Literature Essays
Literature can be a lot of fun to write, but it can also be a lot of work. To make the process easier, you can get information online. Literature essays are more common in college, but you may be assigned to write one for high school as well. There are several sites where you can get examples of essays on literature from these websites.
Writing literature essays involves three steps. The first step is to decide what type of essay you want to write. There are five common types of essays: expository, descriptive, narrative, compare and contrast, and persuasive. You can find examples online for all types of literature essays. You can further refine the many subtypes within the five main literature essays. You may seek professional help if you feel unsure about writing your type of essay.
Writing the body takes a lot of time and effort, but you can find help by writing online. Many websites offer writing services for a fee. You only need to give the guidelines, and a professional will be assigned your task. You will receive a quality written essay in due time.
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 […]
The poet and writer I am studying is Thomas hardy (1840-1928). His first successful novel was called ‘Far From the Madding Crowd’. His poem that I am studying is called ‘A Wife in London’ (December 1899). It is a bout a woman in London who is waiting for her husband to come back from the […]
Charge and Exposure of the Light Brigade Differences These two war poems, although written about the same subject, are very different. The Charge of the Light Brigade is about honouring the brave soldiers that were brave enough to go to war, whereas Exposure almost tells the story of these soldiers that went to war, […]
Henry David Thoreau was a man of individualism, and democracy, quoting in an essay entitled Civil Disobedience, “The government that governs best, governs least.” The quote shares the idea that man is capable of self-government, and shuns the idea of any over imposing power that may decide what is best for the people, rather then […]
Survival has been a part of Australian history and culture since the beginning. When white man first settled on Australian soil, it was a survival of the fittest. From the many wars that Australian diggers fought in (and won) to the Great Depression to the present in this economic crisis, Australia has been surviving through […]
This descriptive poem, “Ode to Man” reflects the usage of power by man in society. The writer uses natural imagery, diction, personification and the structure of 4 lines per stanza to indicate and ensure how the poem and society can reflect between each other and its conflicts. It vividly explains how man became powerful with […]
The possession of patriotism is a common attribute among the citizens of a country, while some believe that it has a poetic quality, making it a suitable topic for poets to explore. E. E. E. Cummings expressed his perspective on patriotism through a poem that, initially, may appear disordered and bewildering. E. E. Cummings expressed […]
Identity and distinctiveness has habitually been subjected to in most of John Donne’s poems, in this case the “Holy Sonnet IV”, as has been questioned in Carol Ann Duffy’s “Originally”. In these poems, which have been written centuries apart, both poets display well the loss of identity suffered by them and the great impact of […]
Intended for Year 4 students, this unit of work aims to foster their knowledge, skills, and understanding of using line, tone, and colour in their own artwork. To stimulate their imagination, the students are exposed to different stimuli including music, studying artists’ work, and experimenting with different mediums. The inspiration for this unit emerged from […]
“Design”, by Robert Frost, contemplates fate and the role it plays on the lives of every living thing, regardless of size. By definition, design is the purposeful or inventive arrangement of parts or details ( Webster ). The poem starts with the description of an observation made of a spider that has caught a moth […]
Vladimir Propp, a Russian literary theorist and critic, carried out an analysis of one hundred Russian folk tales in the 1920s. Published in 1928, The Morphology of the Folk Tale by Propp revealed a standard set of character classifications applicable to characters in traditional fantasy stories. Propp’s theory accurately predicted the role of these characters […]
The ballad form is one of the most ancient ways known of expressing feelings, events, myths, etc.; even before writing was discovered, the possibility of transmitting these things from one generation to the next existed. Ballads are a form of oral poetry known worldwide and traditional to many countries; although at first glance no apparent […]