poem entitled “Curiosity” written by Alastair Reid is a symbolic poem that uses cats as a metaphor for humans. It relates felines to people in the sense of curiosity‚ and what could be considered actually living life to the fullest. Essentially‚ this work contradicts the popular phrase‚ “curiosity killed the cat” by placing it within a broader context. Instead of discouraging curiosity‚ Reid explains why people should embrace it. In the first stanza‚ the author argues that the cat may have died
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Secretary Chant” by Marge Piercy feel unappreciated and lost as employees. Jorge is “outside…of [Americans] understanding” and The Secretary is lost in her work and compares herself to objects such as her “hips are a desk.” The employees from these poems have become hidden behind their duties and are slowly sinking into the unknown. “Jorge the Church Janitor Finally Quits” begins with Jorge’s point of origin. While working as a janitor‚ “no one asks where [he’s] from” assuming he’s “from the country
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picked to represent my emotions during this unit is a poem that talks about hate. To start‚ the unit itself is boring to me. Learning about gender theory is not something that seems exciting to me. In the poem‚ it says‚ “If this is a play‚ I want my money back.” This signifies the waste of time that this unit is to me. I did not feel like this unit is significant to my learning and so I felt upset that I had to sit through it all. Furthermore‚ the poem states‚ “If this is a kidnap‚ I’m trapped in the
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Algeron Charles Swinburne’s “Love and Sleep” established a theme of his lover’s beauty and his unconditional love towards her through strong diction which creates a passionate form of image. In the poem‚ such words as “lying” (1)‚ “asleep” (1) and “night” (1) implies the speaker is in his bedroom‚ creating a lonely‚ quite atmosphere. In this immersive atmosphere‚ the writer strikes a chord with the readers and graphs the sorrow and yearning incisively and vividly. Moreover‚ the word “saw” (2)‚ being
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James Russell Lowell A. Background on the Author James Russell Lowell was born in Cambridge‚ Mass.‚ on Feb. 22‚ 1819‚ of a well-established New England family. Following family tradition‚ he attended Harvard‚ graduating in 1838 and taking a law degree there in 1840. Soon after the publication of his first volume of poems‚ A Year’s Life (1841)‚ he gave up law to devote himself to literature. B. Author’s Major Works and Awards * The Biglow Papers * A Vision of Sir Launfel
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never thought of when and how music came to be a school subject. Of course‚ in elementary school I went to music class learned about the different composers and how to create sheets of it‚ but I did not learn about this man‚ Lowell Mason. After starting some research on Lowell I was surprised to find that I already knew many of his creations. The two hymns that I first recognized were “Joy to the World” and “Nearer My God to Thee”. He composed many more than that‚ but these are some that we still
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English 2 Honors Mr. Amy 11 September 2014 Poem Analysis The poems “We Grow Accustomed to the Dark”‚ by Emily Dickinson‚ and “Acquainted with the Night”‚ by Robert Frost both explain each author’s point of view in regards to darkness and night. While Emily Dickinson uses uplifting diction to portray darkness as moments in our life when we are uneasy‚ Robert Frost recalls his personal accounts to detail night as a constant state of isolation. Dickinson’s poem conveys a positive tone‚ one that
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In “Convergence of the Twain‚” Thomas Hardy describes the greatness of the Titanic and the vanity that embodied its doom‚ radiating an admiring‚ yet regretful tone towards the events of April 14‚ 1912. During the first stanza‚ Hardy talks about the Titanic’s “solitude in the sea.” “Deep from human vanity‚” implying that the reason the Titanic is so deep‚ sunk under water is due to the vanity that created her‚ and ultimately sank her. The headline of the Titanic was “unsinkable‚” typifying
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Sydnie Sivongxay ENG 2000 Christy Williams 23 February 2013 "By and By" by Amy Bloom "By and By" by Amy Bloom is told through a first-person narrative from the perspective of the deceased protagonist’s roommate. Though the narrator shifts in and out of past and present tense‚ the story is simple. Anne (the protagonist) went on a camping trip with her boyfriend Teddy‚ and Eugene Trask (the antagonist) suddenly appeared to murder Teddy‚ then he kidnapped Anne‚ resulting in her missing
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was that they worked in the factory and were away from their family for several hours at a time. Most women went to work in the Lowell Mills of Lowell‚ Massachusetts. Here‚ there was a conflict with women and their role in society. In this paper I will explain what the public thought about women working and what the working girls thought about working in the Lowell system. The culture of New England in the 1830’s and 1840’s expected young girls and women to be submissive‚ moral‚ and domestic
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