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    The Lotus

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    Dutt’s mastery over the sonnet form is proved in this poem. The sonnet is divided into two divisions‚ the Octave and the Sestet. The octave consists of eight lines and the sestet consists of six lines. A sonnet deals with a single idea‚ the octave proposing and the sestet resolving. Within 14 lines of the sonnet‚ Toru Dutt raises a problem in the Octave and resolves it in the sestet. In this poem‚ Toru Dutt presents the idea that the Indian Lotus is the most beautiful of all flowers. For a long time

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    the speaker experiences in coming to terms with his own spiritual struggle. The interpretation of the poem depends in large measure on how one reads the transitions between the poem’s three sections (the first quatrain‚ the second quatrain‚ and the sestet). In particular‚ ascertaining the poem’s chronology can be troubling‚ in part because Hopkins withholds an important piece of chronological information until line 10‚ when the poem first shifts into the past tense. In the second stanza‚ there is a

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    Keats which deals with the cycle of life and nature. It is a Patriarchal sonnet‚ as it is divided in an octave and a sestet. Generally these two parts oppose each other. This poem was written on December of 1816 and is based on Aesop’s fable The ant and the Grasshopper. The first octave refers to the grasshopper who jumps “from hedge to hedge”‚ having a delightful summer. The sestet refers to the cricket beside the stove‚ in the cold winter‚ when there is no life and all is static. The author uses

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    Petrarcha And Laura

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    Man Who Loved too Much in Petrarcha’s Sonnets Laura‚ a very beautiful but also mysterious lady‚ inspired Petrarcha for poems. Petrarcha passes through emotional ’’landscape’’ in his life from the moment he first lied his eyes on Laura to when she rejected his courtship and after when she passed away. His feelings of love towards Laura prevail throughout whole his life‚ but his emotional state changes from happiness to deep despair and grief. Francesco Petrarcha (July 20

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    The Soldier Anaylsis

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    the noblest country for which to die. In the first stanza (the octave of the sonnet) stanza‚ he talks of how his grave will be England herself‚ and what it should remind the listeners of England when they see the grave. In the second stanza‚ the sestet‚ he talks about this death (sacrifice for England) as redemption; he will become “a pulse in the eternal mind”. He concludes that only life will be the appropriate thing to give to his great motherland in return to all the beautiful and great things

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    If I should die‚ think only this of me: That there’s some corner of a foreign field That is for ever England. There shall be In that rich earth a richer dust concealed: These are the first four lines of Rupert Brooke’s poignant sonnet‚ "The Soldier". "The Soldier" is a poem about death in war. This does not glorify war‚ but only shows that dying in war is a proud thing to do for your country. It is a message from Rupert Brooke and possibly all the young men at war to their loved ones. Brooke’s

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    period of the 19th century. One of his famous works is titled “The World Is Too Much With Us.” The first eight lines of the poem represent a type of poem called an octet. An octet is defined as an eight-line stanza. The next six lines represents a sestet or better identified as a six-line stanza. The entire poem represents an Italian sonnet made up of fourteen lines total. An Italian sonnet is sometimes called a Petrarch after a famous Italian poet. William Wordsworth gained most of his inspiration

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    Essay question on the comparison between two poems by Wordsworth Q. Compare and contrast how Wordsworth depicts nature in ‘The Daffodils’ and ‘Sonnet : Composed Upon Westminster Bridge’. (2-3 pages) The question asks you to compare how Wordsworth illuminates and expresses nature in the two poems written by him‚ ‘The Daffodils’ and ‘Sonnet: Composed Upon Westminster Bridge’. There are some similarities and differences in the two poems‚ and these create different atmosphere even though both poems

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    Leda & Swan Analysis

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    structure of the sonnet is Petrarchan‚ an Italian form of the sonnet that characteristically divides its theme into an octave‚ in which a problem or emotion is stated‚ and a sestet‚ in which the problem or emotional tension is resolved. There is a clear separation between the first eight lines (the octave) and the final six (the sestet). The octave is divided into two four-line stanzas‚ or quatrains. The first quatrain opens with a recounting of the occurrence in mid-scene. It begins abruptly‚ as the

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    On His Blindness

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    increasingly cluttered thoughts. As the sonnet moves from uncertain-resistance in the octet to certain-obedience in the sestet responders are able to observe Milton as he reaches a point of spiritual resolution. This follows as his faith in God is strengthened and he comes to the conclusion that ‘“God doth need either man’s work or his own gifts.” The faster pace of the sestet reflects his certainty about his faith in God while the use of enjambment produces a fluidity that was absent in the octet

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