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Poems
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Poetry is one of the oldest and most studied forms of literary expression, making it a central subject across English literature, humanities, and arts courses at every level. Students write about poems to develop close reading skills, engage with questions of form and meaning, and understand how compressed language can carry profound emotional and philosophical weight. The works and poets that appear most frequently in this area — including Robert Frost, Langston Hughes, Walt Whitman, Charles Bukowski, Isaac Rosenberg, Arthur Hugh Clough, Herrick, and Marvell — represent a wide historical range, giving essays rich material for examining how poetry responds to its cultural moment.

The papers collected here take several distinct approaches. Comparative analysis is especially common, placing two poems or poets side by side to examine shared themes such as death, nature, race, or war. Other essays focus on a single poet's body of work, tracing pessimism, nationalism, or the relationship between narrator and reader across multiple pieces. Formalist explications — working line by line through structure, imagery, and tone — also appear frequently, as do essays that apply broader critical frameworks such as the Apollonian and Dionysian myth to interpret poetic meaning and argue for a specific reading of a speaker or author's intent.

A strong essay on poetry begins with a precise, arguable thesis about what a poem does and how it achieves that effect. Evidence should be drawn directly from the text — specific lines, word choices, and structural decisions — rather than broad generalizations about the poet's life. The most common pitfall is summarizing a poem's content instead of analyzing its craft; every claim about meaning should be anchored to the language on the page.

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Paper Undergraduate
Raven an Explication of Edgar
An Explication of Edgar Allen Poe's "The Raven"
Paper Doctorate
Robert Frost Speaker/Persona Poems. Comparing Poems \"Stopping
Robert Frost's lyric poetry depends upon a first-person voice which maintains a consistency of tone even as the lyrics strain to push the concrete details of the verse into a kind of symbolically universal significance.
Paper Undergraduate
Shakes Poems Irony and Juxtaposition
Irony and Juxtaposition in the Works of William Shakespeare
Paper Undergraduate
Poets and their literary contributions
¶ … Power of Symbolism Explored in the Works of Plath, Bishop, and Parker
Paper Doctorate
Close reading and explication of poetry with interpretive analysis
Sylvia Plath's "Daddy," written on October 12, 1962 and posthumously published in 1965's Ariel, is one of the author's most well-known poems, though it may be considered one of her most controversial.
Paper Doctorate
Autonomy Metaphor: Men as Leaves
The concept of Autonomy in "Paradise Lost"
Paper Doctorate
Thomas Hardy / Elizabeth Barrett Browning Considered
Thomas Hardy / Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Research Paper Undergraduate
Madness Depicted in Poe Stories
Madness always makes an appearance in Edgar Allan Poe storiesand what makes the madness especially interesting is the fact that it is always associated with some flaw in the personality.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Poetry analysis and interpretation
¶ … Bradstreet's "To My Dear and Loving Husband" and Browning's "How Do I Love Thee"
Paper Doctorate
Uncontrollable Urge: The Effect of the Imp
An analysis of Edgar Allan Poe's writing style through the short stories of "The Imp of the Perverse," "The Tell-Tale Heart," and "The Black Cat." Analysis includes the relationship between the imp of the perverse and how it manifests terror and horror within the narrator. Differences between terror and horror are also defined to distinguish between the two concepts and the effects that they have on an individual.