copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
In Ozymandias, who is the ye in the line Look on my works, ye Mighty . . . 2) What is the literal meaning of “ye” here? 3) Whom does Shelley (in Ozymandias’ voice) call “ye mighty” and why? It seems clear to me that #3 is what’s actually being asked (with a side serving of “please check my assumptions about ye = you ≠ the”), but I could be wrong, and the title certainly lends itself to #2
Sarcasm, satire irony - Literature Stack Exchange On what basis is an expression with an opposite meaning classified under the three types namely sarcasm, satire and irony? How do sarcasm, satire and irony different from one another? I need exam
What was the irony of the end of Lord of The Flies? People keep telling me there is irony at the end of Lord of The Flies, specifically during the conversation with the captain of the ship What was ironic about that scene?
meaning - Are Don Juan and Haidée both Greek, as this line in the poem . . . Such ironic juxtaposition relies on doubleness, putting forward two opposing ideas at once As you suggest, the word "half" also does double duty here The surface meaning is that Don Juan and Haidée are like the antique statues: partially unclad, depicted in loving attitudes, realistic in appearance, and Greek
Why is Pechorin a hero of our time? - Literature Stack Exchange In Mikhail Lermontov's A Hero of Our Time (Герой нашего времени), the main hero is Grigory Pechorin, a cynical noble army man, an example of superfluous Byronic hero The title of the novel has to
meaning - What does All the air of the fourteenth floor was sibilant . . . All the air of the fourteenth floor was sibilant with the categorical imperative What does it mean? I know what is the categorical imperative, but I can't fit its literal meaning in this context Is it simply a rhetorical way of saying that the sound of the loud speakers saying "silence, silence" filled the room? Any pointers would be appreciated
Is the dear Brutus speech ironic? - Literature Stack Exchange And Brutus would make just as good a leader as him But is the speech ironic? Don't the events of the play prove him to be wrong, and that Brutus is not the master of his fate? In the very same scene, a soothsayer warns Caesar to "beware the ides of March" which Caesar dismisses The prophecy comes true Is Cassius making the same error?
character analysis - Meaning and implication of these lines in The . . . Lady Bracknell is pleased with Cecily's appearance, but only in the sense that she thinks it will make an impression on society ("distinct social possibilities") Her listing of lack of principle and lack of profile as the present day's two "weak points" is ironic to the reader, given that one of these is an essential component of character and the other is completely superficial Algernon
What is the meaning of the sentence “You are--arent you?” in this . . . The conversation stops here, and that left me without more context to try and grasp the meaning of the question My guess is that it could be something ironic like “you are experienced in washing your head, aren’t you?”