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Papers On Poetry
Page 92 of 130
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Robert Browning/"My Last Duchess"
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A 5 page research paper/essay that examines Robert Browning's poem "My Last Duchess." This poem takes the form of an extended monologue. A duke is showing his art collection to an emissary, who has come to arrange a marriage between the duke and his master's daughter. The collection includes a portrait of the duke's first wife. What soon becomes clear is that the duke is a jealous, paranoid, egomaniac who had his "last duchess" killed because she did not worship him in a manner to suit his ego. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: khlastdu.rtf
Robert Burns: Themes of Love, Nature, and Imagination
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A 5 page paper which examines the themes of love, nature, and imagination in Robert Burn’s poem “A Red, Red Rose.” No additional sources cited.
Filename: RAburns.rtf
Robert Frost
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A 4 page paper which examines the common themes in some of Robert Frost’s poems. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: RAro.rtf
Robert Frost & Philip Larkin/Poets
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A 10 page essay/research paper that contrasts and compares 2 poems. "The Wood-pile" by Frost and "Church Going" by Larkin, reflect similar worldviews in regards to nature and humanity's place in the natural world. In each of these poems, the reader hears the poet yearning for something transcendental, to communicate successfully with nature in a manner that will fill a spiritual gulf. But while this feeling is evident in both poems, each poet ultimately denies that such communication with the natural world is possible and pictures the works of human beings as transient to the enduring presence of the natural world, a god that is unaware of humanity's existence. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: khrfpl.rtf
Robert Frost on Nature
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A 7 page paper that analyzes the nature poetry of Robert Frost. The writer looks at three representative poems and argues that scholarly opinion substantiates the position that Frost's poetry the beauty and mystery of nature, but in doing so it delineates the position of humanity in a world that is largely man-made, and, therefore, separated from nature. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Filename: khfrtnat.wps
Robert Frost Poetry
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This 3 page paper examines three of Frost's poems. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Filename: HVRFrost.rtf
Robert Frost's "Mending Wall" - Analysis
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5 pages in length. Robert Frost's eloquent words and descriptive imagery combine to create a poem that can be interpreted as either finite or far-reaching, inasmuch as his focal point of a wall that separates two otherwise isolated individuals serves as a symbolic presence of the walls people routinely place between one another to maintain distance. Throughout the poem the narrator puzzles over the meaning behind the wall, why it falls into disrepair and the reason it needs to be fixed at all given it does not serve to contain anything but merely keep him at arm's length from his neighbor - unsocial as he is. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Filename: TLCFrostMend.rtf
Robert Frost's "Nothing Gold Can Stay"
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A 5 page paper which examines the poem
"Nothing Gold Can Stay" by Robert Frost. The paper offers an examination of the poem
through discussing imagery, metaphor, allusion, and theme. Bibliography lists 3 additional
sources.
Filename: RAgldsty.rtf
Robert Frost's Boundless Moment
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A 5 page paper which analyzes Robert Frost's poem "Boundless Moment." No additional sources cited.
Filename: RAfrtbd.rtf
Robert Frost’s “A Lone Striker”
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A 5 page paper which analyzes Robert Frost’s poem
“A Lone Striker.” Bibliography lists 3 additional sources.
Filename: RAfrstst.rtf
Robert Frost’s “Departmental”
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This 5 page report discusses the
poem “Departmental” and the fact human beings behave like
animals, even insects, in a number of similar ways. This poem
demonstrates that human beings actually appear to mimic the
actions of ants in the ways society is ordered and who is
responsible for what. If one person is not directly affected by
an event, he or she need not be concerned. Somebody else will
handle it. “Departmental” serves as a metaphor for the ways in
which people compartmentalize their world in order to assure they
are able to continue to go about their business, regardless of
the circumstances they encounter. Bibliography lists only the
poem as a source.
Filename: BWrfdept.wps
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