427 Results for Symbols and Symbolism

Frost's Symbolism Analyzed As we dig into the brain of one of life's greatest poets, we have to find the symbolism he uses in his stanzas. Frost has written many different symbolistic poems, but we will look at just four: "Nothing Gold Can Stay," "The Oven Bird," &quo...
A famous poem of "The Tyger" was regarded in its time as very strange but many of its idea make sense to the modern reader. William Blake, who was the author of the poem. He was born on 28 November 1757, and died on 12 August 1827. "The Tyger" was a poem that with a religion background. It expresses...
Faith has always been part of humanity. It has given many people hope, strength and peace to battle the hardships they have endured in their lives. The lyrics, in the ballad Angel, dramatically express how the composer has triumphed over pain and sorrow because of his never-ending faith in God. He e...
"My Last Duchess" One of the greatest Victorian poets and masters of the dramatic monologue, Robert Browning was born in London on the seventh of May in 1812. His father was a clerk at the Bank of England and mostly educated Browning at home. He attended London University in 1828, but withd...
The Garden of Love Falling out of love can be described as one word: depressing. It's not hard coming back to reality after being swept off your feet by the most beautiful girl in the world. William Blake expressed this through his poem. Set in "The Garden of Love" in 1794, yo...
Red
REDWarm lips are red, blood drops are too, Abe Lincoln was shot, the nation was blue. In the poem" O Captain! My Captain!" by Walt Whitman, the color red is used as a symbol for many objects. Red symbolizes blood shed, life, happiness and it also associates with love, life, and vitality. Other thing...
Stéphane Mallarmé, a French poet, became one of the most important masters of French symbolism, a nineteenth-century movement in poetry that stressed impressions and moods rather than descriptions of reality (Online). The poetry of Charles Baudelaire, Arthur Rimbaud, Paul Verlaine, and others stro...
Creating a Tone and Theme in "The Unknown Citizen" In W.H. Auden's "The Unknown Citizen," several key literary elements form the tone of the poem. The entire poem is almost satirical, with a humorous tone throughout. Due to the poet's irony and sarcasm, the humor is ...
speech".(Frost) His poems can be interpreted through many levels of perception. A person who is not an expert in interpreting symbolism can still enjoy Frost's poetry for simple pleasure. An experienced reader can enjoy the deeper meaning and symbolism contained in the verse. Since Frost's poems...
Love Poem Analysis "Two souls, one heart" - French saying Love between a man and a woman is intimate and profound. It is sentiments that cannot be easily explain, yet it can be express through a mental and emotional thought such as Sandra Cisneros' poem, "Love Poem #1."...
In the beginning, God created heaven and earth. When He created Adam and Eve they sinned, this began the imperfect world today. This sin altered the world and represents the mutilated state portrayed in Adam Zagajewski's poem, Try to Praise the Mutilated World. One must learn to accept (or prai...
Since everyone knows that William Blake was Virgina Woolf's son, it should come as no suprise that they share a postmodern sensibility. In Blake's poem, "The Sick Rose," the rose is a symbol for a tree. The worm which infects the rose symbolizes a plague of locusts that comes to kill the rose/tree...
The poem "Funeral Blues", written by W. H. Auden, is based on a loved one who is deceased. The poem is written based on nontraditional and traditional elements. This poem is also based on several different themes such as death, love, order and disorder, and also meaning of love. Through...
Critical/Analytical Response to poem: "Because I could not stop for death-" by Emily Dickinson Poems Theme Emily Dickinson created an unusual theme. The poem portrayed a person transcending with leaving memories behind. The title would suggest that this poem is tragic or grievo...
In order to discover the wonders of the ocean, one must dive deep into the vast, blue waters of the sea. Poet Dreamer urges readers to dive into these water. By combining metaphor, imagery, and symbolism, the poet portrays that like the wondrous ocean, everyone has a secret world inside them. Dreame...
"The Eagle" By: Lord Alfred Tennyson The poem "The Eagle" by Tennyson, is an example of lyric poem. The expressing of celebration addressed to the eagle makes the poem an ode. The stanza patterns in this poem are called a tercet. In the iambic rhythm there are six tetrametric l...
\"The Echoing Green\" by William Blake is taken from the book Songs of Innocence. It is a beautiful poem bringing forth the reality of life. Time goes on and youth grows old. All the events are repeated over and over again. It is life\'s circulation. Ⅰ.The knowledge coming from information In thi...
Emily Dickinson was born in Amherst Massachusetts, in 1830 and died in 1886. A shy, reclusive person, Dickinson has come to be known as one of America's greatest poets. Even though only seven of Dickinson's poems were published in her lifetime, her poetry was published after her death an...
William Blake (1757-1827) William Blake wrote during the Romantic period which was a span between 1785 - 1830. Other great writers during this time were Mary Wollstonecraft, Coleridge, Wordsworth, and others. Some said that the Romantic period was the fairy tale way of writing through s...
Robert Frost writes of ordinary life situations in his work, these basic situations are used in to portray a deeper meaning. The simple or ordinary aspects of life that Frost illustrates in his poetry are associated with the extraordinary features of human life. Frost's poetry makes this connec...
'Eternity' is a term that brings to life the timeless infinity of both marriage and death. Marriage symbolizes the depth of eternal love and death symbolizes the longevity of eternal rest. The union of these two seemingly opposite realities define the poetic climax of Emily Dickinson&apos...
Death is always an interesting topic and two poets that allow us to look at death in a different way are John Donne and Emily Dickinson. Donne's "Death be not Proud, Though Some Have Called Thee" and Dickinson's "Because I Could not Stop for Death" offer a different perspectives on the subjec...
Zemene Seol Unseen, Just Foreseen Word count: 1227 In the three stanzas of Tomorrow, Tomorrow, by the great African-American poet Langston Hughes is portrayed a foreign travel enthusiast's rehearsal of what would be an effective mendacity. A reader in the habi...
ANNE SEXTON Her Kind This is a poem that is filled with imagery that the author uses to identify the reader with what I feel were personal stresses in her own life. In class we talked about Anne as an emotionally challenged women who couldn't cope with every day life. The Title of th...
The author of The Lady of Shalott is Alfred Tennyson. The poem was written in 1842 and is included in Tennyson's published work, Poems. Tennyson's life story, the literary devices found in the Lady of Shalott, and the literal and symbolic meaning of the poem are discussed. Alfred Tenny...