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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
Passionate Shepherd to His Love
This paper analyzes a pair of poems. The pair analyzed is The Passionate Shepherd to his Love by Christopher Marlowe and The Nymph's Reply to the Shepherd by Sir Walter Raleigh. The second poem is a direct response to the latter, and the two are compared in terms of their metaphors, messages, narrations, and forms.
Paper Undergraduate
Christopher Marlowe\'s Short Lyric \"The Passionate Shepherd
Christopher Marlowe's short lyric "The Passionate Shepherd to His Love" has exercised an influence on English verse which hardly seems indicated by the limpid faux-naif quality of the poem itself, written in simple…
Research Paper Doctorate
Hemingway and Eliot: Modernism in American Literature
Modernism in Literature: Comparative Analysis of the works of Ernest Hemingway and T.S. Eliot
Research Paper Doctorate
Dickinson in the Chapter Introduction
In the chapter introduction to Dickinson: The Poet's Voice (pp. 321- 327), the author focuses on three key areas distinct to Emily Dickinson's work: her personal voice, the poet as a person, and Dickinson's commitment,…
Research Paper Masters
Light and Acceptance: Dickinson and Thomas on Death
There are a number of points of comparison that exist between Emily Dickinson's "Because I Could Not Stop For Death" and Dylan Thomas' "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night." Both of these poems are highly similar in…
Paper Doctorate
Selected readings and course materials
This essay responds to a set of thirteen separate readings on American literature, including works by Jonathan Edwards, Ben Franklin, Washington Irving, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Philip Freneau, Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson. It also includes two five-hundred-word essays, one about Nathaniel Hawthorne's story "Young Goodman Brown" and the other about Washington Irving's story "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow". In all cases, historical information about the period of American history before the Civil War is adduced to help interpret the literary works.
Paper Doctorate
Romanticism No Other Period in English Literature
No other period in English literature displays more variety in style, theme, and content than the Romantic Movement of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Furthermore, no period has been the topic of so much disagreement and confusion over its defining principles and aesthetics. Romanticism is often described as a large network of sometimes competing philosophies, agendas, and points of interest. These philosophies are often very contentious and controversial, as is the case with Walt Whitman. In England, Romanticism had its greatest influence from the end of the eighteenth century up through about 1870. Its primary vehicle of expression was in poetry, although novelists adopted many of the same themes. In America, the Romantic Movement was slightly delayed and modulated.
Paper Doctorate
Wartime journeys and character analysis in Homer and Shakespeare
This paper examines several wartime poems and texts and evaluates whether the author is a pilgrim of a tourist. For the purposes of this paper, "pilgrim" refers to a spiritual journey of solidarity, valuing the journey as much as the arrival. Meanwhile, the "tourist" undergoes a more external, individual journey.
Research Paper Doctorate
Old French language history and characteristics
¶ … Old French Before and After the Oaths of Strasbourg
Paper Doctorate
William Wordsworth: A Wordsmith for All Time
This paper will focus on some of the important events in Wordsworth's life as well as analyze two of his works, The World is Too Much with Us (1807) and It is a beauteous evening, calm and free (1807). Furthermore, the paper will examine Woodworth's reputation over time before the conclusion.