Test of 12 Authors (Masterpieces)
Test of 12 Authors (Masterpieces)
Test of 12 Authors (Masterpieces)
Negro Spirituals
● songs created by the Africans who were captured and brought to the United States to be sold into
slavery.
● They reflected the slaves’ need to express their new faith, Christianity, the religion of their masters.
● stories from Genesis to Revelation, with God's faithful as protagonists.
● They are a translation of the biblical stories memorized by the slaves, since they could not read the
bible.
● they were created extemporaneously and passed orally from person to person
● used to communicate with one another without the knowledge of their masters.
● There is record of approximately 6,000 spirituals or sorrow songs
● Slave Songs of the United States was the first book ever published of African-american
spirituals
● They served as a wake-up call to those protesting against laws and policies that prevented
African Americans from enjoying equal rights.
● Examples: Oh freedom!
Abraham Lincon
● He was the United States' 16th President during the civil war in 1865
The Gettysburg Address is a famous speech given by President Abraham Lincoln during the American Civil
War. The speech was given at a cemetery in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
● It was one of the most famous speeches in United States history at the dedication of the Gettysburg
National Cemetery in1863. It is recognized as one of the most powerful statements in the English
language and, in fact, one of the most important expressions of freedom and liberty in any language.
● It speaks about the Declaration of Independence and the notion that all men are created equal.
Moreover, he tied both to the abolition of slavery—a new birth of freedom.
● The Gettysburg Address gave meaning to the sacrifice of over fifty thousand men who laid down their lives
in the Battle of Gettysburg.
Walt Whitman
● Walt Whitman (1819 New York) American poet, journalist, and essayist
● He founded a weekly newspaper, The LongIslander.
● He is considered the father of free-verse poetry
● Whitman spent his declining years in his house working on additions and revisions to his work: Leaves
of Grass (book with 300 poems) (seven editions of the book)
● "Leaves of Grass'' celebrated life, sexuality, individuality, and democracy. It was so controversial by that
time since It celebrated the human body and carried sexual descriptions that many readers criticized when it
was first published.
● Whitman wrote about the war, about what he believed in, and also about love
● Plays: "One's-Self I Sing" is a tribute both to the individual self and to humanity as a collective whole. Its
speaker affirms the "worth[iness]" of the human body, the equal dignity of men and women, and the
"passion" and "power" of life in a democratic society. In the process, the speaker suggests that the
recognition of individual worth is fundamental to democracy itself. (themes Individuality, Democracy, and
Equality)
● "When I Heard the Learn'd Astronomer" was published in Drum-Taps. In the poem, Whitman conveys his
belief in the limits of using science to understand nature. Rather, Whitman suggests, one needs to
experience nature for true understanding, instead of measuring it. (themes: Knowledge, Nature, and
Experience)
Emily Dickinson
● Author of 1,789 poems, this writer is considered one of the pillars of modern American literature and
one of the best poets in world literature.
● Her work denotes an extraordinary ability to observe the world around her, from the subtle buzzing of a
bee to the unappealable character of death.
● She composed all her poems in pencil on small pieces of paper that her sister Lavinia found and
published after her death.
● During her lifetime, Emily published only six poems.
● Towards the end of her life, Emily barely left her room.
● Her writing style is most certainly unique.
● She used extensive dashes, dots, and unconventional capitalization, in addition to vivid imagery and
idiosyncratic vocabulary.
● Used slant-rhyme, conceits.
● 'Because I could not stop for Death'; Death is presented in a realistic manner in it.
● 'Hope is the Thing with Feathers' Hope is compared to a small bird that sings a tune even in the most
powerful storm. Hope is a feeling that we get, not always a rational one, that helps us to overcome
difficulties.
● Her poems addressed emotional and psychological states such as loneliness, pain, happiness, and
ecstasy; death, often personified; religion and morality; as well as love and love lost.
E.E Cumming
● He ignored conventional punctuation and syntax in favor of a dynamic use of language, even inventing
his own words by combining common words to create new meanings.
● Cummings’ verses frequently manage topics of adoration and nature
● His sonnets are likewise regularly overflowing with satire.
● his themes were more traditional: love, childhood, nature.
● While other modernists explored similar themes, E.E. Cummings expressed those themes in new
ways. (Modernis poets did not usually used free verse, but he did)
● 'Buffalo Bill's/defunct,'-is a famous poem about mortality, and it is laid out on the page in an unusual
and meaningful way. Something that is defunct is dead. This poem, then, is about Buffalo Bill being
dead.
● '9.' is about love and how natural it is. In that poem, cummings uses onomatopoeia to help get his point
across.
Orden Nash
● 'Adventures of Isabel' is a funny poem that tells what happens when a girl named Isabel meets a
ravenous bear with a cavernous mouth, a witch, a giant, and a doctor, who all want to harm her.
Instead of worrying or panicking, Isabel thinks fast and calmly beats them all. The poem is written in
forty lines and follows the same pattern on each of Isabel's adventure with a group of five couplets.
● One of the most widely appreciated and imitated writers of light verse (poetry on trivial or playful
themes that is written primarily to amuse and entertain and that often involves the use of nonsense and
wordplay.)
● brilliant use of rhyme which is often taken to absurd lengths and utilises invented or misspelled
words
Works by her:
Daddy
- Sylvia Plath uses her poem, “Daddy”, to express intense emotions towards her father's life and death
(She feels betrayed by her father because he died)
- Childish vocabulary and imagery are used.
Edge
- It tells the haunting story of a woman’s depression; she murders her children and then takes her own
life.
- It was written only days before Sylvia Plath committed suicide.
- It is a twenty-line poem, separated into sets of two lines known as couplets. These couplets do not
follow a specific rhyme scheme or metrical pattern.
- It uses metaphors and similes.
- It is filled with pain, sadness, and longing, emotions one must speculate were part of Plath’s last days
as well.
Robert Frost
- He is a modernist, he is not following past nor future writers, he is between.
- He was an American poet who was much admired for his deceptions of the rural life of New England.
- Although he is a modernist,
Characteristics of modernist poetry:
- Simplified language is used (natural language).
- Non-traditional rhyme is used.
- Pessimistic
Works by Robert Frost:
The Road Not Taken
- It includes modernist elements.
- Traditional rhyme patterns A BAAB
- Although he is a modernist, in here, he doesn’t use an imagery style.
- The end is left with a vague open final.
The Road Not Taken Summary is a poem that describes the dilemma of a person standing at a road with
diversion. This diversion symbolizes real-life situations. Sometimes, in life too there come times when we have
to take tough decisions. We could not decide what is right or wrong for us.
What makes their poems modern?
- Basi language -Unclear
- Not uplifting (it is not about joy but pessimism)
Stopping by woods on a snowy evening
- It contains themes such as life, death, and nature
- He was describing everyday experiences
- He uses simple language.
- It is open to interpretation.
- It represents ideas with nature.
The poem is told from the perspective of a traveler who stops to watch the snowfall in the forest, and in doing
so reflects on both nature and society.
Fire and Ice
- It contains themes such as obsessions and destruction.
- Simple language is used.
- It is open to interpretation.
- The poem uses the metaphor of the end of the world to characterize this destruction
The poem suggests that the forces of desire and hate (represented by fire and ice, respectively) lead to
destruction, and equally so.
Robert Frost's 'Fire and Ice' is about destruction, the central theme of the poem.
- The first part of the poem reflects on destruction by fire which is caused by obsession.
- The second part of the poem indicates destruction by ice, which is caused by a complete absence of
love or an all-consuming hatred for someone or something.
Elizabeth Bishop
- She was an American poet known for her polished, witty(intelligent), descriptive verse.
- She taught writing at Harvard University.
- She uses refrain.
Characteristics of a refrain:
- It appears at the end of a stanza.
- It is a group of lines that are repeated at specific intervals in a poem.
- A refrain can include rhymes, but it is not necessary. It can also be repeated exactly, or the phrasing
can vary slightly.
- Some poetic forms require a refrain, like a villanelle or a sestina
Works by Elizabeth:
Example of a refrain = One art:
In this work. Elizabeth tries to express losing, she says how to master losing, that is how to make it easy to
face.
- It is an example of a villanelle, as its name suggests, it is a French verse form
- It asserts that, over time we can recover from the loss of a loved one. ( The art of losing isn’t
hard to master).
- It is a complex of nineteen lines, divided into five tercets (3 lines stanza)
- The rhythm pattern is iambic pentameter.
Maya Angelou (1928-2014, St. Louis Missouri)
- Maya Angelou was an American author, actress, screenwriter, dancer, poet, and civil rights activist.
- She was an african american who experienced racial prejudices and discrimination.
- Raped by the mother’s boyfriend
- She wrote 36 books (and children’s books)and recited a poem at Clinton’s inauguration
- I know why the caged bird sings (first nonfiction bestseller by an african american woman)