Emily Dickinson's Reluctance

Emily Dickinson's Reluctance ????98??(3)? [email protected] ABSTRACT: This research paper concentrates on the mystery of ED reluctance to publish her poems in her life time. Among the various explanations to this center of interests, the paper takes up the new view as the thesis that Dickinson who was in fact well aware of her worth, deliberately chose to withhold her poems from the world until they could be valued as unique artistic creations, even if this meant postponing fame until after her death Key word: KEY WORDS: Reluctance, Sorrow, Publish, Poetry . At her death in 1886,Emily Dickinson left behind over 1700 poems, of which only 7 were published anonymously while she was alive <Johnson, poems 1:ix>.certainly then, the woman York Winters called: one of the greatest lyric poets of all time"<40>was all but unknown as a poet during her lifetime. For many years after her pomes first appeared in 1890, her reluctance to publish was attributed to a supposed unconcern for worldly matters, including literary fame. Literary critics, serious biographers, and writers of fictionalized accounts of her life created an image of Emily Dickinson as a timid, reclusive, mystical thinker, who was too absorbed in personal sorrows and ecstasies to be concerned with literary recognition. And this image persists, to a great extent, in the public mind today. Sine the late 1950s,

  • Word count: 724
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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"Hollow Men" Explication.

Gurpreet Singh 1st Period English Mr. Little November 12, 2003 "Hollow Men" Explication "We are the hollow men We are the stuffed men" Empty and full. Considering the speaker of this fraternity of contradictions is a singular being (it can be a human, or even a rock) representing the many of its kind, it resembles the likes of a scarecrow...or perhaps a mannequin along the lines of those seen on CNN representing a Bush with a monstrously big nose put on flames. A scare crow with straw. Stuffed to the brims. A substance lacking substantiality. The straw is the substance, but each individual straw is hollow, light, one nuance of color...yet together they make a purpose...one of either being a mockery of what the U.N. puts in its record books of the only super power in the beginning of the 21st century or scaring crows away. There is a purpose amongst hollow grounds, a purpose for the straw to be compacted together. And alas, that purpose is accomplished when a "we" is achieved...not an "I." "Leaning together Headpiece filled with straw. Alas!" This reconfirms my suspicions of flitting together to achieve a statute of social approval, of a status that determines the purpose to be one of those flirting with the positive. And all they have to do is lean their heads, even the heads that are full of straw, in a virtually neuron encapsulated skull. Lean over, and

  • Word count: 3265
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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"I'm not a great one for blood-red sunsets&#133;" said Dawe. What is Bruce Dawe "a great one for"?

Bruce Dawe: Long Essay By Carina Uehr "I'm not a great one for blood-red sunsets..." said Dawe. What is Bruce Dawe "a great one for"? T he label "Poet" carries with it many connotations, a certain mystique, which can be both favourable and not-so favourable. People expect you to be brilliant, weave words like thread. You may be classified as "arty", or "creative" or "romanticist". Bruce Dawe, however, is a modern poet. He avoids the stereotypical topics that have given this genre of writing a somewhat out-dated feel, and instead focuses on current times. Dawe uses his environment as subject-matter, his work criticising and questioning aspects of our society and standing up for people whose voices go otherwise unheard. What is Bruce Dawe a great one for? The answer is quite simple: Questioning, criticising and documenting the life around him. In the introduction of Sometimes Gladness, Dawe is asked the question, "Why do you write?" He answers, "...because I feel like it. I write out of a need to come to terms with some concern, something bugging [me]." Indeed, Sometimes Gladness seems like a collection of thoughts on a myriad of issues: Neighbours, local issues and politics, people on the streets, war (Dawe himself served in the RAAF from 1959 to 1968), television, immigrants, etc... all topics we come across and are affected by every day. Dawe lived through

  • Word count: 1982
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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"The Charge of The Light Brigade" - Poem anaylisis.

"The Charge of The Light Brigade" Poem anaylisis "The Charge of The Light Brigade" was a poem written by Lord Alfred Tennyson in Nowember 1954. Tennyson got the job of Poet Laureate after the death of William Wordsworth in 1850, his job was to write poems on the signifcants of his country . He bases the poem on a brief report from "The Times" newspaper which was published on October 954. Tennyson was a civilian and a arm chair patriot he wrote his poems from reports. The poem celebrates "The Light Brigade" bravery even though they were masacred by the Russian army because of a terrible military blunder caused by the Lord Raglan. This catatrophic mistake wiped nearly all of the 17th Lancers out, britains best cavalry brigade. "The Charge of The Light Brigade"cosists of six stanzas which have short but effective sentences, repitition, metaphors and rhetorical questions, Tennyson goes through the stages of the battle during the course of the poem.. The poem opens up with a rhythm "Half a league, half a league, half a league onwards" Tennyson uses repition here to establish the sound of galloping horses. "All in the valley of death" is a metaphor and a effective sentence because the soldiers are entering the valley were many of them died. Next follows "Rode the six hundred" as the light brigade consists of six hendred soldiers. "Charge for the guns he

  • Word count: 573
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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"Death the leveller" by James Shirley and "Ozymandias" by Percy Bysshe Shelley

Death the Leveller. The statement "Death is a leveller" means that no matter how you've lived your life, when you die we are all made equal. The two poems "Death the leveller" by James Shirley and "Ozymandias" by Percy Bysshe Shelley, are expressed in different ways, yet have the same intensions. They show us that everybody is eventually brought to the same level, death, but Shelley wrote about one person imparticular "Ozymandias". Shirley wrote a poem at the time of the civil war, he was also a follower and supporter of King Charles, the King was charged with high treason but refused to recognise court. He thought "a King cannot be tried by any superior jurisdiction on earth", so Charles was beheaded at Whitewall and buried in Windsor. He was thought of not as the King he was, but as a tyrant, murderer and pubic enemy, even though he was a King he was not protected, it creates a cold feeling like he's seen death. Shirley began his poem in very optimistic words by using "glories" in the first line. Shirley extends the military image by saying "there is no armour against Fate", he's saying that what's done is done. but in the second line he contradicts himself, by using a more definite statement... "Are shadows, not substantial things; There is no armour against Fate" ...these lines are more negative than the first, showing a contrast between the two and is

  • Word count: 622
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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I will be comparing three poems. The three poems will be "To One In Paradise" by Edgar Allen Poe, "I Am Stretched On Your Grave" a translation by Frank O' Connor and "The Voice" by Thomas Hardy.

English Coursework: Compare and Contrast Three Poems For my English Coursework I will be comparing three poems. The three poems will be "To One In Paradise" by Edgar Allen Poe, "I Am Stretched On Your Grave" a translation by Frank O' Connor and "The Voice" by Thomas Hardy. All three poems are about someone who has lost a loved on and long to have them back. The thing that makes these three poems so good is the fact that the poet's souls are poured out in words; you can really understand the grief that the poets are feeling. All three poems depict the inner and most secretive feelings of the poets about love and death. Each poet express their emotions through poetry, for them, for them the opportunity to write there feeling down on paper offers them some conciliation and comfort for the traumatic life they now feel they are living after the death of a loved one. Each poet has experienced a whirl-wind childhood and what all three poets have in common is that the expression of grief, loneliness, despair and pain over the death of their loved ones who they cherished of the centre of their lives. Death Death is the total assertion of life process that eventually occurs with all the living. The state of death has always been obscured by mystery and superstition. The precise definition of human death remains controversial and differs according to culture and legal system.

  • Word count: 1506
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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In what ways, are relationships distorted in T.S. Eliot poems?T.S. Eliot was an intellectual of the modernist movement of the 20th century. In the

T.S. Eliot: In what ways, are relationships distorted in T.S. Eliot poems? T.S. Eliot was an intellectual of the modernist movement of the 20th century. In the 20th century, there was the invention of the machines, so now with the invention of new machines; factories started to opaque other commerce which were not industries. Now the world was facing a growing problem: mass production. With mass production, industries started to come up. This is the result of an economic phenomenon called industrialization. Because of industrialization, there were not enough jobs in the rural area, which obliged workers to move into the cities. This problem is called urbanization. Due to the urbanization, workers had to labour under terrible conditions; industries exploited their workers asking them to work for long hours and with low salaries because there was too much demand for work, and not enough on offer. This kind of thought is what modernists, such as T.S.Eliot criticized: This unjust, inhuman way of living, a life where everything is done practically automatically. Where there is no fantasy, no adventure, or pleasure. A place where people have lost their beliefs causing desperation and frustration, giving rise to false prophets and false hopes. A place where there are so many, that they are mingled in a "sea of people". A place where there's no time for inter and intrapersonal

  • Word count: 2399
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Choose two or three characters from the poem you have studied - Discuss how the poets have described these characters and their behaviour - Consider the choice of words, poetic devices, rhythm and rhyme that the poets have used to communicate their ideas.

MADHU.R.NAIR 10B 23.11.2002 English and Literature GCSE Coursework, Pre - 20th Century Narrative Poetry. 3. Choose two or three characters from the poem you have studied. Discuss how the poets have described these characters and their behaviour. Consider the choice of words, poetic devices, rhythm and rhyme that the poets have used to communicate their ideas. The poems we have studied are: * How They Brought The Good News From Ghent To Aix Robert Browning, * The Revenge Alfred, Lord Tennyson, * The Inchcape Rock Robert Southey, * The Charge of The Light Brigade Alfred, Lord Tennyson, In the four poems we have studied, there are different attitudes and behaviours displayed by the characters, ranging from pure envy to patriotism and heroism. In "The Inchcape Rock", Sir Ralph the Rover is portrayed as a wicked and jealous man. However the irony is that, his evil feat backfires onto him when he least expects it. "His heart was mirthful to excess, But the Rover's mirth was wickedness." Sir Ralph the Rover was jealous of how the Abbott of Aberbrothok was loved by everyone for doing such a good deed. Southey shows how Sir Ralph was determined to humiliate the Abbott, and how inconsiderate he was of others. Sir Ralph was willing to put other people in danger, just so he could

  • Word count: 1865
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Compare the poems 'Elegy for Himself' and 'No More Pain'.

Poetry Comparison The poems 'Elegy for Himself' and 'No More Pain' were both written by authors awaiting execution, however the similarities of the situations and therefore the mindsets of the poets end there. Edward Moody is a contemporary poet on death row in the U.S.A. He had already been awaiting death for a number of years when he wrote 'No More Pain'. Chidiok Tichborne, author of 'Elegy for Himself', on the other hand was executed within a week of his trial in the sixteenth century. Moody had had far more time to contemplate his situation, whereas Tichborne only had time to write down his initial reaction. I believe that 'Elegy for Himself' is a poem about the ephemeral nature of life in comparison to the eternal afterlife, whereas 'No More Pain' is a poem about the inherently painful nature of the lives of all those condemned to death. I will be exploring my own reasoning in this essay. Tichborne's poem follows a rigid structure. All three verses follow the same rhyme scheme: the last word of the first line rhymes with the last word of the third line. Similarly the second and fourth lines rhyme. Each verse ends with a rhyming couplet. By ending with a couplet, Tichbourne echoes the ending of his life in emphasising the ending of each verse. These couplets resolve each verse, and by always ending by directly saying 'now I live, and now my life is done' Tichbourne not

  • Word count: 1621
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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How do the poets of the Pre and Posts 1900, evaluation their opinions of &#145;Death&#146; through poetry?&#148;

"How do the poets of the Pre and Posts 1900, evaluation their opinions of 'Death' through poetry?" Now in the 21st century, death is something, which has imprisoned our newspapers and television screens, particularly now due to the very unfortunate suicide terrorist attack in New York of the twin World Trade Centres and the Pentagon, which affected lots of people. But everybody interprets death itself differently. I believe our personal beliefs play a significant part in this, because for some they believe that once you die; that's it, your body gradually decays; others believe that you are taken up to heaven and some even look forward to death because of their belief in reincarnation. But what most people thrive on is the fact that there will be loved ones on earth that will remember them and acknowledge them for all their accomplishments and disappointments. In Pre and Post 1900, they too interpreted death differently, and many illustrated this through poetry. A famous Post 1900 poet is Wilfred Owen, who's poem 'Anthem for Doomed Youth', portrays his bitter angst towards the war and he laments the deaths of a whole generation of young men, who 'die as cattle' on the battlefields of Europe. Wilfred Owen was born in Oswestry, Shopshire, and the son of a railway worker. He became under the influence of contemporary French poetry. He enlisted in 1915, becoming a second

  • Word count: 3186
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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