الأسئلة كانت على كل الpoems وتختاري فقرة وحدة من كل poemوتكتبي في paragraphs
1-"My Last Duchess"
A-Difine
B-the story summary and you said the charactristics
ما أذكرc-
2-"If thou must love me"
A-theme
B-what kind of love
c-love true in poem how explian
3-"Crossing the bar"
?A-discuss the extended phor
ايش هي رسالة الكاتب في النهايةB-
c-?????اظن ايش يتمنى يشوف !!!!
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هذا اقتباس من تجمع البنات 2010 مع مس ناريمان
طبعا احنا مو نفس قصائدهم
انا بس نسختها لكم يعني ناخذ فكرة عن اسلوبها في الاسئلة
...
و هذا اخر شيء لقيته عن EPIGRAM ON MILTON
هذا التعريف
Epigram - a witty, ingenious, and pointed saying that is tersely expressed.
The term is from the Greek epigramma, meaning “an inion,” and was formed by combining epi, meaning “upon,” and gramma, meaning “a writing,” or graphein, meaning “to write.”
Originally, it meant an inion or epitaph, usually in verse, on a building, tomb, or coin. Then it came to mean a short poem ending in a witty or ingenious turn of thought.
a short, often satirical poem dealing concisely with a single subject and usually ending with a witty or ingenious turn of thought.
و هنا عن القصيده نفسها
جبتها لكم من موقع enotes بعد التسجيل ^^:
The rhyme scheme of the three couplets is aa bb cc. Dryden's epigram does not end with a ridiculing satirical twist but rather with a "punchline" that equates Milton's greatness with the combined greatness of the poet of Greece (Homer) and the poet of Italy (Virgil). This constitutes a punchline because it was a bold step for Dryden to suggest that Milton was both a Homer and a Virgil rolled into one.
A prose style paraphrase of the epigram might read: Three poets, who were born in three ages of long ago, brought honor to the lands of Greece, Italy and England. The first, the poet of Greece, had the loftiest thought; the poet from Italy had the most majesty; the third, the poet from England, had both loftiness and majesty. Mother Nature could produce none better than the first two poets, so to make a third poet, she combined the powers of the first two.
Dryden writes this epigram in the spirit of a praising elegy to the poet Milton. Indeed, the elegy and the epigram share the formulaic feature of being composed of couplets. Dryden's message is to clearly rate Milton as a poet of equal rank with the two most recognized ancient greats, Homer of Greece and Virgil of Rome (Italy)
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