Genre Essays
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John Clare was born in 1793 and died at the age of seventy-one in 1864. Clare came from a poor background and left school at the age of twelve to become a farm labourer. He had many jobs in the earlier years of his life as a Potboy, a Ploughboy and a Gardener. When he […]
This is a love poem written by a Scottish poet. As the poem is written in Scottish dialect, to grasp it in its full effect it would be good to hear it read by someone with a strong Scottish accent. The poem is a ballad and is in four line stanzas. The poet also uses […]
“Sonnet CXXX” by William Shakespeare was written to send a message to poets, telling them that sonnets do not have to be unrealistic; Shakespeare also mocks traditional Elizabethan sonnets. The occasion is that Shakespeare believes in real love and not falsely comparing women to god-like creatures. The sonnet was written in the Renaissance era. The […]
In ‘How do I love thee’, Elizabeth Barrett Browning expresses an unconditional and melancholic love. The poem also contains spiritual themes evident in words such as ‘Being’, ‘Right’, ‘Praise’, ‘Grace’ and ‘God’. The final line, ‘I shall but love thee better after death’, suggests the idea of reuniting with a loved one in heaven, reflecting […]
This poem is about someone experiencing love for the first time. “I ne’er was struck before that hour With love so sudden and so sweet.” The poet compares the face of the woman to a flower “Her face it bloomed like a sweet flower.” He describes how the feeling of love affects him physically “my […]
‘Thy vows are all broken,’ ‘And light is thy fame:’ which implies she broke their relationship and she was fickle, but Byron is grief stricken ‘half broken-hearted’ and ‘silence and tears’ and he regrets that their relationship was not as special as he believed it to be. ‘share in its shame’ it was thought of […]
The poem “Villegiature” was written by Edith Nesbit in the late 19th century. The actual word villegiature means holiday or retreat in French. “Villegiature is a short poem which is about a woman who is being haunted by her former lover. The poem mainly deals with the woman’s idealised image of the man and the […]
One of the hardest things to do is to leave someone that is dear to us, and convince them its ok. John Donne does so brilliantly in his poem Valediction: Forbidding Morning. The poem’s message is that the relationship between two lovers is greater than anything else to them, and that true love cannot be […]
‘In Memory of My Mother’ is about love, a very strong theme in this poem. The speaker has great love for his mother. She is dead but he still thinks about her wherever he is. He remembers moments they shared together and he replays them in his mind. “I see you walking down a lane” […]
Shakespeare composed Sonnet 116 in the sixteenth century, and it follows the traditional form of a Shakespearian sonnet. The love poem is structured into three quatrains where the poet shares his perception of genuine love, followed by an assertion of his faith in a concluding rhyming couplet. The poem beautifully portrays the steadfastness and constancy […]
Since the beginning of human existence, there has been once practice, one instinct, one single obsession that we cannot escape. Some may call it necessary; others say it’s a gift. It can be controlling, enlightening but it’s oh so powerful. It isn’t the need for food, safety or shelter. It isn’t love nor greed nor […]
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 it 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 […]
The two poets, John Donne and W. H. Auden each explore the theme of love in their poems “The Good-Morrow” and “Stop all the Clocks” from “Funeral Blues”. On the first glance, the poems seem to be extremely dissimilar: there is a great contrast between the – rather dramatic – openings “Stop all the clocks” […]
The narrators of Havisham and Our Love Now cling onto relationships that their partners have abandoned. Despite Havisham’s bitter and angry tone and Our Love Now’s more positive and hopeful tone, there’s a feeling that their relationships cannot be salvaged. This essay will explore the conflicts within romantic relationships in these two poems, which both […]
Rejection and Years Ago are both poems that discuss the theme of love and relationships that have gone wrong. However in the poem Rejection, Sullivan describes the consequences of a rejection and is saying her thoughts aloud. Conversely in the poem Years Ago the poet highlights what love brings about and recollects her memories. In […]
In the poems “Catch” and “Minefield”, the poets, George Bilgere and Diane Thiel both reveal how the difficult relationships that they experienced with their fathers have shaped both their pasts, the present and their futures. Both poets have started their poems by relating what they believed were the causes of their father’s behaviour towards themselves […]
For the last term I have been studying two famous war poems, the older of which dates back nearly 300 years. One of the war poems is ‘The Battle of Blenheim’ which was written by Robert Southey in 1798. ‘The Battle of Blenheim’ is a poem looking back on the battle which took place in […]
War is such a popular theme for poetry due to extremely different views on it, and how people can show their feelings about it through it. War is seen as brave, na�ve, brutal, necessary, chivalrous, and wasteful by different people.The Drum is a strong anti war poem written by John Scott, a vicar. The drum […]
Our coursework involves comparing two war poems: Alfred Lord Tennyson’s “The Charge of the Light Brigade” and Edgar Wallace’s “War.” As a former medical orderly with personal experience of war, Wallace considers it a terrible and unjustifiable occurrence that only leads to violence and suffering. Alfred Lord Tennyson believes that it is a duty for […]
Raymond Garlick presents a frank and subtly persuasive narrative in his poem ‘Waterloo’. Through this poem, readers can explore his perspective on The Battle of Waterloo and war scenarios, which can be viewed from a contemporary and ironic point of view. To fully understand the poem, it is crucial to consider the historical context. The […]
Lord Alfred Tennyson authored both The Charge of the Light Brigade and The Defence of Lucknow. Alfred Tennyson was made poet laureate by Queen Victoria in 1850. Despite not having experienced war himself, Tennyson’s poetry focused on war and he used vivid imagery to create a sense of being present during the conflict or seeing […]
The two poems I am comparing are ‘The Charge of the Light Brigade’ by Lord Alfred Tennyson and ‘The Hyenas’ by Rudyard Kipling. Both are anti-war poems and aim to discomfort the reader’s opinion on war. However the poets differ in how they convey their attitudes to war, through the language and devices they use […]