YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Four Poems by Sesshu Foster
Essays 811 - 840
"The West Country" from an operative structure standpoint, it is perhaps even more useful to analyze this poem from a thematic sta...
like a walk in the park. The poem describes how tired a person can feel while working hard, and laboring at ones love. Though a mu...
war songs, marriage songs and love songs among many more. Throughout the ages, the poems came to known as not merely an example of...
serves to draw the readers attention to this word and give it added emphasis. They break up the lines in such a way that mimics th...
(line 5). As this illustrates, the second stanza builds the tension even further as this comment intimates that this death is par...
enjoying the fact that many people have bleeding hearts from love. The narrator is clearly an individual who has been harmed by...
he mocks. It is after all a story of a lock of hair stolen while a young woman sleeps. What can be simpler? What can be less impo...
But, Frost never treats it as an overpowering tragedy for the participants, who still live, continue without looking back it seems...
This three page original poem is inspired by psalm 73, but takes a present day perspective. No surces are cited....
paganism was not about to go quietly, even though the poet describes the protagonist as a gift that, "God, in His mercy, has sent....
power. I willed my keepsakes, signed away What portion of me I Could make assignable,-and then There interposed a fly, With blue...
a number of jobs, he worked in a textile mill and on a farm, and taught Latin at his mothers school in Methuen, Massachusetts."5 H...
who has lost her lover in the south. We can assume this came from a lynching (as evidenced by the reference to "Dixie," which lync...
how Frost "speaks of the (metaphoric) wall between his neighbor and himself" which seems to him to be unnecessary. This brings to ...
likens the process of death to an innocuous fly buzzing. In other words, instead of being a mysterious occurrence, it is a proces...
of a child. 1. "I a child and thou a lamb" (Blake 670). B. Dickinsons narrator is a dying woman. 1. "The Eyes around-had wrung the...
hilltop is now shown as much as it is suggested by two rounded green shapes in the lower half of the painting. The dancers barely ...
An analytic interpretation of this poem is presented in five pages with a discussion of loneliness and home themes that are featur...
First, there is the surface level, that he was walking and had to decide which path to take to get to his destination. But at a mu...
sooner will his race be run, / And nearer hes to setting" (lines 7-8). In this manner, Herrick sets up an ever-increasing sense of...
Comparing and contrasting the search for enlightenment in the works of Dante Alighieri and Hanshan in 4 pages. Primary sources on...
and the "The Negro Speaks of Rivers" by Langston Hughes are both evocative and deeply beautiful poems. In each poem, the poet uses...
In a paper of three pages, the writer looks at Blake's The Chimney Sweeper. The Innocence and Experience versions of the poem are ...
In a paper of seven pages, the writer looks at found poetry. Rossetti's "Goblin Market" is used to construct a found poem with fem...
This paper offers two blog posts. One on "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" and the other on "Sex without Love" by Sharon Olds....
to the United States when she was seven. Her poetry then is an attempt to reconcile the extremes that come from living in two cult...
William Blakes "The Divine Image" have little in common, as the first poem relates a mystical enchantment of a knight with a super...
that this is "Her hardest hue to hold." The budding of plants at this time in the early spring is the shortest part of the seas...
reflects both the poet and the readers changing perspectives that can only be achieved through a rational and nonprejudiced examin...
and the bright blue squills. I walk down the patterned garden-paths In my stiff, brocaded gown. With my powdered hair and jewelled...