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Kathryn Keats, lived in virtual hiding from a former live-in lover for fifteen years. This man, suffered with the insidious disease known as Schizophrenia. For years, he mentally, physically, ritualistically and emotionally abused Kathryn.
By Todd Matthews | Published 1/19/2008
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Keats Boyd wants to become the first seven year old to scale this dangerous dormant volcano for charity.
By DrD | Published 1/3/2008
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Both Keats' "The Eve of St. Agnes" and Coleridge's "Christabel" use gothic elements to enhance the ominous mood set forth by both authors, but the similarity between them ends at the point where both Keats and Coleridge engage these elements for their specific purposes.
By Timothy Sexton | Published 12/31/2007
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John Keats' "Ode on a Grecian Urn" speaks volumes about not just humanity but about the timeless nature of art itself. In fact, it can be said that Ode on a Grecian Urn is a beautiful time capsule of and for humanity.
By Joshua McMorrow-Hernandez | Published 12/22/2007
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An essay designed to build a bridge between two of Keats' works, "Ode On Melancholy" and "To Autumn", by establishing their interdependence on one another.
By Adam Michael Luebke | Published 12/14/2007
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Senior-level essay on poet John Keats's "Ode on a Grecian Urn".
By Tammy G | Published 4/30/2007
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Essay about the poem "To Autumn," by John Keats
By Tammy G | Published 4/30/2007
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John Keats, aside from being a ground-breaking poet, helped to reinvent the concept of imagination.
By Mark Maier | Published 10/23/2006
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John Keats had a sense of urgency in his work due to his tragic awareness of death. His poem, "Sleep and Poetry", helps explain his fascination with finding extreme beauty while one still can.
By Tyler Howard | Published 5/26/2006
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In John Keats' poem "This living hand, now warm and capable" he is contemplating on the integral part of literature, the relationship between the writer and reader. This is the basis of literature's appeal: the grasping for expression and understanding.
By Nicole Beck | Published 12/14/2005
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For many romantic writers, imagination is creation. Samuel Taylor Coleridge and John Keats shared romantic concepts of imagination, which they creatively expressed through their writing and poems.
By WKS | Published 11/15/2005
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The Human Experience Through William Blake's "The Divine Image" and John Keats's "Ode on Melancholy"
Literature of the Romantic period emphasized the reality of humanity. Although life is full of pain and death, it is the experience of life that makes it the beautiful thing that it is.
By ACfan | Published 10/23/2006
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St Agnes, a Christian maiden of Roman birth, was martyred at the age of thirteen (304A.D.) for refusing to marry a heathen. She is the patron of virgins. Keats' poem The Eve of St Agnes is based on a medieval folklore
By Bhaskar Banerjee | Published 9/6/2007
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Teaching Science to children can be both fun and rewarding. Books can make learning even more fun, as well as enriching. As a parent, nanny, and student of early childhood education, I have come across many different children's books.
By Momie Tullottes | Published 7/24/2007
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The works of Wordsworth are as ground-breaking as they are numerous. He goes so far as to defy, though subtly, the dogmas of the Christian faith and assert that one's own mind plays as much of a role in creating all that one sees as ever could some all-powerful deity.
By Matt Dubois | Published 6/14/2007
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The Melancholy Beauty of Shakespeare's Worlds: The Mind of the Greatest Writer in English Literature
A delve into the melancholy mind of the greatest writer in English Literature.
By Taylor Sharpe | Published 6/11/2007
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Beauty is an idea, not an aspect of reality. Because this idea favors some people and not others, beauty creates separateness, relies on separateness, values separateness, and because of this, creates a binary that overrides the complexities of humanity.
By David Merriman | Published 6/1/2007
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Hoaxes and pranks perpetuated on Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates
By Elliot Feldman | Published 5/24/2007
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For The Love of Letters by Samara O'Shea is a guide to writing letters for most occasions and a brief history of letter writing through the ages.
By Desire' M. Hendricks | Published 5/15/2007
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About Brian Jones, one of the original Rolling Stones, who died under mysterious circumstances.
By Elliot Feldman | Published 5/14/2007
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In England, in the year 1848, 7 avante garde artists that all shared a unique vision formed one of the greatest movements in art history known as the Pre-Raphaelite movement.
By Kristine Doherty | Published 5/8/2007
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During my 35 year career as a structural engineer (I am now retired), I prided myself in knowing a little bit about everything. Of course, that necessarily meant that I did not very much about anything in particular.
By Firoze Hirjikaka | Published 5/4/2007
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A brief history on opium culture and British literature in the nineteenth century.
By Erica Forish | Published 5/3/2007
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Everybody fails at something sometime. We all have an opportunity to learn from our own failures and from those of others. Here are some of the best quotes on failure...
By Susan300 | Published 4/30/2007
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âThe sites main function is to "feed" the passion within
us all, all of us who love poetry.â
By Nicole Hester Francis | Published 4/27/2007
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All poets are crazy, even when they are intelligent. But lots of poets are not intelligent at all; all they know how to do is bleed emotions.
By Brant McLaughlin | Published 4/13/2007
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An overview of Strategic Management strategies and their usefulness in gaining a competitive advantage in the marketplace.
By Julie Hancock | Published 4/9/2007
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Hallucinogenics have been around, in one form or another, for millenia. They've enabled imbibers to enter into the world of the mystic - but only for brief visits.
By Seth Mullins | Published 4/2/2007
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This paper explores the specific roles that day and night, play in Fitzgerald's classic novel Tender is the Night. The major themes of consumerism, war and societal standards are discussed.
By Jessica Lemp | Published 3/28/2007
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Essay analyzes what it means to be human according to Amy Lowell's poem, "The Letter", "Yesterday" by W.S. Merwin, Christopher Sousa in "Come Live with Me and Be My Love", and Nikki Giovanni's "Possum Crossing".
By Stephanie King | Published 1/13/2007
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He is one of the greatest legends of all time. He has influenced music for decades. He is a rock legend, folk hero, gifted and talented musical genius, innovator and an inspiration to us all. He is Bob Dylan.
By Renee Morway | Published 12/4/2006
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I have always liked to stroll through the forests and meet fairies and elves. This story is a reflection of my wish !!
By Kalai Selvi Arivalagan | Published 11/2/2006
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Reading is my greatest passion in life and the more books I read, the more I have to buy.
By Empress Cindy | Published 10/22/2006
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Books are Christmas gifts that will often last long after toys are broken or discarded. Here are books that children will love , with simple, clear messages told in an entertaining way and with child-friendly, eye-catching illustrations.
By Rhetta Akamatsu | Published 10/18/2006
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An analysis of the author's own poem in terms of Stephen Fry's model of the English ode.
By Song Ren | Published 10/2/2006
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Whether or not you consider yourself a writer of lyric or metered poetry, an understanding of word rhythms and how they are measured can help you improve your skill and craftsmanship as a poet.
By Jolie O'Dell | Published 9/18/2006
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An essay on the significance of bird imagery in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The Sky-Lark, and Ode to a Nightingale.
By Cynthia C. Scott | Published 9/14/2006
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This paper researches the multiple areas of influence and accomplishments of William Blake.
By Michael Profumo | Published 9/12/2006
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In everyday speech, the emphasis of certain syllables can cause sentences to have a metered lilt. Read more about how poetry uses these syllables to make our language metrical.
By Jolie O'Dell | Published 9/7/2006
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The sonnet is one of poetry's most time-honored and popular forms. Shakespeare's sonnets remain some of the most-read poems in English literature. Although it is difficult to master, the sonnet is simple to comprehend.
By Jolie O'Dell | Published 9/7/2006
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Read to your child everyday and let them see you reading if you want to encourage your children to love reading. Look for popular authors to really hook your children.
By Lisa Sheppard | Published 9/5/2006
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Most Americans live in suburban sprawl. In the past 50 years nearly all new housing has been in automobile-dependent places. But a high fraction of Americans want something else. Tthe sprawl industry uses its money to keep out competition.
By Joel Hirschhorn | Published 8/15/2006
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The endurance of myths in our cultural lives.
By Cynthia C. Scott | Published 6/20/2006
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For the forty years after the Beat Generation, we've turned to singer-songwriters to provide the soundtracks to our lives. The lead singer of Coldplay? Gwyenth's hubby Chris Martin. The US Poet Laureate? Anyone?
By Candace Leigh Coulombe | Published 4/7/2006
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Focuses on love in two versions of "La Belle Dame Sans Merci" as well as "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight". Presumes that love is, and will always be, a timeless conversation.
By Lauren Reis | Published 3/13/2006
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In the poem, The Song of Wandering Aengus, one can clearly see Yeats's fascination with the occult as a way of incorporating classic pagan and Celtic myths as a means of creating an alternative reality for his own nationalistic intentions.
By Carmen Medici | Published 11/21/2005
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Beginnings of a short story about becoming a writer and such.
By Eric Santiago | Published 11/18/2005
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Finding or creating your own original wedding vows takes a little bit of thought, but they are not difficult once you know the process. This guide will help you create the most personal gift you've ever given; a committment with style.
By Lolaness | Published 7/17/2005
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This article is a raodmap to writing and self publishing a book, and discusses tips to help drive profits and avoid costly mistakes.
By Taylor | Published 3/5/2005
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Becoming a good reader will open college doors for you as if by magic. Here are some tips for getting a well rounded self-education.
By Joanne Rose | Published 2/25/2005
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