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  2. Casey at the Bat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casey_at_the_Bat

    In the show Friends, Ross clarifies how to spell "Casey" as in "at the bat" in the Season 2, episode 14 titled "The One with the Prom Video." [41] In the show Containment, Season 1, episode 6 takes its name, "He Stilled the Rising Tumult", from the poem. In the show Black Mirror, Season 6, episode 3, "Beyond the Sea" quotes the poem.

  3. A Dream (Blake poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Dream_(Blake_poem)

    "A Dream" is a poem by English poet William Blake. The poem was first published in 1789 as part of Blake's collection of poems entitled Songs of Innocence.. A 1795 hand painted version of "A Dream" from Copy L of Songs of Innocence and of Experience currently held by the Yale Center for British Art [1]

  4. The Garden of Love (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Garden_of_Love_(poem)

    The first two stanzas of the poem are written in a loose anapestic trimeter and rhyme acbc. [2] The third stanza begins in the same way, but the last two lines of this stanza make a sharp break with the form of the preceding stanzas. These concluding lines are written in tetrameter rather than trimeter, and they fail to maintain the acbc rhyme ...

  5. We Are Seven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_Are_Seven

    The poem is a dialogue between a narrator who serves as a questioner and a little girl, with part of the evolving first stanza contributed by Coleridge. [8] The poem is written in ballad form. The poem begins with the narrator asking: A simple child, dear brother Jim, That lightly draws its breath, And feels its life in every limb,

  6. Personification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personification

    Late antique philosophical books that made heavy use of personification and were especially influential in the Middle Ages included the Psychomachia of Prudentius (early 5th century), with an elaborate plot centered around battles between the virtues and vices, [30] and The Consolation of Philosophy (c. 524) by Boethius, which takes the form of ...

  7. The Sun Rising (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sun_Rising_(poem)

    The speaker of the poem questions the sun's motives and yearns for the sun to go away so that he and his lover can stay in bed. Donne is tapping into human emotion in personifying the sun, and he is exhibiting how beings behave when they are in love with one another. The speaker in the poem believes that, for him and his lover, time is the enemy.

  8. Love That Dog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love_That_Dog

    It is written in diary format, in the perspective of a young boy who resists poetry assignments from his teacher. [1] The author drew inspiration from Walter Dean Myers' poem, Love That Boy. [2] The book received good reviews [3] [4] and was a finalist for the 2001 Carnegie Medal as well as being commended at the 2002 Children's Book Awards.

  9. The Emperor of Ice-Cream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Emperor_of_Ice-Cream

    The hero of Tom Perotta's Joe College reflects on the poem throughout the novel, wondering what the ice cream symbolizes. The heroine of Laura McNeal's National Book Award-nominated novel Dark Water reads the poem for a high school class and wonders about its meaning. Spenser, the hero of Robert B. Parker's novel School Days quotes from the poem.