,” and “When my love swears that she is made of truth” robustly reveal author’s purpose on the topics of

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    In the William Butler Yeat’s poem “Leda and the Swan” he uses fourteen lines but really fifteen counting the dramatic pause to describe the violence and sexual act that happens to Leda. Zeus the Greek king of the gods, disguises himself as a swan and come out of the sky and rapes Leda. Yeats descriptions of the rape is very harsh, but in reality, it is very sexual in a valuable way. Yeats makes it seem like Leda was expecting for the act to happen with his choice of words. The poem is explaining

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    characters either. On the next chapter, it talks about the renaissance and about sonnets and about how they are 14 lines long and and ten syllables per line too. The Petrarchan sonnets are the most popular type and its divided into 2 parts and one part is 8 and the other part is 6 lines. And it says how the poem turns itself into a shape of a square which is why the title of this chapter is called “if its square, It’s a sonnet”. On chapter five, the author makes references to things to like characters

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    In the poems “Still Will I Harvest Beauty Where It Grows” by Edna St. Millay and “God’s Grandeur” by Gerard Hopkins, the accentuation of two uniquely similar views of pollution and industrialization is evident. Hopkins discusses a world of pollution saved by nature and God, while Millay highlights one of imperfect perfection through finding beauty in places affected by negative human impact, such as industrialization and pollution. Both poems acknowledge the negativities that come with human pollution

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    was known as the Great Chain of Being. It is believed that God was the ruler of everything followed by angels and arch angels, humans, animals, plants and minerals. The prologue of Romeo and Juliet is written in sonnet form which created a contemporary feel to the play. Shakespeare's sonnets were popular among the English of the time period and they came to watch his plays in the Globe Theatre. His prologue in Romeo

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    Sonnet 17 and Sonnet 55: Shakespeare’s Differing Opinion of Preservation Two constant themes throughout this collection of sonnets is death and preservation. Shakespeare battles with the idea of how to preserve not only the beauty of his subject, but also his work without losing value and merit. Sonnet 17 and Sonnet 55 share the common idea that preservation is necessary and important, but each take different approaches to this preservation. From Sonnet 17 to Sonnet 55, Shakespeare grows confident

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    Sonnet 116 And John Donne

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    William Shakespeare’s “Sonnet 116” and John Donne’s “A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning” similarly explore the theme of everlasting true love. However, both poems differ in rhyme scheme, techniques, and meaning. The poets use these tools to convey to the reader that everlasting true love does in fact exist. Although both speak so passionately about said love, only the speaker of Donne’s poem has actually experienced it. While both poems explicate eternal true love, their rhyme scheme differences

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    there is bound to be a Millay poem to help with that. Time does not bing relief; you all have lied is a poem in which Millay describes the voraciousness of his or her pain after having lost someone near and dear to them. Within this fourteen line sonnet they depict the variety of ways they miss them and are reminded of them in their daily life. “There are a hundred places where I fear To go, -so with his memory they brim!” ( Millay 56). Within a poem the author has only so much space to convey all

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    give the impression that not much effort went into this mere thought. In the opening lines of Millay’s poem, it seems as if she is speaking to a lover. The tone of the poem is set in the first line, “in some quite casual way” (1). Throughout the sonnet, one senses a frighteningly casual tone, something very matter of fact, as if these fourteen lines are a passing thought in Millay’s head. The alliteration of “quite casual” supports the plain-spoken tone, giving a feel of simple, everyday speech

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     Use a creative and informative title The Apocalypse on earth has started and The Anti-Christ a beast of half-human, a half animal is rising, and the world is being pulled into the darkness of hell through the gyre. This is what the poem “The Second Coming” by William Butler Keats is about. Even though “The Second Coming” is about Revolutions, to the reader Keats is left looking at the events of the world around him and trying to take in all the violent acts of war and the devastation, that leaves

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