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  2. The Idiot Boy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Idiot_Boy

    The poem uses a five-line stanza of tetrameter lines, with a rhyming scheme of ABCCB, [6] said to be a "variation on the long meter quatrain." [7] It has been described as a realisation of the traditional form of the ballad, chiefly because of its "unobtrusive" narrator, [8] as well as "an extreme example of the naive or rustic style in poetry."

  3. All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Watched_Over_by...

    Historian of counterculture Theodore Roszak wrote that it "captures perfectly the much-prized synthesis of reversionary and technophiliac values", [10] while futurist James Lovelock viewed it in an environmentalist light, as "an early, and in some ways accurate" example of the subject of his book, Novacene: "an age in which humans and cyborgs ...

  4. What's the history of 'outside agitators'? Here's what to ...

    www.aol.com/news/whats-history-outside-agitators...

    Historically, when students at American universities and colleges protest — from the Civil Rights Movement to Black Lives Matter — there's a common refrain that “outside agitators” are to ...

  5. Given how the trope of the “outside agitator” has been deployed throughout history, Morris says he views recent references to outsiders at these protests as a distraction from the students ...

  6. The Scholar Gipsy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Scholar_Gipsy

    What the poem actually offers is a charm of relaxation, a holiday from serious aims and exacting business. And what the Scholar-Gipsy really symbolises is Victorian poetry, vehicle (so often) of explicit intellectual and moral intentions, but unable to be in essence anything but relaxed, relaxing and anodyne.

  7. Revolting Rhymes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolting_Rhymes

    Revolting Rhymes is a 1982 poetry collection by British author Roald Dahl.Originally published under the title Roald Dahl's Revolting Rhymes, it is a parody of traditional folk tales in verse, where Dahl gives a re-interpretation of six well-known fairy tales, featuring surprise endings in place of the traditional happily-ever-after finishes.

  8. Taylor Swift Calls Out the 'Worst Men' in 'TTPD' Booklet ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/taylor-swift-calls...

    The TTPD booklet poem ends with the “all’s fair in love and poetry” stanza that Swift previously released when she shared the TTPD cover earlier this year. The Tortured Poets Department is ...

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