Compare the ways in which the poets have written about love and loss bringing different aspects of the theme. The poems I have chosen to analyse are written from a male and a female perspectives in the 18th and 19th centuries.

Poetry Compare the ways in which the poets have written about love and loss bringing different aspects of the theme. The poems I have chosen to analyse are written from a male and a female perspectives in the 18th and 19th centuries. All the poems describe the aspects of love and loss. Each poet is influenced by sad or happy events in their lives. Some poets share their joy and happiness, while others experience separation. The poems I have chosen are: 'A Birthday' by Christina Rossetti. The poet celebrates love as a joyful event in her life. 'How Do I Love Thee' by Elizabeth Barret Browning. The poem is devoted to her partner with whom she shares her love. 'Remember' by Christina Rossetti. The poet disscuses the aspect of loss and separation by death. ' When We Two Parted' by Lord Byron. The poet conveys his negative feelings about separating. 'A Woman To Her Lover' by Christina Walsh. The poet requires co-equal relationship in the family and quality of marriage. The first poem I am going to analyse is entitled 'A Birthday' by Christina Rossetti. The poet refers to celebration of love and raises the issue of marriage. The poet's thoughts are consistent. In Victorian era people did not speak openly about the physical side of life that's why Christina Rossetti expresses her feelings and emotions through similies and metaphors. The title of the poem 'A Birthday' is

  • Word count: 2555
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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In the poems, 'The Beggar woman' and 'Our Love now,' the men and women have different attitudes to a situation.

Jaspreet Verdi In these poems, the men and women have different attitudes to a situation: 'The Beggar woman' and 'Our Love now.' In the poems, 'The Beggar woman' and 'Our Love now,' the men and women have different attitudes to a situation. In the Beggar woman, the poem is about differences in social classes between the gentleman and the beggar woman, based on a narrative, sending out the moral message that there is no pleasure without responsibility. The gentleman is a member from the wealthy, upper class assuming that he is well-mannered and respectable towards women. Class does not define him as a clean, intelligent and moralistic man. He is in actual fact, as the reader finds out in the poem, that he is cunning and acts in a perverted manner yet naïve, this line is an indication of this immoral behaviour 'Were the child tied to me, d'ye think the child t'would do?' He is pretending to be kind and polite as he is urging to seduce her. This line suggests his playful nature, 'A gentleman in hunting rode astray.' Whereas the beggar woman is seen as a poor, lower class woman yet she is attractive, 'But her cheeks were fresh and linen clean.' She is also clever and cunning, like the gentleman, so her innocent appearance deceives the gentleman and the reader, as found out later in the poem. The man is very eager to seduce the woman, resembling the attitude of a

  • Word count: 2554
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Loneliness.

Loneliness The sun blazed down from the clear blue sky on to the window. I lie in bed listening to the bird's voice. Its singing is remarkable; I could sit and listen all the time if I had nothing else to do. But what have I got to do? I ponder on what I might achieve today, nothing comes to mind. I rise with a sudden feeling of emptiness. I dress slowly into the faded jeans and the blouse that I had worn the day before and equipping myself with a pen and pad, I get to work on another poem I'd started earlier but had not finished. It's not as though I don't have the time but I just become impatient and bored. After browsing through the empty fridge, I decide to go shopping and treat myself with some delicious foods. I check my reflection in the mirror, my brown hair falls down at shoulder length and my green eyes glisten in the light. I make my way to the door unaware of the stack of bills I haven't yet paid. Twix rushes past my feet to his bowl, I promise myself that I'll feed him when I come back. I give him a quick stroke and he says thank you with a friendly meow as I rush out of the door. * Meanwhile, on the other side of town Bob was already on his way to work. He was walking briskly through the crowds unaware of the people surrounding him. He stopped abruptly to place a fifty pence piece into a donation box. The smile that had entered his face came just as

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Love is a very common theme in poetry. By closely examining the ways in which two poets(one must be pre 1900) have explored this theme. Show what you have found to be similar/different in their handling of this theme.

Love Poetry Coursework Love is a very common theme in poetry. By closely examining the ways in which two poets(one must be pre 1900) have explored this theme. Show what you have found to be similar/different in their handling of this theme. Many people have different views on love. Many of these views throughout the ages are explored through poetry as love has much contemporary relevance in today's society as it ever did before. Two love poems I read which inspired me were Shakespeare's 'Sonnet 116' and Carol-Anne Duffy's 'Valentine'. Shakespeare's poem is a traditional sonnet written in the late 1660's Renaissance period when at this time love was not a discussed topic in society. The people of society married for money or business purposes, which Shakespeare strongly disapproved of. This may have been a factor, which led Shakespeare to write this poem. The structure of 'Sonnet116' is typical of poetry in the Renaissance period. The first line establishes the tone as already having something defensive about it - reinforced by the negative definitions of the first quatrain-. "Let me not to the marriage of true minds... love is not love/ Which alters when it alteration finds..." The poem begins telling of what love is not. It denies the short-term everyday image of love and believes love is a very special and unique thing. This gains the reader's attention immediately. The

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Poetry Analysis and Comparison: Cultivation and Antonia's Story by Owen Sheers.

Poetry Analysis and Comparison: Cultivation and Antonia's Story by Owen Sheers B+ (15) Cultivation I have recently been studying the disturbing poem 'Cultivation' by Owen Sheers. The word 'cultivate' means to devote attention to something, nurture it, like a parent to a child or a child to their pet. In this case, it's about a boy and his butterflies, a boy who watches the 'slow hatching', and has the patience to observe the 'paper lampshade larvae'. These first few lines set the mood of the poem, creating a pleasant, childhood scene and a comfortable atmosphere. The phrase 'paper lampshade larvae', is a comparison that we are all familiar with, as larvae are delicate, bright objects that certainly are like 'paper lampshades'. 'Giving birth to hanging candelabras, of dusty, patterned satin.' This phrase is an effective way to end the first stanza, as it describes the beauty of a butterfly's wing like satin. However, the word 'dusty' is used, which isn't a word we would generally use to describe a butterfly, but this poem is about more than beautiful things. It's about abuse, and how people destroy nice things for pleasure. The word 'dusty' is used again later in the poem, but this time to describe bruises, something which is not pretty, but abusive. 'He would let them fill their wings, with fluid, with light' This is the first two lines of the second stanza in

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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With Particular focus on content, language and structure examining the similarities and differences that exist between Love's Farewell by Michael Drayton and the Chilterns by Rupert Brooke.

With Particular focus on content, language and structure examining the similarities and differences that exist between Love's Farewell by Michael Drayton and the Chilterns by Rupert Brooke. "Love's Farewell" is a Shakespearean sonnet, written by Michael Drayton. It describes a relationship between a man and a woman. The man in the poem is bringing the relationship to an end. Michael Drayton came to prominence in the Elizabethan era. In the Elizabethan era there was a trend of following Shakespeare's way of writing because it pleased the Queen. Michael Drayton wrote "Loves Farewell" in 1619. The poem starts with a bitter tone and this suggests that it is not a friendly end to a relationship. The mood changes in the poem and at the end there is a gentle and positive feeling to it, suggesting the relationship might recover. The words and the language used in Drayton's poem reflects how he was feeling at the time. We have no information about Drayton's love life but from what we can gather he had quite a well known love. "The Chilterns" is a ballad, written by Rupert Brooke. This poem also describes a relationship between a man and a woman coming to an end. The mood also changes during this poem. At the beginning of the poem there is a positive mood. The man in the relationship is bringing it to an end because he believes that life experience is more important to him than

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Erika Kohut's Absence of Revolt

Erika Kohut's Absence of Revolt Elfriede Jelinek's novel "The Piano Teacher" is a breathtaking, a shocking, a fascinating and a terrifying study case of human's emotional, sexual and societal repression. The book deals with three main characters, i.e. Erika Kohut- the daughter of Madame Kohut Senior, a.k.a. the Mother and Walter Klemmer- Erika's master student, and their relations to each other and to the outside world of classical music and clichés. Vienna is the setting for the drama, pain, humiliation, domination and love Erika experiences while dutifully teaching piano in the Musical Conservatory. The opening pages of the novel contain the essence of Erika's sufferings, and allude the reasons for her pathological behaviour to herself and to others:" She puts Erika against the wall, under interrogation-inquisitor and executioner in one, unanimously recognized as Mother by the State and by the Family" (p.3). This is the "nurturing and loving" home atmosphere Erika comes to every day from a work and lives in since birth. But Erika's family has never been and wanted to be the typical formation of Mother, Father and Child happily living together, it is the cool calculated design for fulfillment of Mother's personal desires. Mother usurps Father's role and Erika has only her to look up to and to be taken care by. The Mother has also taken care of Erika's Father: "Erika did not

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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How love is presented differently in various poems

Select three or four poems and explain and compare how the theme of love is presented and explored The oxford dictionary defines the over-used word 'love' as 'a strong feeling of affection'. The poems that we studied all refer the word 'love' however they explore the different dimensions of love. In 'A Subaltern's Love Song' love is presented as an excited energy between two lovers. On the contrast, "One Flesh' is about the emptiness of a love 'grown cold'. The types of love presented in the poems explore very controversial views yet are all very meaningful and have a sense of truth to them. This essay shall examine how the various poets have presented the idea of love between lovers and will compare how love is presented in each poem. Hopefully, through the comparison this essay will be able to distinguish the different dimensions of 'love'. 'A Subaltern's Love Song' by John Betjeman demonstrates very positive imagery of 'love'. The poem contains eleven quatrains, which are a traditional form of English love ballads. Each quatrain follows a rhyming scheme of AABB, which creates a sense of certainty for the reader as it becomes quite predictable. The full rhyme also makes it psychologically satisfying for the reader so it creates a happy atmosphere just through its rhyming scheme. The sense of certainty suggests a healthy love between the Subaltern and Miss J. Hunter Dunn.

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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How do the poets convey their attitudes toward love and loss in the poems 'A Woman To Her Lover' 'First Love' 'Remember' and 'When We Two Parted'?

NAME OF CANDIDATE: KAMEL AL-HADDAD TITLE OF ASSIGNMENT: HOW DO THE POETS CONVEY THEIR ATTITUDES TOWARDS LOVE AND LOSS IN THE POEMS: 'A WOMAN TO HER LOVER' 'FIRST LOVE' 'REMEMBER' AND 'WHEN WE TWO PARTED'? PURPOSE OF TASK: CONVEY THE POETS ATTITUDES TOWARDS LOVE AND LOSS IN THESE POEMS. DATE OF SUBMISSION: 29/NOV / 2004 STIMULUS MATERIAL: POINTS DONE IN CLASS ON 'WHEN WE TWO PARTED', 'REMEMBER', 'FIRST LOVE' 'A WOMAN TO HER LOVER'. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: FINAL DRAFT Q. How do the poets convey their attitudes toward love and loss in the poems 'A Woman To Her Lover' 'First Love' 'Remember' and 'When We Two Parted'? Ans. Love is a powerful emotion. There are many different kinds of love and it is through different relationships and experiences we get a closer insight of how one feels to love or to lose someone. Love is a wonderful and joyful emotion however if it is not shared with the right partner it may lead to heartache and pain. Knowing that you are needed and loved dearly is an amazing comfort although loosing someone dear to you can cause a lot of distress and pain and can result in someone being very depressed and heart broken. All the poems deal with love and loss in different ways. John Clare in 'First love' narrates the incident when he fell in love for the first time and the pain of it. The title signifies his first magical moment of falling in love. His

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Explain the arguments used by the poets to make use of time

Explain the arguments used by the poets of 'To the Virgins to make much of Time' and 'To his Coy Mistress' are used to persuade both the mistress and the virgins to make most of time? The 17th century poets Andrew Marvell and Robert Herrick explore the meaning of time and how to make the most of it. 'To his Coy Mistress' written by Marvell portrays a more philosophical approach on these issues and challenge the ideas of sensual and mortality to man. Marvell varies in the techniques makes his poem much more sophisticated and evocative and contains a fluid structure. Herrick's poem 'To the Virgins, to make much of time' is much more direct and lyrical and striking and refers to natural metaphysical imagery. Both poems are written in a metaphysical style and are an example of the Carpe Diem genre meaning seize the moment. Both poems belong to a period of great social and political change. The civil war bought an element of danger to society and made the surroundings uncertain and dangerous. This shapes Marvell's poetry at the time of uncertainty and repression. Despite being both a cavalier poet and a puritan in his own right, 'To his Coy Mistress' challenges Puritanical views as the subject of sex is seen as taboo and is a puritanical disapproval. Herrick on the other hand is a cavalier poet who supported the monarchy during the civil war. Herrick's writing is more sensual

  • Word count: 2418
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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