Senior Honors Language Arts February 27‚ 2009 The Road Not Taken “The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost is one the finest poems written in the 20th century. It describes the difficulties of a traveler who has to choose between two diverging roads. Frost uses the roads as a metaphor for life’s many choices‚ and exemplifies how these they decide a person’s outcome in life. It can also be interpreted that the speaker in the poem is promoting individualism‚ self reliance and wondering what he might
Premium Choice The Road Decision making
Robert Frost uses imagery in The Woodpile to show the death of nature and the impact we humans have on it. The use of imagery affects the setting that the speaker is in and causes the reader to see this image of death right from the beginning. The words “frozen”‚ “snow”‚ “gray” are examples of nature and color imagery and can be related to winter. A perception of winter is how the days are gloomy and dark and trees have lost their leaves only to look like skeletons and lifeless as there is no color
Premium Poetry Human Bird
Vision of the future For many years‚ science fiction writers have challenged readers with visions of the future and future society. These authors offered an insight into what they expected man‚ society‚ and life to be like at some future time. One could divide their visions of future into two main streams: an apocalyptical one‚ with the degradation and demoralization of our society‚ and a utopian world‚ where our civilization turns into a highly conscious and developed one‚ and people live in
Premium Stephen Vincent Benét Science fiction Utopia
Society’s focus on materialism and consumerism has lead to the shift in our value system‚ which in result has lead to the degradation and neglect of the environment. In his poems‚ Robert gray forces us to consider and reflect upon our involvement on the issues presented- being our priority of material and superficial value which in result has implicated on the natural world‚ provoking its decline and also the degradation of Australian society itself. Furthermore‚ we have lost the values that make
Free Sociology Nature Culture
Francis the Anti-Hero Francis in the novel “Heroes” by Robert Cormier demonstrates he is not a hero through his decisions and actions. Francis is not a hero because he did not help Nicole in the time of need. This is non-heroic because he had a good idea of what was happening to Nicole. He didn’t act upon because he was too scared to react. A hero in this situation would have done something that have helped Nicole and stopped Larry. For iInstance‚ when he was outside the wreck center he said
Premium
Albert Einstein once said ”We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them.” The Odyssey written by Homer and translated by Robert Fagles resembles this quote by how Odysseus only thinks about the first thing that pops up in his mind. He is very good at planning war attacks‚ but when it comes to society and talking to others he is not very advanced. He has made some good choices‚ but even those have some bad consequences. Odysseus needs to learn how to talk and act
Premium
“Doing The Right Thing” In the story‚ “The Moustache‚” by Robert Cormier‚ a boy named Mike had a moustache. Although many did not approve nor like the moustache he really liked and wanted to keep it. Until one day he visited his elderly grandma at a nursing home and saw how she couldn’t quite remember him‚ things changed. She did have a memory issue and while she slightly remembered the boy as her grandson she absentmindedly referred to him as her husband‚ Mike. She then went on to tell
Premium Family
The Contender is a story written by Robert Lipsyte‚ the story is about a boy named Alfred who is a highschool dropout with a dead-end job. Alfred wants to make something of himself and decides to do boxing because he feels that he might enjoy it. Alfred starts going to Donatelli’s gym and Aunt Pearl finds out about this. Aunt Pearl addresses her concerns and Alfred defends his career choice by saying that Mr. Donatelli cares about the people he trains. Aunt pearl respects his career choice but wishes
Premium
Appearances can be deceptive. How does Cormier assert this view in his novel? ‘Heroes’ by Robert Cormier presents the view that appearances can be deceptive‚ asserting that how an individual may appear does not reflect his or her raw nature. Cormier explores this view by developing multiple characters and their outer personas through the slow deliberate unveiling of their true nature. Cormier develops his characters Francis Cassavant‚ Larry LaSalle and Nicole Renard to portray this duality. The
Premium Rape World War II Hero
prefers his idea of the boy swinging on the branches‚ climbing up the tree trunks and swinging from side to side‚ from earth up to heaven. The narrator remembers when he used to swing on birches and wishes that he could return to those carefree days. Analysis This poem is written in blank verse with a particular emphasis on the “sound of sense.” For example‚ when Frost describes the cracking of the ice on the branches‚ his selections of syllables create a visceral sense of the action taking place: “Soon
Premium Birch Tree Universe