Hearts and Partners.

GCSE English Year 10/11 Hearts and Partners Introduction. The hearts and partners theme contains the following poems: 'The Beggar Woman' by William King (Pre 1900) 'Our Love Now' by Martyn Lowery 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell (Pre 1900) 'Rapunzstiltskin' by Liz Lochhead 'i wanna be yours' by John Cooper Clarke 'One Flesh' by Elizabeth Jennings As the title suggests, hearts and partners deals with love and relationships. In your exam you will be expected to make comparisons between the different poems and this lesson will help you to make the connections you need to do this. Poetic techniques The hearts and partners selection features an impressive range of poetic forms from the pop lyric derived 'i wanna be yours' to the formal rhyming couplets and elaborate arguments of 'To His Coy Mistress'. 'The Beggar Woman' is a simple narrative told in rhyming couples, 'Our Love Now' is a free verse dialogue and 'Rapunzstiltskin' also uses free verse to achieve its effects. 'One Flesh', in contrast is a formal, rhymed meditation. The most obvious poetic technique that these poems have in common is their use of imagery. Love and Sex Surprisingly, perhaps, the most sexually explicit poems in this collection are the two older ones: 'The Beggar Woman' and 'To His Coy Mistress'. Of the modern poems, none of them deal with the sexual side of a relationship. Three

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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'Why would someone wait until marriage to have sex? What benefit is there? Why is virginity a special gift?'

'Why would someone wait until marriage to have sex? What benefit is there? Why is virginity a special gift?' I'm a virgin, and waiting to share that special gift of human sexuality with that one person I will commit the rest of my life to in marriage (when and if :) A strong foundational supports of a marriage is intended to be the exclusive physical/emotional bond of sexual union. One of the most beautiful ways I think of saving myself for my future wife is looking at it this way: I'm going to love her SOOOO much that right now, as I go through life (even though I don't know for sure who it is I may marry :) I am saving this GIFT. And I want to give this GIFT only to her, a one of a kind, the most precious person I will ever meet. And she DESERVES it. That gift I will have hopefully kept to show her that she is something REALLY, REALLY SPECIAL. And you know what, I know she will appreciate that with her whole heart. In today's society it's a rare and unique person who wishes to save that gift of sexual union for his/her lifetime marriage partner. I would encourage anyone questioning, feeling the peer pressure, the societal pressure, the boyfriend/girlfriend pressure, to wait until you both enter that lifetime covenant with each other. What could be more exciting, more special, more emotional than sharing the wonders of sex with your one true and dedicated love!?! Think

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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shakespeares sonnets

Compare and Contrast the theme of love in six sonnets Sonnets are extremely important poems. Most sonnets are about the theme of love. The poets used sonnets to express the powerful emotion of love for their lovers. Love is a universal emotion as everyone probably feels love for someone at one time in their life. There are many types of love such as unrequited love, love and loss and romantic love. There are a large amount of poems about love because poems are a good way to express your feelings for someone. Most sonnets have different rhyme schemes and structures depending on who wrote them. For example in sonnet 130 by William Shakespeare, he uses ABABCDCDEFEFGG and this creates the rhythm of iambic pentameter and he uses the structure of three quatrains and a couplet. Perhaps the most common aspect of love explored by sonnets is romantic love. When we think of love poems we, first of all, think of odes: a verse written in praise of a person or object. "Sonnet 130" by William Shakespeare and "Garden of Beauty" by Edmund Spenser both focus on the theme of Romantic love. The two sonnets both use natural imagery to describe their lovers but the two sonneteers use the natural imagery and the ode in radically different ways. Edmund Spenser uses his senses to explore his lover's beauty. He describes what she smells like and what she looks like. He uses a series of similes in

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Love and Loss

Love and Loss Referring to 6 poems (3 in great detail), explore how each poet conveys the pleasure or pain of love. In this essay I am going to refer to six Pre 1914 poems and 3 poems in detail , I will also explore how each poet conveys the pleasure of pain and love. The anthology is about "Love and Loss". Love is expresses in many ways. There is dedicated love where a person is dedicated to the person that they love, false love where a person is just having the person on, first love where a person instantly falls in love on first sight, brotherly love where a man loves another man like a brother for example in a war and also unrequited love where someone loves a person but the person does not acknowledge them. There are many types of love in the world today. There is also Loss where there are many ways in where a person has lost someone or they have died. The poems that I have studied all contain some sort of love and loss. Most have love whereas some have loss. Some of them are mixed with love and loss as well. Love and relationships are used a lot in these poems. The poems that I am going to compare and convey pain and love are * " When We Two Parted" by Lord Byron * " Remember" by Christina Rossetti * "How Do I Love Thee" by Elizabeth Barret Browning * " A Birthday" by Christina Rossetti * " La Belle Dame Sans Merci" by John Keats * " First Love" by John

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Explain how the rituals and vows connected with Christian marriage ceremonies might influence the differing ways that couples approach marriage and divorce.

Coursework - Marriage and Divorce Explain how the rituals and vows connected with Christian marriage ceremonies might influence the differing ways that couples approach marriage and divorce. In this piece of coursework I am going to look at the Christian teachings on marriage and divorce. All Christians should share the same general views however their attitudes and opinions would differ slightly. It is agreed by all Christians that marriage should be everlasting, uniting two people in love. The dictionary definition of marriage is: " Condition of man and woman legally united for purpose of living together and usually procreating lawful offspring, act or ceremony..." Although this definition is totally correct we know as Christians that this is just the bare outline of the true definition of marriage. We read in A Catholic Catechism: " Gods love will be effective in their reciprocal of love for one another. Their union in marriage becomes a sign of the union given by God." Marriage is a sacrament, which shows in a way that our human minds can understand that God has the intention of forming a loving community, which we can all experience. A Christian's decision to marry should be out of total love for their partner. They should be at the point in their relationship where they are ready to be united as one, they are responsible for ach other and the commitment they

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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In conclusion, the poems which I have studied describe a range of emotions from extreme love and happiness to extreme sadness and depression.

Explore the theme of love and loss in the poems you have studied, showing how the poets use language and form to express their ideas. Have you ever looked up the word poetry in a dictionary? Poetry is defined as literature in its most intense, most imaginative and most rhythmic forms. For the poet, it can be a way to relieve their stress and just "let go" and for the reader it can be an adventure into the state of mind of the poet. The Romantic Era, during the late 18th and early 19th century, was a period of time in which poets started to express their love and lust for others through poetic forms. This essay will be exploring the way in which poets use language, imagery and form to express their ideas to the reader. Sir Philip Sidney was famous as a poet, a courtier and a soldier and he is still known as a writer of sonnets. He was a very religious man and consequently, religion and faith affected his poetry greatly. One of his famous works is entitled "My True Love Hath My Heart". It is a deeply spiritual poem and it is essentially about the poet's love of God. In this poem, Sidney shows how his love for God is perfect and flawless: "By just exchange, one for the other giv'n. I hold his dear, and mine he cannot miss: There never was a bargain better driv'n. His heart in me, keeps me and him in one, My heart in him, his thoughts and senses guides. He loves my heart,

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Was Janie truly happy at the end of the novel as she killed Tea Cake?

Was Janie truly happy at the end of the novel as she killed Tea Cake? The novel "Their Eyes Were Watching God" did not fit into the typical Canon genre of novels nor did the author of the novel Zora Neale Hurston fit the idealistic author genre of the time. Hurston was a black female writer, recognised for her controversial dress, her wit, and unpredictable behaviour especially regarding her age. Most of all Hurston was known for her great confidence to go out into the world and make a name for herself through her novels in a time when "De nigger women is de mule uh de world as fur as Ah can see." One of the many ideas debated upon buy critics is the innovative ending to this overall revolutionary novel, what type of statement Hurston is making; did Tea Cake need to die to complete Janie's happiness to become truly independent. Some critics believe Hurston is flying the flag of feminism creating a negative slur against black male society and the patriarchal world as a whole. Conversely other critics see Hurston's novel as giving a womenists perspective into 1960's American Deep South society. These critics believe Their Eyes Were Watching God to be a step in the "right" direction of equality for both sexes in the 60's and in society today. As readers and adolescents or remembering our adolescent years we are able to relate to Janie, we too devise ideas on the perfect

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Choose three or four poems on the theme of love. Compare the way in which the poets treat the theme highlighting similarities and differences in their content and poetic technique.

GCSE Coursework essay (10% of literature grade) Comparitive element. Choose three or four poems on the theme of love. Compare the way in which the poets treat the theme highlighting similarities and differences in their content and poetic technique. I have chosen to compare four poems, the first one is 'Porphyrias Lover'. It is written by Robert Browning who died in 1889. The second poem, 'My Last Duchess', is also by Robert Browning. Browning was a great poet in the Victorian age and married Elizabeth Barratt. The third poem is called 'First Love'. It is written by John Clare (1793-1864). The final poem is 'Ballad'. It is an anonymous poem as no-one knows who wrote ballads. This is because they are word of mouth and are passed down through many generations going through minor changes each time and therefore by the end they become a completely different poem to the one in the beginning. The three poets write about the same theme but, as expected, have many differences and similarities with each other in their writing techniques. Obviously, the two poems by Robert Browning will be very similiar to each other. 'Porphyrias Lover' and 'My Last Duchess are both written from a mans point of view . This shows that Browning has used the same approach to both of the poems. Maybe he wants to make a point of men not always being listened to and so writes both poems with a biased

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Compare the different approaches to love in 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell and 'Sonnet' by Elizabeth B. Browning.

Poetry Assignment This assignment will examine two poems that were written before 1914. The two poems I will be focussing on are 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell and 'Sonnet' by Elizabeth B. Browning. In the essay I will be looking at how both poems emphasise love but yet have very different approaches as in the coy mistress the persona is trapping his mistress into falling in love with him and uses tactics to try and have a sexual relationship with her. However in the sonnet the persona has a stronger love for her lover as the poem is more spiritual and her idea of love is on a higher level - she does not refer to the physical but she simply likes the idea of loving. I will be discussing how the period of time that the poets lived in is reflected in their attitudes to life - the tradition affecting the way they think or possibly makes them rebellious towards tradition and to run away with themselves i.e. existentialist views. 'To His Coy Mistress' by Andrew Marvell is an intriguing poem that captures the stereotypical view of men's attitude to women. The persona is obsessed with a young female who is evidently very beautiful and seductive but seems unwilling to let herself show or act upon her feelings for him. He has tried so hard to show her that he has the attitude and love that will make her happy. The poet is basically saying that the persona is in love with

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Love Relationships: a Comparison Between the Victorian and the Contemporary Couple in A.S Byatt's Possession

Love Relationships: a Comparison Between the Victorian and the Contemporary Couple in A.S Byatt's Possession Possession contains two love stories: a contemporary one and a Victorian one whose plots are interlaced, and not as its subtitle suggests a single one: "A Romance". It is a novel about a pair of young scholars who trace the correspondence between two Victorian poets. The contemporary love story between Roland Mitchell and Maud Bailey develops in parallel with and is intermingled with the story of the Victorian lovers, Randolph Henry Ash and Christabel LaMotte, since the modern academics' quest for knowledge of the past drives the modern romance. While the Victorian love affair is characterized by its passionate intensity, the other relation develops slowly compared to the customs of late twentieth century with its sexual freedom. Sexuality is another major concern treated in these relationships. In order to examine sexuality in this novel, it is necessary to analyse the relationships between the characters. Indeed, the sexual act is linked to romance. Byatt draws obvious parallels between the modern characters' need to distance themselves from sexuality and Victorian repression of sexuality. This essay will thus show how love and sexuality are conceptualised, represented and dramatised in the Victorian and in the twentieth-century couple and society. Indeed, these two

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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