
Poem “Shakespeare” by Matthew Arnold—Summary and Critical Analysis
This sonnet “Shakespeare” is one of the best tributes ever paid to Shakespeare. It was composed in 1844.

This sonnet “Shakespeare” is one of the best tributes ever paid to Shakespeare. It was composed in 1844.

In the story “Quality”, the author depicts a far-reaching impact on the lives of traditional artisans when the Industrial Revolution that began in England in the middle of the 18th century and later on spread to the other parts of the world.

“The Diamond Necklace” by Maupassant is the story of a French girl, who suffered all her married life because of her vanity. Her vanity, however, was not without cause.

Tennyson was a great pictorial artist whose poetry is marked by an extraordinary gift for visual description. He possessed unrivalled powers of painting a scene, a landscape, or even a person with words full of clarity and vividness.

William Wordsworth’s sonnet “The World Is Too Much with Us” was first published in 1807 and later appeared in Miscellaneous Sonnets. Inspired by his direct observation of society, the poem reflects his disillusionment with the growing materialism of the nineteenth century.

Alfred Lord Tennyson stands out as the most representative poet of the Victorian Age, capturing in his works the very essence of his time.

“Two Tramps in Mud Time” is one of the best – known poems of “A Further Range”, a volume of poems, first published in 1936. What strikes us about the poem is that the poem “Two Tramps in Mud Time” is a radiant evidence of Frost’s visual imagination coupled with psychological insight into human beings.

The poem “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” has been composed by Robert Frost. In this work, the poet beautifully describes a personal experience of halting during a snowy evening journey.

The poem “The Road Not Taken” is composed by Robert Frost. In this poem, the poet reflects on a crucial decision he had to make during his journey.

Robert Frost’s poem “Mending Wall” was first published in his collection “North of Boston” (1914), though it was composed in 1913. W. G. O’Donnell remarks that the poem explores “the theme of man’s isolation from his fellow men.”