25 Results for Latin

Anglo-Saxon Themes or Ideas and Literary Techniques on "The Wanderer" In an old monastery British experts found a piece of literature entitled "The Wanderer." The piece was written in Latin, so the British assumed it was from the medieval period. When Virginia Jones studied...
The three poets and their poems, which are concerned in this essay, are: Oliver Goldsmith ¡V The Deserted Village; Thomas Gray ¡V An Elegy Written In A Church Yard; James Thomson ¡V The Seasons ~ Winter. Many different styles of poetry were used during the 18th century. Much 18th centur...
The Pessimist Benjamin Franklin King, Jr. (1857-1894) was an American poet and humorist. His poem The Pessimist is full of verses that illustrate how a pessimist would view life; the irony is that through King's comic wit and play on words, he is also allowing for the optimist to read th...
CARPE DIEM According to the Mirriam-Webster Dictionary, the Latin term carpe diem literally means "pluck the day." The term first appeared in 1817, at which time the term phrase "pluck the day" had a connotation of today's "seize the day." The Mirriam-Webster ...
Phyllis Wheatley Our American history is composed of a great deal of historical events and individuals. Phyllis Wheatley is one young woman who greatly contributed to history and holds a valuable spot in it. Phyllis Wheatley was born in West Africa, present day Senegal, in 1753. She remaine...
Be sure to read the introduction to this section ("The Formation of a Western Literature" 1541­ 1545) carefully. Latin as a "universal" language of the educated and the continent­wide domination of the Catholic Church made a European culture possible. (By the way, "Catholic" doesn't have the denom...
William Cullen Bryant was born in Cummington, Massachusetts on November 3, 1794. His home in Cummington was surrounded by brooks, rivers, rocky hills, and woods. Bryant's mother was Sarah Snell Bryant. His father, Doctor Peter Bryant, was a strict Calvinist who loved poetry, music, and...
1 Gwendolyn Brooks is a Noble Prize winning poet, and she has also worked hard in efforts to gain more support and advancement opportunities for African Americans. She was the publicity director for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in Chicago while she attended and...
Is it possible to fabricate profound passions and emotions, or are genuine reasons compulsory to evoke such feelings? All of John Donne\'s verse, his love sonnets, and his religious poems, can be distinguished by a blend of passion and reason. However, the reasons for his poems are essential to comp...
Homo Suburbiensis, Drifter's and Life-Cycle, Bruce Dawe, a well renowned Australian poet was born in 1930 in Geelong. Who was once portrayed as "an ordinary bloke with a difference". Bruce Dawe writes about ordinary Australian people in the suburbs confronting their everyda...
William Blake's "The Chimney Sweeper", part of his Songs of Innocence, is about a young boy who was sold as a baby into the life of a chimney sweep. The boy has a dream about the child chimneysweepers' dreadful lives coming to an end, and finally being set free into God's ar...
Bruce Dawe, a well renowned Australian poet was born in 1930 in Geelong. Who was once portrayed as "an ordinary bloke with a difference". Bruce Dawe writes about ordinary Australian people in the suburbs confronting their everyday problems. He observes and records the sorrow and hardships ...
Bruce Dawe Dawe's poetry is based on life's everyday occurrences. He is a man who vividly outlines his passions in his work. His favourite tool for his poetry is the use of dramatic monologue in which character revelation is far more important than action. Dramatic monologues expose ...
Allegory 1. The representation of abstract ideas or principles by characters, figures, or events in narrative, dramatic, or pictorial form. 2. A story, picture, or play employing such representation. John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress and Herman Melville's Moby Dick are allegories....
In human nature there exists a morbid desire to explore the darker realms of life. As sensitive creatures we make every effort to deny our curiosity in the matters that frighten us. Edgar Allan Poe was a master of his craft, gifted with the talent of introducing each reader to his or her own s...
Dulce et Decorum Est, by Wilfred Owen, is one of those rare examples of poetry that, although relatively skimpy when it comes to symbolic meaning that probes deeper than the surface of the text, is so wonderfully written that it casts itself far above the status of an ordinary poem. It is not surpr...
Three Poets' view of the Poem: Macleish, Moore and Ferlinghetti. Poetry can supply a reader with a unique insight into the mentality of the poet. However, it is a very distinct experience when one can encounter a poets' view on what poetry is for the poet. To learn more about engin...
Dulce et Decorum Est Through vivid imagery and compelling metaphors "Dulce et Decorum Est" gives the reader the exact feeling the author wanted. The poem is an anti-war poem by Wilfred Owen and makes great use of these devices. This poem is very effective because of its excellent man...
"To His Coy Mistress" is a dramatic monologue, in which the speaker addressed to his lady. In this poem, there are argument and counter-argument, as well as a conclusion. The poem is also different from conventional courtly love poetry, because in the first two stanzas,the speaker use...
To the speaker of this sonnet, life is merely a journey towards the inevitable end, which is death. In just fourteen lines, the speaker is able to debate a difficult issue, reach a conclusion, and pour much more meaning into his words than what it seems. Because of the speaker¡¯s choice of spe...
Love and Loss; How Anne did bare Anne Bradstreet was born in 1612 in England. In 1630, she sailed to the New World with her father and rest of the family. Anne had been well tutored in literature and history. She also was well educated in many languages such as: Greek, Latin, French, Hebrew...
Shakespeare\'s love sonnets describe three different contexts in which love operates, as such, he depicts a multi-faceted picture of love. Love in Shakespeare\'s poems does not have a single definition, but rather, an intangible conglomeration of characteristics that, together, make up an ever power...
Owen and Metallica: Worlds Apart but Message The Same For my paper, I chose to compare and contrast Wilfred Owen's poem, "Dulce Et Decorum Est" and Metallica's song "One." Although Owen died before the members of Metallica were even born, they both share the same message in these two poems. That m...
Wilfred Edward Salter Owen, born March 18, 1893, was the oldest of four children of Tom and Susan Owen. His father's work as a railway clerk was supplemented by his mother's father until his death put the family in financial difficulties. The family tried to keep their life along middle class standa...
Poetry EssayIn "Dulce et Decorum Est," Wilfred Owen uses a range of literary devices to give the reader a highly realistic portrait of the true horror of war. While the most important part of Owen's poem is the structure, since the poems organization is critical to a clear understanding of the poet'...