Comparative Analysis
This composition will focus on three melancholic poems by Thomas Hardy penned during the late 1800s and early 1900s, towards the end of his life. The poems share common themes, and their somber tone unites them seamlessly. During a difficult period in Thomas Hardy’s life, his poems captured his mood and emotions. The absence of […]
Read moreThe selected titles demonstrate a shift in the syntax of love and marriage. Initially, the authors present different meanings, but ultimately converge on similar ideas. By utilizing literary devices and variations in structure and theme, they depict characters initially immersed in fantasies, gradually facing the realities of life, along with different forms of love. Both […]
Read moreAccording to the Oxford Concise English dictionary, science fiction is defined as “a fanciful fiction based on postulated scientific discoveries or environmental changes” (1976). Joanna Russ points out the distinction between science fiction and fantasy, stating that fantasy draws its plausibility standards from observations of current life (Russ 1995:4). Science fiction literature originated in the […]
Read moreAlthough there may be shared characteristics, the divergence between PPT found in Tropical Monsoon Climates (e.g. India) and Cool Temperate Western Maritime Climates (such as the United Kingdom) can have substantial implications. “Monsoon” derives from Arabic and pertains to a “season”, where wind movements have a significant impact on this climate by causing considerable shifts […]
Read moreIn the articles, “Does the internet make you smarter” by Clay Shirky supporter of literacy by internet and, “Does the internet make you dumber”, by Nicholas Carr unsupporter of literacy by internet, portrays that each article have different points of views regarding the internet making us smarter or dumber. Clay Shirky uses more historical examples […]
Read moreIn this essay I will compare the similarities and contrast the differences between two crime film openings. I will be comparing ‘Sin City’ and ‘The Bone Collector’. I will analyse the two film openings and see how they establish their own crime film genre. Genre is a way of categorising a film. From genre, producers […]
Read moreSleepy Hollow and Edward Scissor Hands are both created by director Tim Burton, who has recently directed the film Big Fish. The two films were made back in the last millennium, Edward Scissor Hands in 1990 and Sleepy Hollow in 1999. Both films include the girls favourite Mr.Johnny Depp, also Sleepy Hollow includes the legends […]
Read moreThe idiom, “Comparing apples and oranges” has been implemented for a prolonged amount of time in order to convey a vast difference between two things. When the phrase is used it provokes the thought that the items are incomparable and as a result, ridiculous to compare. As an idiom it’s meaning is immediately apparent, but […]
Read moreCompare and contrast ‘the day the lady died’ by Frank O’ Hara with ‘Mid-term break’ by Seamus Heaney. How do the poets deal with the experience of death and grief in two very different circumstances and culture? In this essay I am going to compare and contrast two poems. One is ‘The Day The Lady […]
Read moreI have chosen to compare The Red Room by H. G. Wells and The Monkeys Paw written by W. W. Jacobs. In The Red Room, there isn’t a ghost but it’s about a man who is overwhelmed with fear when he spends a night in a haunted room. There isn’t a ghost in The Monkeys […]
Read morePenelope Lively and H. G. Wells both wrote stories with large similarities even though they were written in completely different eras. The two main characters in ‘The Red Room’ and ‘The Darkness Out There’ stories both go on stories of self-discovery and realization, although they are placed in different situations. Lively creates a character called […]
Read moreAlthough both these stories are based around the theme of fear, the types of fear that the characters in each story experience are quite different.’The Whole Town Is Sleeping’ is the more modern of the two stories. It was written in 1950, just after the Second World War and at the beginning of the Cold […]
Read moreBoth ‘The Red Room’ and ‘Examination Day’ share similarities and differences. They both incorporate suspense, but differ in terms of their time period. ‘The Red Room’, set and written in the late 19th Century, exhibits clues to its era through the use of words like ‘askance’ and ‘apoplexy’, suggesting Victorian influence. Moreover, the author opts […]
Read more‘The Red Room’ by HG Wells and ‘Farthing House’ by Susan Hill explore themes of fear and the supernatural. ‘The Red Room’ was written in pre twentieth Century, when there were no televisions, so books and newspapers were the most common forms of entertainment. ‘The Red Room’ involves a young, sceptical twenty-eight year old man […]
Read moreBoth ‘The red room’ by H. G. Wells and ‘Farthing house’ by Susan Hill are examples of ghost stories. But what makes a ghost story? Obviously, there has to be some sort of ghost whether it be literally a ghost or someone’s imagination, it doesn’t matter as long as there is some sort of suspense […]
Read moreIn this essay, I will be comparing a pre-20th Century novel, “The Time Machine” by H.G. Wells, and a 20th Century novel, “A Sound of Thunder” by Ray Bradbury. Both novels fit into the Science Fiction genre and both look at the effects man’s ignorance and ignorant intervention could have on the future. Science Fiction […]
Read moreAmong the many artistic works that have been inspired by the dramatic historical event of The Charge of the Light Brigade, two notable examples are Alfred Lord Tennyson’s 1854 poem and Tony Harrison’s 1968 film. Despite some differences in their attitudes towards soldiers and officers, levels of emotion, and attention to detail, both the poem […]
Read moreFor 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 […]
Read moreLatern Yard and Ravloe were two different towns, religiously and socially. People in Latern Yard were more religious and less friendly, but in the other hand Ravloe was less Religious but friendly. In Latern Yard the church played an important part in the people’s life, it was like the heart of the town. Silas had […]
Read moreThe story of The Merchant Of Venice looks at very typical attitudes of the day on many subjects such as the treatment of Jews and the way women should have acted towards men (mainly their fathers and husbands). After studying the Merchant Of Venice I have decided to discuss weather Shakespeare’s three women characters are […]
Read moreIn ‘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 […]
Read moreOver hundreds of years, the views of poets have varied. There has always been the desire for physical love, but also there has always been the traditional idea of purity. Nowadays though there are fewer ‘everlasting loving’ poems and more ‘Carpe Diem’ based. This is a sign of a change in the world and the […]
Read more