Alliterative verse Essays

  • Epic of Beowulf Essay - Prosody of Beowulf

    1223 Words  | 3 Pages

    Literature of the Western World, actually includes considerable alliteration (Wilkie 1271). The Old English poet would “tie” the two half-lines together by their stressed alliteration (Chickering 4). The first half-line is called the on-verse, which is followed by the off-verse. Each line of poetry ideally contains four principal stresses, two on each side of a strong medial caesura, or pause, and a variable number of less-heavily stressed or unstressed ones. “At least one of the two stressed words in the

  • Walt Whitman Poetry Analysis

    1080 Words  | 3 Pages

    autobiographical type of poem in which the author, Walt Whitman, is also that persona, who in developing this type of poetic work, and surpasses the traditional limits of the “self.” The captivating and attention-grabbing aspect of the poem is the free verse technique or style, which significantly makes the development of the “self” a calming task while celebrating a personal life. The persona is described as a lover of nature, and incorporates three sections of the self-personality that include “I,”

  • An Analysis Of Linda K Hogan's Innocence

    1322 Words  | 3 Pages

    As a senior I am obviously aware that my journey through school is coming to an end. At this point in my life, I have a slight idea about what I want to do in the future; however, I still do not know if that is what I want to do for the rest of my life and I will not ever know until I learn more about it. Some people may see my lack of permanent direction as an indication of someone who is lost. Nonetheless, I see this as an exhilarating experience where I am constantly discovering new things about

  • Quest for Eternity in the Poetry of Dickinson

    3328 Words  | 7 Pages

    final Room And Rooms where Those to be alive Tomorrow were, a Blame That Others could exist While She must finish quite A Jealousy for Her arose So nearly infinite-- (P-1100) It is presumed that Dickinson wrote this piece of verse in circa 1886. In May of that year, Laura Dickey, the wife of Frank W. of Michigan, ... ... middle of paper ... ...Dickinson. 2 vols. 1974. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1994. Stocks, Kenneth. Emily Dickinson and the Modern Consciousness. Hong Kong:

  • Music Essay - An Analysis of the Rap Song, Put it On

    1421 Words  | 3 Pages

    bosom of humankind. To this end, I have composed a line-for-line translation of the complex, sophisticated diction, which, I expect, will henceforth serve as the standard through which all scholars will study this master of the English language. Verse One Ayo you better flee, hops, or get your head thrown three blocks. L keep rappers’ hearts pumpin’ like Reeboks. And every year I gain clout and my name sprout. Some brothers would still be virgins if crack never came out. I got the wild style

  • Liberty Bell

    3362 Words  | 7 Pages

    each of the 13 original states and bears the following inscriptions: Around the crown: "Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace, good will      toward men - Luke, chapter II, verse 14." Around the lip: " Proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants      thereof - Leviticus, chapter XXV, verse 10." Upon one side of the of the bell is cast - "Presented to the city of Philadelphia, July 4, 1876, for the belfry of Independence Hall, by a citizen." On the opposite side is

  • In What Ways do the Poets Studied Write about Childhood Experiences?

    1916 Words  | 4 Pages

    poem to culminate all his childhood memories into one poem that expresses all his love for nature. Seamus Heaney uses a bit of both of the other poets styles in his poem. He shows a love for nature in the first verse, but also tells the reader how he lost it all in the second verse. However, one issue is a constant theme throughout all four of the poems – that of childhood. These poems are outlets for the poets to show feelings that they felt years before, but could not express at that

  • How does Owen make clear his feelings about war in Dulce et Dorcum est?

    1443 Words  | 3 Pages

    detail throughout the poem. He is also successful in writing the poem as a memory, as he did fight in the war. In this poem he effectively shows his thoughts and expressions, as he wants the reader to think of them. Owen accomplishes the mood in verse one through his use of language. The poem starts with the words “Bent Double”, which introduces the image of a soldier as Owen remembers one. These words show us the action and figure of the soldiers. In reality you cannot walk bent really close

  • Augustan Poetic Tradition

    4392 Words  | 9 Pages

    rhythms and metres. Instead he has worked with what was to hand and brought to it great powers of expression and art as well as a significant subject matter" (Tamplin 1). At the same time, Sidney Burris was making a similar point: "Readers of his verse must continually remind themselves that Heaney, perhaps more so than most other contemporary poets, is a deeply literary poet, one whose consolations often lie in the invigorating strains of the poetic tradition itself" (Burris ix). For Heaney,

  • Digressions in the Epic Poem, Beowulf

    1974 Words  | 4 Pages

    surrounding the poet’s digressiveness has arisen from the fact that we have not yet discovered or admitted why he digresses in the first place” (Tripp 63). In this essay we hope to help answer that question. The longest digression, almost 100 verses, is the story of Finn, which is here explored. In  “The Finn Episode and Revenge in Beowulf” Martin Camargo states: The allusive manner of its telling has long taxed the abilities of philologists to determine the precise sense of the lines

  • Moral or Immoral

    659 Words  | 2 Pages

    Moral or Immoral In Martin Luther King Jr.’s essay, A Letter from Birmingham Jail he compares the issues of Moral acts verses Immoral acts. This essay was written in response to a letter some clergymen had written after a direct action march Dr. King had participated in. In their letter the clergymen had praised the local police officers and media for the nonviolent and calm manner in which the situation was handled. It was this praise that prompted Dr King to write: “I have tried to

  • Anglo Saxon Scops

    1043 Words  | 3 Pages

    performed their own poetry. Also, they had to be able to insert fitting verse where necessary, depending upon the occasion or celebration . Scops were known to travel from village to village; however, many had permanent posts in the king’s court or mead halls. Usually, they performed for great feasts, celebrations, or the homecoming of soldiers from war. Their performances were usually short, but there were usually many lines of verse. Beowulf itself is over 3000 lines long. Any given song could deal

  • A Comparison of Mother to Son and Harlem, Both by Langston Hughes

    739 Words  | 2 Pages

    identify his flow of writing through analyzing the form and meaning of each line. Form and meaning are what readers need to analyze to understand the poem that they are evaluating. In “Mother to Son”, his form of writing that is used frequently, is free verse. There is no set “form”, but he gets his point across in a very dramatic way. The poem is told by a mother who is trying to let her son know that in her life, she too has gone through many frustrations just like what her son is going through. The tone

  • The Dhammapada

    1226 Words  | 3 Pages

    collection of 423 verses that tell about the ideals and teachings of the Buddha. When taken together, these verses provide a structured form of teaching within the Buddhist religion. These verses are a kind of guiding voice to the path of true enlightenment. The Dhammapada is a religious work that is meant to provide a certain set of religious and ethical values, as well as a certain manner of perception of life and the problems that life brings along with the solutions. Although the verses may be looked

  • Exile

    1797 Words  | 4 Pages

    Biblical picture of life in Judah during the Exile was expressed in only a few verses. One states, “But the poorest of the people were left to farm the land (2 Kings 25:12).'; This gives us little information to work with, and all that can be assumed is that not many people were left in Jerusalem, and those that were, farmed. Whether they farmed for themselves, or for Babylon cannot be reasonably determined from this one verse. Later on, we see that some underground guerrilla forces were also left

  • Comparing and Contrasting the Novel, Heart of Darkness

    1227 Words  | 3 Pages

    was trying to convey a deeper meaning about a situation or a place, he would us a comparison or contrast. The comparative and contrasting themes in the story help to develop Conrad's ideas and feelings in the Heart of Darkness. Light verses dark, the Thames verses the Congo, the Savages compared to the civilized people, and the darkness of both worlds are all contrasts and comparisons that are important to the meaning as well as the understanding of this novel. The most obvious contrast found

  • I Love My Gay Friends

    651 Words  | 2 Pages

    purpose of all this hate?" I asked, thinking he would be really cute if he weren't holding those nasty signs. "This town needs help," he replied. "Do you really believe that God hates?" I asked. "Yes, He does," he said, and showed me a Bible verse that read, "God hates the work of iniquity." "Yes, but not the workers. He loves everyone," I countered. "No, you are mistaken. Go ask a preacher," he said, sounding angry.

  • Prophet, Messiah, and Son of Man

    750 Words  | 2 Pages

    ” (Achtemeier, p.231) Jesus was the ultimate prophet, you read in Deuteronomy 18:15, 18, verse 15 states “The LORD your God will raise up for you a prophet like me from among you, from your own people. You must listen to him,” and verse 18 states “I will raise up for them a prophet like you from among their people, and I will put my words in his mouth. He will tell them everything I command him.” These verses show you that Jesus will be the ultimate prophet who will be a teacher of the word of God

  • Homer’s The Odyssey

    1262 Words  | 3 Pages

    simile to describe the pain and sorrow that Odysseus feels as he recalls the story of Troy. The passage of the simile is the first verse paragraph following several prose paragraphs. The structure of the verse is loose in following rhythmic or syllabic patterns. Although the form does not have any specific significance to the content, perhaps it is written in verse to sound somewhat poetic. Because the scene is very descriptive and dramatic, it is fitting to write it in a poem-like structure rather

  • The Role of Women in Buddhism

    2968 Words  | 6 Pages

    the Visuddhi Magga, a monk asked, “Reverend Sir, have you seen a woman pass this way?” And the elder said: Was it a woman or a man that passed this way? I cannot tell. But this I know, a set of bones is travelling upon this road. Although this verse attempts to show the equality of women on the spiratual path, there was, and still is... sexual stereotypes present in the culture of Buddhist communities. By contrast to such bigoted practices that hinder spiritual development, Buddhism can be