A comparative analysis of the treatment of love in Charlotte Dacre's romantic poem "Il Trionfo del Amor" and an extract from Alfred Lord Byron's romantic poem "Don Juan" (canto I, stanzas 90-117).
Comparison Essay # 74587 |
1,450 words (
approx. 5.8 pages ) |
8 sources |
MLA | 2006
|
$ 28.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper examines how the use of the concept of love in both poems is similar in that both poems distinguish between spiritual and physical attraction while calling both 'love'. It also discusses how both poets seem to ultimately (though Dacre- explicitly and Byron - most probably unintentionally) agree that males are more inclined - by nature - to physical relations and women - to the transcendent kind of love. In other words, the separation of love and sex, commonly considered as late twentieth century obsession, originated in the Romantic era.
From the Paper
"In contrast, Charlotte Dacre's poem is only sixteen-lines long, arranged in four quatrains rhymed in a much less flamboyant abab scheme. The poem seems to be a letter/note from the author to her aspirant but uses a slightly more ornate language than Byron's. Dacre drops no name and belittles no one. No one in particular, that is: the very choice of Spanish for the title - Il Trionfo del Amor - is a very subtle way of telling all her male contemporary colleagues and readers alike, that she, too, is well learned and well read... Likewise, when she makes a direct reference to broader erudition, it is put in parenthesis and bites at the learned males and their perception of learned women. Indeed, "(So charms the witchery)", for being put in parenthesis and for insinuating she is familiar with witchery, could be read as teasing the contemporary (male) perception that "women's writing is an affront to God-given, 'natural' gender roles" (Gilroy, in Bygrave, p.183)."
Tags:amor, byron, charlotte, dacre, del, il, juan, poetry, romantic, trionfo
An analysis of the life of 19th century romantic poet, Lord Byron, and his works.
Analytical Essay # 110007 |
2,845 words (
approx. 11.4 pages ) |
8 sources |
MLA | 2008
|
$ 50.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper studies the life and the works of George Gordon Byron, better known as Lord Byron, the most celebrated and vilified romantic poet during his lifetime. The author discusses the style, context, and morale of the works of Lord Byron, particularly noting his beliefs and perceptions of politics within the British government in his 1822 masterpiece, "Sardanapalus". The paper also analyzes Lord Byron's most creative literary stigma, "Don Juan", in which Byron wittingly commented on a plethora of concerns, including liberty, tyranny, war, love, sexuality, and hypocrisy; all of which, Byron insinuates, can be found within the walls of English high society.
From the Paper
"Between the years of 1819 and 1823, Byron wrote his most famous piece, Don Juan, using the elements of comedy and satire that Beatty dignified as Byron's creative literary stigma. Through the use of various narrative perspectives, Byron wittingly commented on a plethora of concerns, including liberty, tyranny, war, love, sexuality, and hypocrisy; all of which, Byron insinuates, can be found within the walls of English high society. His use of irony and his brutally concise portrayal of human weaknesses precipitated widespread condemnation from his contemporaries, who subjected Don Juan and its author to an endless campaign of personal slander and critical abuse."
Tags:literature, poets
A discussion of darkness and light in Lord Byron's "She Walks in Beauty".
Poem Review # 103250 |
855 words (
approx. 3.4 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2008
$ 18.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper analyzes Lord Byron's poem "She Walk's in Beauty", which combines images of darkness and light to create a unique internal and external aura. The paper maintains that this aura surrounds the beautiful woman who he describes in his poem. Each one of Byron's three stanzas describes a natural, a physical and a spiritual aura which surround the woman. Byron uses images from the natural, physical and spiritual world to describe the emotions he has towards this particular woman, represented in images of both light and darkness. The paper concludes that, through his poem, Byron has combined the beauty of the natural world, the physical body and the spiritual being to create a timeless expression of love and admiration.
From the Paper
"Byron's first stanza concentrates on the natural beauty of the woman who he encounters. "She walks in beauty, like the night/ Of cloudless climes and starry skies" (Ln.1-2) .Byron has immediately introduced us to a woman whose beauty is that equal to the beauty of nature. Her beauty is represented by the darkness of night. The image of night creates an aura that surrounds her. Byron is describing how beautiful he feels the night is and that this woman represents that beauty of night within her own aura. Nature is both day and night, both dark and light. In the first stanza the images of day light and dark night both represent the woman. The lines "All that's best of dark and bright Meet in her aspect and her eyes," (Ln. 3-4) represent the combination of day and night within the woman. She is a combination of the best of the day and the best of the night. Her combination of dark and bright creates, "that tender night Which heaven to gaudy day denies" (Ln.5-6). She is not the overpowering "gaudy," brightness of day. She's the perfect combination of light and dark. Not even heaven bestows this beautiful light on the day. She is a pure, natural and heavenly creature on earth."
Tags:love, admiration, poetry, ideal, image, metaphor
A biography of the life and contributions to computer science by Ada Augusta Byron King.
Essay # 62331 |
2,101 words (
approx. 8.4 pages ) |
7 sources |
MLA | 2005
$ 39.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This biographical study examines the critical contributions to computer science by Ada Augusta Byron King, Countess of Lovelace (1815-1852). In addition to describing and analyzing Bryon's technical achievements, the study examines various personality traits and important facts from her life that demonstrate both the technical and human side of this fascinating individual, and that led to her unique contributions to the development of computers. The study also discusses the historical context in which Byron worked to show how the prevailing technological, social, and political environments negatively affected her abilities, as a woman during the Victorian era, to advance her scientific work. The study demonstrates that Augusta Ada Byron was both one of the most acute minds and most picturesque characters in computer history.
From the Paper
"A major turning point in Augusta Ada Byron's intellectual development occurred in 1833, when at the age of 18 years she met the famous scientist Charles Babbage at a social gathering (Freeman, 1996; Tee, 1979). Babbage was already widely known at the time as the inventor of the so-called "Difference Engine," a machine that applied the method of finite differences to perform mathematical computations (Freeman, 1996). The machine had to capacity to store numbers and perform additions, thereby enabling tables generated by polynomials to be computed by a uniform process (Freeman, 1996). Impressed with the young Ada, Babbage invited her to visit the studio where he kept his engine and was delighted when she showed up two weeks later, along with her domineering and meddlesome mother (Freeman, 1996; Tee, 1979). Ada was captivated by the Difference Engine and began regular correspondence with Babbage in an effort to learn all that she could about the invention and about Babbage's other ideas (Freeman, 1996)."
Tags:charles, babbage, engine, difference
A comparison of George Gordon Byron and William Wordsworth, exploring the theme of nature versus civilization.
Comparison Essay # 93036 |
2,792 words (
approx. 11.2 pages ) |
13 sources |
MLA | 2007
|
$ 49.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
The paper discusses how both Byron and Wordsworth are poets who exemplify the Romantic imagination in their art and in their personal responses to the philosophical and literary problems of their time. The paper explores how nature and civilization are the two opposing and pivotal points in the Romantic oeuvre, with both poets seeing nature as the antithesis of a decadent and "fallen" civilization. The paper concludes that, while Wordsworth sees nature and the imagination as a means to transcend the mundane world, Byron sees transcendence and "mystical vision" as yet another form of artistic escapism.
From the Paper
"Much of Byron's attitude towards the decadence of civilization can be gleaned from Don Juan. The central theme of this work and others such as The Island, is nature versus civilization. Through the central characters of this work Byron shows "...the rottenness of the social system to which they belong. They will wreck Juan with their scheming, contriving, and cross interests, and then, herding together hypocritically, they will expel him with all the blame concentrated upon him. "(Boyd, 1945, p. 69)"
Tags:transfigured, reason, science, humanity, reality, mundane, majestic, intellect
This paper discusses four management principles related in Christopher Byron's "Martha Inc.: The Incredible story of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia".
Analytical Essay # 48987 |
990 words (
approx. 4 pages ) |
3 sources |
APA | 2004
|
$ 21.95
More information
|
New! Look inside the paper
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper explains that Christopher Byron, in his unauthorized biography of Martha Stewart, "Martha Inc.", describes how the girl from a blue-collar, dysfunctional family from New Jersey worked her way to star status by recognizing opportunities and knowing how to capitalize on them. The author points out that, with a mindset of unabashed determination, the book shows another essential quality that a manager must develop in order to have a successful career: working hard; Martha Stewart would not have built her empire without working hard. The paper relates that Byron's book shows the effects of Martha Stewart's egotism and her desire for success at any cost; Along the way, she cheated her friends, lost her husband, and became known for her unscrupulous business practices.
From the Paper
"These management styles have put her at the top, but the final page has not been written. After Byron's book went to press, Martha Stewart found herself in the middle of an insider trading scandal. The press reports seem to back up the other stories in the book. She has passed blame to her broker; then to the broker's assistant. Her former business associates have not come forward to give accounts of Martha Stewart's integrity. Her management style and her treatment of friends and family have left her alone to fight the charges filed against her. If there is any one thing to take away from the book, knowing what has happened since its publication, it is not to burn bridges and to treat subordinates, partners and coworkers with respect. Not doing so could undo years of hard work and certainly come back to haunt you."
Tags:dysfunctional, determination, scandal, work, success
A look at the work of Byron, Keats and Coleridge, the poetic masters of the Romantic period.
Analytical Essay # 27773 |
988 words (
approx. 4 pages ) |
5 sources |
MLA | 2002
|
$ 21.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper discusses how of all the English poets that comprise the Romantic period, Lord Byron (1788-1824), John Keats (1795-1821) and Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) stand as the quintessential masters of Romantic poetry. It examines how their contributions to the aesthetics of versification are highly representative of the Romantic period by reviewing Byron's "She Walks in Beauty," Keats' major odes ("Ode to a Nightingale", "Ode on a Grecian Urn" and "Ode to Melancholy") and Coleridge's "Rime of the Ancient Mariner."
From the Paper
"The great symbolic voice of the true Romantic poet can best be heard in John Keats' romantic odes. In "Ode to a Nightingale," Keats relates that his "heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains/My sense, as though of hemlock I had drunk" (1st stanza, lines 1-2), which shows that Keats longs for happiness and wishes to be free like the nightingale, a symbol of great importance to the Romantic poets, for it represents freedom of expression and flights of fancy into the sublime. Thus, this image conjures up the idea that the poet has drunk poison (hemlock) which illustrates his deep longings for a spirit free of pain and misery, a reflection of the often poverty-stricken lives led by a good number of Romantic poets."
Tags:ode, nightingale, urn, ancient, mariner, beauty
A paper on the life and writings of Lord Byron.
Analytical Essay # 28558 |
1,150 words (
approx. 4.6 pages ) |
5 sources |
MLA | 2002
|
$ 23.95
More information
|
New! Look inside the paper
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper reviews the life and poetry of Lord Byron. Specifically, the paper analyzes the relationship between Byron's literary heroes and his own personality. In his life, as in his work, he carefully constructed his physical and social image as a decadent, handsome poet who chafed against moral and political strictures of his time. This image lasted long after his death. The paper offers examples from his work, including the characters of "Don Juan." the hero in "Manfred." The writer also suggests that many other writers have utilized his ideas and created similar type characters, such as the main male persona in the modern movie "Heathers."
From the Paper
"Many years after the poet's demise, the poet was said to have inspired and certainly contributed to the popularity of Mr. Rochester of Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre and Heathcliff of Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights in fiction. The ideal of the Byronic hero took on a cultural life of its own, independent of the life of the poet and his poetry. Lord Byron's constructed image lives on in literature, film, and fiction today. The Byronic hero is usually portrayed as a man who is tormented by society's hypocrisies and social mores, and engages in practices that flout these norms."
Tags:english, literature, don, juan, bronte, manfred, hero
Compares the theme of vampirism in John Polidori's book "The Vampyre" and Lord Byron's lengthy poem "Giaour".
Book Review # 107300 |
1,850 words (
approx. 7.4 pages ) |
2 sources |
MLA | 2008
|
$ 35.95
More information
|
Add to cart
Abstract
This paper explains that John Polidori acknowledged that, for his book "The Vampyre", he drew on a number of themes and other elements in the formation of his own story of vampirism from Lord Byron's poem "Giaour". The author describes both works, which both involve a sort of outside observer, who becomes a biographer for the main character and gives the story a sense of authenticity. The paper concludes that the pattern set by Polidori for his protagonist Ruthven would become the norm for the vampire in fiction after this time, as witnessed with the future creation of the character Dracula.
From the Paper
"Giaour is a stranger among people of a different culture, and Ruthven is also depicted as a stranger in the midst of London society. Polidori says that he is "remarkable for his singularities" and that he looks at the proceedings around him "as if he could not participate therein." This sense of being an outsider links the two characters from the first. Ruthven is invited everywhere because of his foreign-ness rather than in spite of it, and he is pursued by women like Lady Mercer because he is so prized and so different."
Tags:authenticity, culture, stranger, history, pattern
A critical review of the biography of the 18th Century-19th Century English poet Lord Byron.
Analytical Essay # 22351 |
2,025 words (
approx. 8.1 pages ) |
1 source |
1995
|
$ 38.95
More information
|
Add to cart
From the Paper
"Leslie A. Marchand's Bryon: A Life (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1957)
Marchand's biography of George Gordon offers a full-bodied and accurate literary portrait of one of late eighteenth and early nineteenth century England's most elusive and legendary figures, Lord Bryon (1788-1824), the poet. In attempting to synthesize a life grown large by legend, Marchand in his "Preface" quotes Bryon's quip "I am such a strange melange of good and evil that it would be difficult to describe me" (p. vii). Taunted by this challenge, Marchand establishes for himself the task of assessing Bryon's psyche, revealing him to be not necessarily more inconsistent than most individuals, but ..."