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Shelley’s Love For Nature
Love for Nature is one of the prerequisites of all the Romantics and Shelley is no exception. Love for Nature…
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Shelley: A Poet Of Love
Shelley is primarily a poet of love, as Keats is of beauty. The story of his life is, in fact,…
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Heart of Darkness: Theme of Isolation
“Heart of Darkness” has a multiplicity of themes interwoven closely and produces a unified pattern. The theme of isolation and…
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Hemingway’s Hero and Code Hero
HEMINGWAY’S HERO The Hemingway Hero is defined by a static set of characteristics. These characteristics remain essentially the same throughout…
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Hemingway: Generation Lost
Seeking the bohemian lifestyle and rejecting the values of American materialism, a number of intellectuals, poets, artists and writers fled…
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S. T. Coleridge: Function of Poetry
Coleridge poses numerous questions regarding the nature and function of poetry and then answers them. He also examines the ways…
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S. T. Coleridge: Criticism on Wordsworth’s Theory of Poetic Diction
Wordsworth and Coleridge came together early in life and mutually arose various theories which Wordsworth embodied in his “Preface to…
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T. S. Eliot’s Poetry
Eliot attributed a great deal of his early style to the French Symbolists–Rimbaud, Baudelaire, Mallarme, and Laforgue–whom he first encountered…
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Waiting For Godot: A tragi-comedy
Tragic-comedy is a play which claims a plot apt for tragedy but which ends happily like a comedy. The action…
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Structure Of “Waiting For Godot”
“Waiting for Godot” is not a play to which traditional ideas of plot, action, structure etc. do apply. To a…
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