Results for Ariel by Sylvia Plath
- Romanticism: The Dark and the Traditional -
...line Usher, is dying of a terrible disease and will be leaving him all alone, since he is the last of the bloodline. His sadness and Madeline’s illness have made the atmosphere of the house extremely dark and gloomy. The... - Daddy -
Sylvia Plath’s “Daddy” is a confession of her true feelings concerning her deceased father. Her hatred for him is woven throughout this poem, which are easily translated by the reader. The author begin the work by expressing ... - "Daddy" By Sylvia Plath -
... her father. She says “I thought even the bones would do”. This poems seems more of an emotional declaration of independence, which she accomplishes as the end of the poem to the male figures in her life.
... - Critical Essay on The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath -
...st honors in 1955 and went on
to Newnham College, Cambridge, in England on a Fulbright fellowship. The next year
she married the English poet Ted Hughes and taught for two years as an English
instructor at Smith College... - Intensity by Dean Koontz -
.... Later in this story Chyna finally gets out of the handcuffs late one night when this man leaves her and Ariel for the evening. Chyna has not yet met Ariel and once she gets free, she frees Ariel. After she frees Ariel... - anger-- Its power -
...girl who is on an outing with the neighborhood children. Miss Moore, a lady who feels that it is her duty to teach the kids lessons, takes the children to a ritzy department store. It is here that Sylvia becomes infuriated... - Loyalty to Nature in White Heron -
In The White Heron, a short story written by Sarah Orne Jewett, Sylvia, a young quiet girl, living with her grandmother on a farm, Symbolizes the meaning of loyalty and love for nature through her many actions, d... - "Mirror" by Sylvia Plath -
...el, only truthful"
A mirror, standing in one corner reflecting what it see's. No lies or trickery or preconceptions. This is explaining what the mirror does and explains it in first person.
"I think it is a part of m... - ANALYSIS OF YELLOW WALL PAPER AND WHITE HERON -
... in the society. “The enemy had discovered her …” (133) Sylvia defines the hunter as enemy, the reason is that I think Sylvia does not trust men. As she had come from a town she had got used t... - 'Mushrooms' by Sylvia Plath -
...ely ignored and exploited.
The opening of the poem emphasises the sense of a ‘quiet’ revolution occurring – one from within society rather than an assault from without. The pulsing rhythm of the poem, rigidly control... - Characters or individuals that drew your interest -
...lly of her daughter. Sylvia was interesting because her actions were cruel and non-material especially when making her daughter obese.
She appealed to the reader's imagination and emotions. her 'force-feeding Daphne to ... - City Verses Country in A White Heron -
...chooses to keep the birds secret, and accepts the heartache for letting the boy go.
The country is portrayed as a nice quiet and peaceful place. The woods are filled with vast amounts of trees, flora, birds, and other... - ‘The Thought-Fox’ -
‘The Thought-Fox’ is, for many readers, especially young readers, their favourite Hughes poem. The mere glance I gave the poem in The Art of Ted Hughes is completely inadequate. There was even less excuse for neglecting the... - Mirror's Truth -
... In the first nine lines, the mirror describes itself and what it does. In the second half of the poem, the mirror is still talking, but starts comparing itself to other things. Overall the poem uses devices to show that... - Hawk Roosting -
The poem, “Hawk Roosting”, by Ted Hughes is more than a poem about a bird of prey; it is a poem by a bird of prey – a cool chant of confidence by an animal that has no serious competitors and literally has the world at its fe... - “The Lesson Sylvia Learns” -
...chwarz toy store, to teach them a lesson and inspire them to strive for success and attempt to better themselves and their situations.
Douglas 2
At the beginning of the story, the author gives us the feeling that a c... - Differences between Tow Mothers -
.... A good example of this is found in the passage, “Sylvia was intricately cheerful. Each day she urged him to go out with her somewhere—to the library, or the little museum with the dinosaur replicas he’d been found of as ... - the tempest -
...ell your piteous heart there’s no harm done." His main servant is called Ariel he is a spirit and not a human i will get to him later. Prospero's other servant is Caliban he was born on the island and was on the island w... - Sylvia Plath -
...can’t. When she looks at the picture she is reminded of the pain she is bringing them by being in the hospital. She then writes “I didn’t want any flowers, I only wanted to lie with my hands turned up and be utterly empt... - Social Stratification in Gosford Park -
...fferent. Not much is expected of the individual and if they do work their way up through the ranks than they are still held in low regard by there “peers.” This was of course seen in the way the members of the party that c...