23 Results for abstract art

THE ABSTRACT AND THE TANGIBLE in JOHN KEATS'S 'ODE ON A GRECIAN URN' John Keats's "Ode on a Grecian Urn" is a poem that rests largely on the author's powerful imagination, and therefore his extensive use of imagery is one of the most attractive elements of the poem. Keats seems to be fascinate...
The term Modernism refers to a movement, which began to get under way in the closing years of the 19th century. The modernist movement affected poetry, fiction, drama, painting, music and architecture. The true birth of modernism in poetry is often dated to the publication of T.S. Eliot\'s \"The Lov...
Oh, my love is like a red, red rose. thats newly sprung in june. my love is like a melody thats sweetly played in tune. So far art thou, my bonny lass, so deep in love am I. And I will love thee still, my dear until the sea gangs dry. Till a seas gang dry my dear and the rocks melt with the sun, an...
Dear Sir/Madam, As a fan of modern poetry, I would like to publicly express my outrage at the comments made by Peter Bloxham in his article, \'Poets Cornered\' (The Australian Magazine, 9 June 2001). I believe that poetry, like most other things, is simply moving with the times, constantly adapting ...
Figurative language occurs whenever a poet uses words in ways that deviate from their usual meaning. Sometimes, complex examples of figurative language leaves me puzzled but if I sit down and think about what I am reading, the underlying meanings become apparent. A metaphor is a comparison between t...
The Greek philosophers Plato and Aristotle were among the most important and creative thinkers of the ancient world. Their treatises set forth most of the important problems and concepts of Western philosophy, psychology, logic, and politics, and their influence has remained insightful from ...
\"Sonnet 18,\" written by William Shakespeare during the Renaissance Period is very much a reflection of the poet\'s own feelings of immortalising beauty which is captured magically amongst the quatrains. This is depicted utilising a number of poetic devices throughout the sonnet and reflects the pe...
Poetry is a very powerful way of communication between a writer and a reader. Different poets express them selves in a variety of ways, writing about what they have gone through or just simply what they dream about, both spiced up with twists and double meanings. Every reader gets a different reacti...
Born in 1795, Keats, the son of a stablekeeper, was raised in Moorfields, London, and attended the Clarke School in Enfield. The death of his mother in 1810 left Keats and his three younger siblings in the care of a guardian, Richard Abbey. Although Keats was apprenticed to an apothecary, he soon ...
Aesthetic Rewriting in the Translation of Poetry Abstract: This paper attempts to explore the strategy of rewriting, in particular, the method of naturalizing and historicizing, in the translation of poetry to maintain the aesthetic meaning. Theoretical support from Susan Bassnett and others is a...
The song settings of Guillaume Apollinaire's ideographic Calligrammes demonstrate Francis Poulenc's exceptional ability to unite poetry and music, without compromising the integrity of either medium. The graphical notation of the poetry presents a formidable challenge to Poulenc, requir...
The Metamorphosing World of Literary Criticism The critical view of any literary work is always subject to the societal vices of the time. Judgement of a piece of writing changes over time because new view points, set to different fields of experience, fixed by completely different historica...
The Author and His Times When, in 1939, W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood set sail for the United States, the so-called 'All the fun' age ended. Auden's generation of poets' expectations came to nothing after the end of the Spanish Civil War, and they, disillusioned, left the European conti...
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...
TS Eliot The love song It is an examination of the pitiful outcast of a modern man--overeducated, well-spoken, irrational, and emotionally awkward. Prufrock, the poem's speaker, seems to be addressing a potential lover, with whom he would like to "force the moment to its crisis" by somehow fix...
Discuss the treatment of death in three poems of your choice. One must be at least a pre 1900 poem. In your answer you should consider  Use of language  Use of form  Use of mood and tone No matter what we refer to death as it is always with us and causes great pain in our...
\"O for a life of sensations rather than thoughts!\" What is the relation between thought and feeling in Keats\'s odes? Out of all his poetry, the odes appear to be the most sensually explored poems that Keats wrote. Through this collection of poetry, he deeply explores the world of feelings and ...
Focus Question: Using a few of his poems as examples, how effective are Kenneth Slessor's poems in revealing his identity as a man and a poet? It was once said that poems, though brief and whatever quality, serve as a look into the eyes of the poet. They are expressions of the poet's emotion...
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...
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...
\'It is good to have an end to journey towards, but it is the journey that matters in the end.\' Ursula Le Guin A journey is an arbitrary, cyclic conduit to which no end can be foreseen. The arrival of a journey is not the end, simply a reflection on the events thus far, a pause in the eternal flig...
Robert Frost and T. S. Eliot were undoubtedly influential poets of theirtime. Both poets eventually enjoyed fame and popularity for developingtheir own voice and style. While both men wrote compelling poetry, we findthe aesthetic poet with Eliot and the meditative poet with Frost. Both menclea...
ROAD NOT TAKENEnglish 113B26 September 1999Choices are never easy- men face multitudes of them in their lifetime. Some decisions to these choices are clear while others are sometimes more difficult to effectuate. The poem "The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost is a first person narrative tale of a mon...