George Bernard Shaw
John Dryden
Christopher Marlowe
William Shakespeare
Jane Austen and Charlotte Bronte
Sir Walter Scott and Maria Edgeworth
William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Mary Shelley and Percy Bysshe Shelley
Sea scenes
Rural Idyll
War
Innocent childhood
Robert Hass
Jessica Hagdorn
Maya Angelou
Micheal Palmer
Elizabeth Bishop
Sylvia Plath
Marianne Moore
Laura Jackson
The 12th
The 14th
The 17th
The 19th
Troilus and criseyde
House of fame
The canterbury tales
Parliament of fowls.
Queen Cristina
Top Girls
Camille
The Homecoimg
pun
simile
haiku
metaphor
H. W. Longfellow
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Dylan Thomas
William Wordsworth
The Homeric epic
The Gilgamesh epic
The Deluge epic
The Hesiodic ode
Alliterative verse
Sonnet form
Iambic pentameter
Dactylic hexameter
Paradise Lost
Paradise Regained
Samson Agonistes
Divorce Tracts
Impediments
Inconveniences
Worries
Troubles
Owner convicted of fraud
Fall in Sales
Rise in taxation on magazines
Shortage of paper
John keats
Lord Byron
Solan
Sappho
Denver
St Louis
Cuba
Toronto
2
4
1
5
french
latin
italian
english
Light verse
Romantic
Political satire
War poems
Boer War
Second World War
Korean War
First World War
The Epic
The Comic
The Occult
The Tragic
A poet of middleness
Capturing a sense of spiritual marooness
One of the leading prairie poets
Has some distinction as a critic
Carolyn Kizer
Mary Oliver
Sylvia Plath
Marianne Moore
Agatha Christie
H Ryder-Haggard
P D James
Arthur Conan Doyle
hundred years war
Black death
Peasant revolt
None of the above
Language Arts
Peter Piper Picked Peppers
I like music.
A beautiful scenery with music
Alliterative
Epic
Acrostic
Haiku
Lust
Corruption
Theft
Gluttony
No difference. Simply two different ways in referring to the same thing.
A simile is more descriptive.
A simile uses as or like to make a comparison and a metaphor doesnt.
A simile must use animals in the comparison.