Every essay and term paper listed below can be purchased and downloaded instantly. If you can't find your exact topic our writers can write one from scratch just for you. Our Web site is open 24-hours so you can order at any time.
First Prev 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 Next Last| 1709.
401 An Analysis of Different Poems. This paper discusses several poems including T.S. Eliot, E. E. Cummings, Wallace Stevens, and Williams Carlos Williams. The paper begins with T.S. Eliot - The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock and Other Observations. In this poem, Eliot is speaking from the perspective of J.Alfred Prufrock, the prototypical modern man who serves as the poem's speaker. Prufrock seems to be addressing a would-be lover from afar as he searches for the courage to approach her despite everything he knows about the world.
|
| 1710.
394 Six Questions Concerning Literature. This paper asks six different questions about literature. What would an instruction manual for assembling a fertilizer spreader have to be to count as literature? Why does Shakespeare cast most of his lines in poetic meter? What function does this serve? Give Examples from Macbeth. What is the plot (or actions) of a play? What is the plot of Macbeth? What are the major turning points in the plot of Macbeth? Why does Dostoyevsky fabricate a double to tell his story of imprisonment? What universal truths about humanity does Dostoyevsky communicate in House of the Dead?
|
| 1711.
393 Shakespeare and Iambic Pentamenter. This paper discusses Shakespeare and iambic pentamenter. Meter is the regular rhythmic pattern of a speech, or poem, or in the case of Shakespeare, a play. Iambic pentameter is one of the most common metrical schemes in English, because it sounds the most like ordinary speech. It only makes sense that Shakespeare would choose to write his plays in such a way that the words would sound natural coming out of the mouths of the actors, and yet retain a poetic quality that adds a greater depth and sense of drama to their meaning. Of course, people do not always rhyme their sentences when they speak, and therefore it makes sense that Shakespeare would choose to write his plays largely in what is called, blank verse. That is, iambic pentameter that does not rhyme. There are exceptions, of course.
|
| 1712.
411 Reflections. This romantic and lyric narrative symbolically tells the story of a relationship between a man and woman destroyed by jealousy.
|
| 1713.
407 The Wisdom of Fools in Mark Twain's Pudd'nhead Wilson. This paper discusses Mark Twain's Pudd'nhead Wilson. It is the tragic tale of a mother's love for her son, the misguided actions of that love, and the ultimate disastrous results. Tragedy: A serious drama with a sorrowful or disastrous conclusion. With that definition as criteria, "Pudd'nhead Wilson" can only be considered part tragedy, because it's conclusion is not entirely sorrowful, and the drama of the tale, as serious as it's events may be, is also heavily imbued with the trademark wit, humor and sarcasm of it's author, Mark Twain.
|
| 1714.
403 Thomas Hardy and Landscape in Poems. This paper discusses the importance of landscape in poetry. Thomas Hardy was one poet who used landscape particularly effectively, but not "landscape" in the sense of rolling hills and mountains, but more the landscape of society within the Victorian period during which he lived. Hardy's poetry explores a fatalist outlook against the dark, rugged landscape of his Dorsetshire, England home. Hardy's use of landscape if demonstrated in the two poems, which I will analyze in the following, pages, "The Convergence of the Twain" and "The Ruined Maid".
|
| 1715.
402 Dylan Thomas's Poetry. This paper discusses the life of Dylan Thomas and his autobiographical elements in his poetry. In fact, Thomas' poetry is so autobiographical in itself that one can learn a great deal about the poet just by reading them. His life can be summed up in a quote from Thomas himself, which reads, "I hold a beast, an angel, and a madman in me, and my inquiry is as to their working, and my problem is their subjugation and victory, downthrown and upheaval, and my effort is their self-expression".
|


Last 5 Order



