Lyrical Poetry: Key Elements and Literary Devices

Genre: Lyrical Poetry

Elements of a Lyrical Creation

Lyrical Subject: A circumstance or being causing a certain mood in the poet.

Temple of Mind: The emotion or mood of the poet.

Reason Lyric: The concept or the idea present in a certain poetic composition. This idea or concept represents the most important message, usually being an abstract noun, such as sadness, love, loneliness, homesickness, anxiety, etc. In other words, it refers to the feeling that arises from mood and circumstance.

Lyric Speaker:

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Metamorphosis by Kafka: Character & Family Dynamics

The Metamorphosis: Character Evolution and Family

Gregor Samsa’s Transformation

Kafka’s characters often grapple with profound loneliness, devoid of the love and connection experienced by others. In *The Metamorphosis*, this isolation manifests in a cruel destiny: a sensitive man transforms into something repulsive, even to his own family. This is the fate of Gregor Samsa, who awakens to find himself transformed into an insect, retaining human qualities yet unable to communicate. This metamorphosis

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Modernist Literature: Key Authors and Their Masterpieces

James Joyce: Father of Modernism

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916) offers a distanced, selectively framed treatment of its subject. The central figure is Stephen Dedalus, whose name evokes the mythical Greek craftsman, serving as an image of the artist. “Fight” is a key motif throughout the novel.

Ulysses (1922) chronicles the events of a single day in the lives of two heroes. Incidents are elaborated, paralleled, and parodied, creating a comprehensive portrait of Dublin city. Leopold

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Juan Ramón Jiménez: Life, Poetry, and Evolution

Generation of ’14

The Generation of ’14, or Noucentista school, occurred in the 1920s and had a different intellectual climate. It is characterized by:

  • Intellectuals are usually academically trained.
  • Attitude of Europeanist research.
  • Awareness of the reality of the country.

Their method is based on rigor and high standards. They abandoned the passionate tone. The intellectuals were considered a select minority. This led to a kind of literature in which the intellectual and conceptual took precedence

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English Grammar Essentials: Nouns, Pronouns, Verbs & More

English Grammar Fundamentals

The noun on the predicate is an object.

  • Any word to describe a verb

Objects:

  • Direct: What

  • Indirect: Whom

  • Prepositional Object:

The vs. a/an

  • The: specific: singular and plural

  • a/an: general – singular

Personal Pronouns

Subject Pronouns

  • I

  • You

  • He

  • She

  • It

  • We

  • You

  • They


Objective Pronouns

  • me

  • you

  • him

  • her

  • it

  • us

  • you

  • them

Possessive Adjectives

  • my

  • your

  • his

  • her

  • its

  • our

  • your

  • their

Possessive Pronouns

  • mine

  • yours

  • his

  • hers

  • its

  • ours

  • yours

  • theirs


Reflexive Pronouns

  • myself

  • yourself

  • himself

  • herself

  • itself

  • ourselves

  • yourselves

  • themselves

Last

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Jose Cadalso and 18th-Century Spanish Theater: A Deep Dive

Jose Cadalso: A Literary Figure of the 18th Century

Jose Cadalso stands as one of the most interesting figures of 18th-century Spanish literature, both as a man and a writer. Like many others of his time, Cadalso’s work spanned various genres, but it is in prose where he truly made his mark. Born into a wealthy family of Basque origin in Cadiz in 1741, he died in Gibraltar in 1782. As a teenager, he made many trips to Europe, acquiring knowledge of several languages. He joined the army, where he

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