YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Poets Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman
Essays 181 - 210
In six pages this paper compares the influences and poetry styles of Emily Dickinson and Sylvia Plath. Six sources are cited in t...
In five pages this paper examines how American literature evolved from he colonial times of Jonathan Edwards, John Winthrop, Benja...
In five pages this paper examines how the death theme predominates in the poetry of Edgar Allan Poe, Emily Dickinson, Lydia Huntle...
In five pages four questions pertaining to Frederick Douglass, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Emily Dickinson, and Edgar Allan Poe are consi...
In five pages this paper contrasts and compares the death perspectives featured in the poetry of Robert Frost and Emily Dickinson ...
This paper bundles four essays into one. In five pages the writer separately discusses specific questions regarding Eliot's The L...
"Heaves of Storms" in the last line of the first stanza is a metaphor that conjures the image of violent storms, but also suggests...
of struggling against it. For example, the "gentleman caller" in "Because I Could Not Stop For Death" -- who is clearly intended...
In six pages this paper discusses how inequality is strengthened through repressing anger about gender roles and sexuality in a ps...
In three pages this poem by Emily Dickinson is analyzed in terms of personification, message, and theme along with other literary ...
In four pages this poem by Emily Dickinson is explicated and analyzed. There is no bibliography included....
her mid-twenties Dickinson was on her way to becoming a total recluse. Although she did not discourage visitors, she literally nev...
And, it is in this essentially foundation of control that we see who Emily is and see how she is clearly intimidated by these male...
that a womans association with a man is what defined women in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Yet, Emily was le...
the author and his works this short story holds a deeper and more historical position. In relationship to the story itself, anot...
theme in that poets verse. Section 1 When Longfellow was born the nation was less than fifty years old. America was in the proce...
1). Using this metaphor, he goes on to say that Science "alterest all things with thy peering eyes," which preys upon his poets h...
time, as well as giving rise by their death to the new life, the "stalwart heir who approaches" (Whitman 1) of the new America....
Part forty seven is the focus of this poetic explication consisting of six pages in which symbolism uses by the poet are the prima...
best or the worst and the critic could not decide which. Consider these two excerpts from the same critique, the first is in respo...
to punctuation for Ginsberg is to describe his howling. He writes that he has witnessed: "Ten years animal screams and suicides!...
In 5 pages these influential 19th century authors are examined within the context of their writings 'Preface to Leaves of Grass,' ...
In five pages this paper discusses how Walt Whitman represented the Civil War in such poems as 'A March in the Ranks Hard Prest an...
those around them, as if they were now removed from all responsibility to those around them. She seems to call them dead before th...
of this in the following lines which use that imagery in the comparisons: "Thou ill-formed offspring of my feeble brain,/ Who afte...
of this world. She is saying good-by to earthly cares and experience and learning to focus her attention in a new way, which is re...
great exception may arise and disregard and overturn it"(Whitman 2003). This would seem to show a type of reflection on...
As a gun, Dickinson speaks for "Him" (line 7) and the Mountains echo the sound of her fire. Paula Bennett comments that "Whatever ...
waxed poetic when he observed of Poets Corner, "To wander around the Poets Corner along the echoing aisles, and stand in front of...
turning, hungry, lone,/I looked in windows for the wealth/I could not hope to own (lines 5-8). Dickinson now clearly classifies he...