"ENGLISH POETRY" Term Paper Section |
| 1. | ANTHROPOLOGY |
| 2. | ARCHITECTURE |
| 3. | ART |
| 4. | BLACK STUDIES |
| 5. | BUSINESS
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| 6. | CRIMINOLOGY
AND LAW |
| 7. | ECONOMY |
| 8. | EDUCATION |
| 10. | HISTORY |
| 11. | JOURNALISM |
| 12. | LABOR |
| 13. | LINGUISTICS |
| 14. | LITERATURE |
| 15. | MEDIA |
| 16. | MEDICINE AND HEALTH CARE |
| 17. | MUSIC |
| 18. | PHILOSOPHY |
| 19. | POLITICAL SCIENCE |
| 20. | PSYCHOLOGY |
| 21. | RELIGION |
| 22. | SOCIOLOGY |
| 23. | SCIENCE |
| 24. | WOMEN STUDIES |
| 25. | AREA STUDIES |
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| "ENGLISH POETRY" TERM PAPERS |
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Academic Term Papers Catalog 14G. ENGLISH POETRYHOW TO INTERPRET THE CATALOG ENTRIES:
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| 02574. IMAGES AND THEMES BY ROSAMUND TUVE. A review of a scholarly study of poetry, with the emphasis on Tuve's consideration of Milton and his work. 4p., 0f., 0b. | $28 |
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| 02571. THE UNDERWORLD IN SPENSCR. An examination of thc conception of thc underworld found in Books I, II VI of "The Fairie Queene", comparing it to Dante's inferno and citing thc struggle of virtue with evil. 5p., 0f., 0b. | $35 |
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| 02503. LIBRARY SERVICE IN MICHIGAN. Good detailed study of a social institution, including history, organization of libraries cost, who uses them. Statistics could use update. 8p.; 6f.; 7b. | $56 |
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| 02498. A RESEARCH DESIGN FOR THE USE OF ISOLATION IN THE TREATMENT OF DELINQUENCY. Good design of an experiment to be carried out at a youth institution, using "isolation rooms" no as punishment (as is usual) but as "time-out" or "Neutral" spaces from ongoing therapy. 15p. 4f. 4b. tables. | $105 |
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| 02484. BLACK CHILDREN IN WHITE INSTITUTIONS. Good presentation of the case that Black children are forced to do more poorly in school by subtle institutional bias in white-dominated educational systems. 14p.; 34f.; 21b. | $98 |
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| 02469. DORNE'S "SONNCT 51." A careful consideration of rcligious imagery, connotations and nuances of meaning in Love Sonnet 51 "Twickham Garden". 6p., 0f., 0b. | $42 |
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| 02468. THE DOCTRINE OF SUNYATA AND ITS RELATION TO BUDDHIST PHILOSOPHY. Sophisticated and very subtle examination of the relationships of phemonenal world and theoretical Reality in the doctrines of Buddhist teacher Nagarjuna; how nothingness becomes a tool for grasping the oneness of the Absolute. 12p., 7f., 4b. | $84 |
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| 02222. T. S. ELIOT AND THOMAS HARDY. Recurring themes in the works of two writers are pointed out; futility and borcdom in Eliot, and barrenness in Hardy are analyzcd as themes. More on Eliot than Hardy. 5p., 0f., 0b. | $35 |
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| 02196. THE PSYCHEDELIC EXPERIENCE IN LITERATURE. Elements of mysticism in the works of Coleridge, Shelley, Blake and Hesse are related to the modern psychedelic experience, and compared to the mystical beliefs of Indian religion. 8p., 11f., 8b. | $56 |
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| 02191. THE LOVE POETRY OF DONNE. The themes of tenderness and pain in the love poetry of John Donne are analyzcd, and the early cynicism contrastcd with his later emphasis on joy in the love of his wife. 8p., 0f., 7b. | $56 |
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| 02188. MILTON'S CONCEPT OF FREEDOM. The responsibilities and perils of freedom in Milton's work, concentrating on the theme in "Areopagicita," "Paradise Lost," and "Samson Agonistes." 6p. 0f. 0b. | $42 |
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| 02179. THOM GUNN: BRITAIN'S GRCATEST EXPORT SINCE AUDEN. A look at the life and work of the modern English poet, studying his socio-critical views and calling him "Britain's greatcst export since Auden." 6p., 0f., 0b. | $42 |
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| 02177. THE POEMS OF ROBERT FROST. Three poems by Frost are analyzed; "Mending Wall", "Acquaintance With the Night", and "Happiness Makes Up in Height for What It Lacks in Length" are looked at for elements of humor and seriousness. 7p., 3f., 5b. Poems attached. | $49 |
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| 02173. POUND, ELIOT AND E. E. CUMMINGS. Three modern poets are viewed in terms of the relationship of their works to their treatmcnt of war and the social malaise is considered. 6p., 0f., 0b. | $42 |
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| 02172. T. S. ELIOT'S "THE WASTCLAND." A study of the imagery and prosody in the twentieth century masterpiece with notcs on Eliot's rhythms and his occult symbolism. 7p., 0f., 5b. | $49 |
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| 02165. THE POETRY OF COLERIDGE. A brief examination of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poetry in relation to his life and his literary associations; symbols of Christ in his work are discusscd. 6p., 0f., 0b. | $42 |
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| 02163. THE CANTERBURY TALES. A discussion of the formal structure of rich characterizations of Chaucer's classic with a full analysis of "The Miller's Tale" and "Thb Knight's Tale" with regard to their treatment of love and chivalry. 16p., 5f., 3b. | $112 |
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| 01863. THE RED CROSSE KNIGHT'S ENCOUNTER WITH DESPAIRE IN "THC FAERIE QUEENE." A brief discussion of the allegory of despair found in CantoIX# of Spenser's epic, contrasting with Una. 5p., 0f., 0b. | $35 |
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| 01852. SHELLEY'S VIEW OF POETRY AND THE POET. A comprehensive discussion of Shelley s conception of art and tec poet's role, with an examination of Browning's "Essay on Percy Blythe Shelley" and Shelley's "Defense of Poetry", "Adonis", "The Triumph of Life" and "Epipsychidion" are analyzed. 10p., 0p., 0b. | $70 |
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| 01830. JOHN DONNE'S ACHIEVEMENT. A look at the innovations of the metaphysical poet, with emphasis on his conceits, rhythms, and spiritual qualitics. 4p., 0f., 0b. | $28 |
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| 01811. LOVE PHYSICAL AND DIVINE. The images of love in the poetry of Michelangelo and that of John Donne are compared; light and fire as symbols of love are found in the work of each. 5p., 0f., 0b. | $35 |
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| 01728. WORDSWORTH'S "TINTERN ABBEY." A line-by-line discussion of one of thc earliest and most important romantic poems; Wordsworth's joy in the contemplation or nature, as well as his philosophical perspective, is discussed at length. 9p., 0f., 0b. | $63 |
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| 01378. T. S. ELIOT. A comprehensive account of the poetic theories and writings of T. S. Eliot; Eliot's critical writings as well as his poems are considered, and a thorough analysis of the "Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" is offered. 20 pages, 17 footnotes, 10 bibliographic sources. 4,683 words. | $133 |
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| 01296. ELEMENTS IN THE DRAMA OF CHEKHOV, SHAW AND BRECHT. Three modern playwrights are examined in depth; particular consideration is given their talents in organizing space and time into scenic staging. Chekhov is seen as the master of stagecraft, Shaw as the theatrical philosopher, and Brecht as the revolutionary theoreticician of modern theater. 20p., 9f., 6b. | $133 |
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| 01286. YEATS' ROSE: A VISION MADE PERFECT. The metaphor of the rose as the ideal of supreme beauty is given a thorough consideration, and its use in the early poetry of William Butler Yeats is detailcd. The variety of Yeats' sources, including the pre-Raphaelites and the Rosicrucians, is revealed, and a number of individual poems examined. 17p., 32f., 6b. | $119 |
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| 01283. SHELLEY'S "THE SENSITIVE PLANT." The romantic poem comparing the poet to the work of nature, and studying the metaphor of the garden and the plant, is analyzed here. 4p., 0f., 0b. | $28 |
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| 01222. THE INTELLECTUAL YEATS. The thought of the modern Irish poet is considered as intellectual rather than mystical; even his romantic poetry is felt to be analytical and based on ideas rather than images. 8p.. 0f.. 0b. | $56 |
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| 01142. RICHARD CRENSHAW'S "MUSIC'S DUEL." An Elizabethan poet and his musical "Duel" between voice and lute are related to the Renaissance concepts of art and nature. 5p., 0f., 0b. | $35 |
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| 01132. "BALLAD OF THE LONG-LEGGED BAIT," BY DYLAN THOMAS. A lyric by the Welsh poet is studied for its sexual and procreative metaphors. 3p., 0f., 0b. | $21 |
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| 00972. A CHARACTER STUDY OF BYRON'S DON JUAN. A brief look at the characterization of the famous lover and demonic soul in Byron's poem, comparing him to Alcibiades and Faust. 3p., 0f., 0b. | $21 |
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| 00946. T. S. ELIOT'S "THE WASTELAND." The complexities of Eliot's poem are considered, with the emphasis on its commentary on our civilization. 4p., 0f., 0b. | $28 |
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| 00908. ON "THE FAERIE QUEENE," BOOK I, 48-49. Two stanzas from Spenser's epic are analyzed for their symbols and their personification of human emotions. Classical mythology and medieval allegory are seen as mixed. 4p., 0f., 0b. | $28 |
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| 00897. "THE LOVE SONG OF J. ALFRED FRUFROCK." The bitterly satirical T. S. Eliot poem is considered as a voyage of self-discovery. Prufrock is finally deemed to be a tragic character. 6p., 0f., 0b. | $42 |
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| 00889. COMPARING YUAN CHIEH WITH EZRA POUND. An eighth century Chinese poet is compared with a noted twentieth century poet and interpreter of poetry; "Stone Fish Lake" and "Civilization" by Chieh and "Salutation" and "Salutation the Second" by Pound are considered as appeals to the simple life. 6p., 0f., 2b. | $42 |
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| 00821. CHAUCER'S CANTERBURY TALES. A brief essay on the narrative devices and folk themes of the fourteenth century masterpiece.4p., 0f., 0b. | $28 |
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| 00763. D. H. LAWRENCE'S "THE ELEPHANT IS SLOW TO MATE." The Lawrence poem is considered as an allegory of desire, and the sex impulse in elephants and humans contrasted in gentleness and patience. 5p., 0f., 0b. | $35 |
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| 00757. JOHN DONNE'S "THE RELIC." The metaphor of love and the guardian angel is considered in terms of the corruptibility of the body and the permanence of the relic. 4p., 0f., 0b. | $28 |
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| 00753A. ELEMENTS OF JESUS IN "THE ANCIENT MARINER." The Coleridge poem is examined for its analogy of the Mariner with Jesus, with a step-by-step analysis of the crucifixion metaphor. Page notations in text. 5p., 0f., 0b. | $35 |
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| 00753B. THE ANCIENT MARINER AS CHRIST. Another view of the metaphor of the Mariner as Christ in "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" by S. T. Coleridge. 4p., 0f., 0b. | $28 |
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| 00752. A COMPARISON OF W. B. YEATS AND BOB DYLAN. Sailing to Byzantium" and "Byzantium" by Yeats, and "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "Gates of Eden" are compared as poems of the voyage to paradise; imagination and the human condition in each are characterized. 7p., 0f., 0b. | $49 |
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| 00669. IN IMITATION OF OLIVER GOLDSMITH. A poem entitled "The Cities of the Lost" comments on our contemporary culture in the style of Goldsmith. 4p., 0f., 0b. | $28 |
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| 00473. "THE RUBAIYAT OF OMAR KHAYAN" AND "IN MEMORIAN A. H. H." Edward Fitzgerald's rendering of the Rubaiyat is compared for tone and philosophy with Tennyson's memorial elegy for his friend. 4p., 0f., 0b. | $28 |
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| 00365. AN EXTENDED ANALYSIS OF JOHN KEATS' "ODE ON MELANCHOLY." Keats' poem is analyzed for poetic technique and tone, and his thoughts on beauty and sadness over its end are spelled out. 4p., 0f., 0b. | $28 |
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| 00273. THE CONCEPT OF LOVE IN DONNE AND CUMMINGS. The poems "Valediction Forbidding Mourning" by Donne and "When What Hugs Stopping Earth" are compared in their treatment of the themes of love and death. 7p., 0f., 0b. Includes texts of poems. | $49 |
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| 00263. RELATING KEATS AND SHELLEY. The two poets are seen as examples of Romantic striving, and contrasted with Browning and Tennyson. 3p., 0f., 0b. | $21 |
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| 00197. "PIANO" BY D. H. LAWRENCE. A brief analysis of Lawrence's poem about the longing for a childhood past; themes and imagery are discussed, and the poem is criticized for traces of sentimentality and cliches. 3p., 1f., 1b. | $21 |
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| 00193. "THE FAULTLESS PAINTER" BY ROBERT BROWNING. The monologue of Andrea del Sarto is considered from the viewpoint of Empson's definition of irony; a good study of the artistic conscience. 5p., 1f., 3b. | $35 |
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| 00143. "PORPHYRIA'S LOVER" BY ROBERT BROWNING. The development of the dramatic monologue and the symbolic meaning of the lover are examined. 3p., 0f., 0b. | $21 |
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| 00065. "THE SUN RISING" BY JOHN DONNE. Donne's use of figurative language in this love poem is analyzed, and his personification of the sun studied. 4p., 0f., 0b. | $28 |
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| 53814. VIRGINIA WOOLF: THE LADY WRITER. The English feminists views on the subject of women in fiction, as expounded in her speeches and the study, "A Room of One's Own" are examined in this essay. The history of English women writers, such as Bronte, Eliot, and Godwin, is treated as an exception to the rule rather than as evidence of freedom for women in Victorian times. lOp., 6f., lib. | $70 |
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| 53801. THE BIRTHDAY PARTY BY HAROLD PINTER. Pinter's intent in writing a play based upon absurd characters and actions is considered; the roles of the commonplace in the theatre of the absurd and the function of the leading players is examined. 7p., 0f., 0b., | $49 |
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| 53321. THE DEVELOPMENT OF CHARACTER IN "TROILUS AND CRISEYDE." Chaucer's poem is given a complete analysis in terms of the characters and their development throughout the work. Pandarus is seen as a busybody go-between, Troilus as the love-smitten knight, and Criseyde as the virtuous but realistic maiden. 20p., 24f., 7b. | $133 |
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| 52623. THE MEANING OF PITY IN CHAUCER'S "TROILUS AND CRISEYDE." A thorough exposition of the philosophical and historical background to Chaucer's work, citing debts to Boccaccio, Boethius, and others; the etymology and larger significance of pity (piety) are considered in relation to the work as a whole. 11p., 11f., 8b. | $77 |
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| 52150. THE LIFE AND THOUGHTS OF RUDYARD KIPLING. A good biographical study of the Anglo-Indian poet and novelist, examining his attitudes toward colonialism and viewing his literary output as the product of his personal experiences in a varied life. 6p., 6f., 4b. | $42 |
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| 52097. RELIGION IN THE SECULAR POETRY OF JOHN DONNE. A thorough analysis of the religious elements in Donne's poetry, with an emphasis on the motifs of love, life and death. The sacralized aspect of love is examined particularly. 10p., 22f., 6b. | $70 |
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| 51839. WORDSWORTH AND NATURE. The Romantic poet's concept and treatment of nature are reviewed, and the vision of nature in "Tintern Abbey", "Prelude", "Night-Piece" and other poems compared. 6p., 0f., 0b. | $42 |
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| 51807. "THE WILD SWANS AT COOLE," BY WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS. The symbolism of the swan in Yeats' lyric is examined, and the comparison to the poet and his waning strength made. 3p., 3f., 1b. | $21 |
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| 51658. OSCAR WILDE'S "PANTHEA" IN RELATION TO ANATOMY OF CRITICISM. An analysis of Wilde's poem in terms of Northrop Frye's experiential viewpoint of literature; content and form, Christian and Classical allusions, and pantheistic thought are examined in the poem. 6p., 0f., 0b. | $42 |
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| 16156. MUSIC METAPHORS IN MILTON'S L'ALLEGRO AND IL PENSEROSO. An analysis of Milton's keen sense of musical language and metaphor in two of his lyric poems. Thc effects of musical sound are seen as symphonic and many-levelled in their construction, bringing music and poetry together in an elaborate synthesis. 15p., 38f., 7b. | $105 |
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| 16148. TWO STANZAS FROM "THE FAERIE QUEENE." Cantos 48 and 49 of Book I of thc Spenser epic are considered for allegorical and chivalric interpretations; classical and romantic mythology are seen as blendcd in Spenser's work. 7p., 0f., 0b. | $49 |
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