Wilbur Essays

  • Richard Wilbur, God, and Christianity

    1908 Words  | 4 Pages

    Richard Wilbur, God, and Christianity A recurring theme in the poetry of Richard Wilbur is one of God and Christianity.  Biblical references can be found throughout his work, even in poems that have little to do with religion.  However, this theme is quite prominent as there are several poems contain more than passing references. Wilbur provides in these poems ideas that Christians can identify with, either in the Christian lifestyle or straight from the Bible. Richard Wilbur was raised by

  • The Poems of Richard Wilbur

    1231 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Poems of Richard Wilbur Richard Wilbur's New and Collected Poems is full of poems that cover a huge multitude of subjects. The four poems this assignment covers represent that variety, with the topics including love, juggling, grace and music. Wilbur's poems take experiences and ideas (even a juggler) and through his mastery of the English language force the reader to take another look at what his preconceptions are. His poems allow for many different interpretations, and this paper will take

  • Analysis Of Juggler By Richard Wilbur

    600 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the poem, “Juggler,” Richard Wilbur compares the figure of God to a juggler that manages to control and take care of five red balls, which can be interpreted as a metaphor for our world. Wilbur describes the juggler in a very deferential and admired fashion, which illustrates the speaker’s love and pays tribute to his own God. By using metaphorical language, imagery, descriptive diction, and a very gracious and treasured tone, Wilbur demonstrates the speaker’s admiration for all that God is able

  • Watership Down by Richard Adams

    773 Words  | 2 Pages

    Charlotte is Wilbur’s savior and protector, she is still only a spider. White does not give her the physical ability to do things that a spider cannot normally do. Therefore, she must save Wilbur in a way that makes it possible for a spider to do. She spins a web that becomes a miracle, which in turn saves Wilbur from his almost uncertain death. The thought of that is nonsensical within itself. How could a spider have the brainpower to devise such a clever plan to save her friend? This is where White

  • Charlotte's Web

    1408 Words  | 3 Pages

    and these stereotypes still exist in our society forty five years later. Fern is an eight year old girl who is full of energy. She spends most of her time taking care of a pig named Wilbur. Who would ever believe a little girl would demonstrate mothering abilities? E.B. White has even gone as far as to depict Wilbur as Fern's own child: "A minute later, Fern was seated on the floor in the comer of the kitchen with her infant between her knees, teaching it to suck from the bottle" (6-7). Not only

  • An Analysis of Wilbur's Mayflies

    1584 Words  | 4 Pages

    criticism of Wilbur's work, that it is too optimistic, too safe.  The poet-critic Randall Jarrell, though an early admirer of Wilbur, once wrote that 'he obsessively sees, and shows, the bright underside of every dark thing'?something Frost was never accused of (Jarrell 332). Yet, when we examine the poem closely, and in particular the series of comparisons by which Wilbur elevates his mayflies into the realm of beauty and truth, the poem concedes something less ?bright? or felicitous about what it

  • Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White

    512 Words  | 2 Pages

    convinced her dad not to kill the runt pig and he gave it to her to take care of. She named him Wilbur. Wilbur was getting bigger and bigger and eating more and more. He had to be sold so Fern called her aunt and uncle the Zuckermans. The goose told Wilbur that there was a loose board in his pen. He escaped but he got tired, hungry and afraid. Uncle Homer lured him back to his pen with food. Wilbur had a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day because it was raining and his plans got ruined

  • Cubism

    1291 Words  | 3 Pages

    illusionalistically into a three-dimensional picture space? (Chivers, 1998). Picasso and Braque pioneered the movement and worked so closely together that they had difficulty telling their own work apart. They referred to each other as Orville and Wilbur, knowing that their contributions to art were every bit as revolutionary as the first flight (Hoving, 1999). Cubism was divided into two categories. Analytical Cubism, beginning in 1907, visually laid out what the artist thought was important about

  • Epic of Beowulf Essay - The Balance of Joy and Sorrow in Beowulf

    1017 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Balance of Joy and Sorrow in Beowulf The poet Richard Wilbur expresses in his poem Beowulf one of many sorrows expressed by the original Beowulf poem: “Such gifts as are the hero’s hard reward … These things he stowed beneath his parting sail, And wept that he could share them with no son” (Wilbur 67). The hero’s lament of not having an heir is but one of many dozens of sorrows in this poetic classic, which balance with numerous joys expressed on alternate pages. This essay

  • River God Summary

    959 Words  | 2 Pages

    The novel River God by Wilbur Smith is set in Ancient Egypt, during a time when the kingdoms were beginning to collapse and the Upper and Lower Egypt were separated between two rulers. The story is in the view-point of Taita, a highly multi-talented eunuch slave. At the beginning of the story, Taita belongs to Lord Intef and helps manage his estate along with caring for his beautiful daughter, Lostris. She is in love with Tanus, a fine solider and also Taita’s friend. Unfortunately, Lord Intef despises

  • Analyzing Wilbur’s Orchard Trees, January

    538 Words  | 2 Pages

    try to get deep down into the poem to find the real meaning, or one could investigate the poem and learn what Wilbur is trying to get across to the reader. In "Orchard Trees, January," one could pick up what Wilbur is trying to say if one takes the time to think about it. On some of his poems, though, it is nearly impossible to know what he is talking about. Only the interpretation from Wilbur himself could help one who is completely baffled by one of his poems. Authors often write their poems at the

  • Richard Wilbur

    1551 Words  | 4 Pages

    neighbors; but he does address a great congress of persons who dwell at the back of his mind, a congress of all those who have taught him and whom he has admired; that constitute his ideal audience and his better self” (“Richard Wilbur”, National Book Foundation). Richard Wilbur spoke this famous quote at his National Book Award speech in 1957. Many of the events in Wilbur’s life transitioned to his acceptance of this award, but he did not know what direction his life was going in at the time. From the

  • Forbidden Knowledge in Digging for China

    938 Words  | 2 Pages

    Searching for Forbidden Knowledge in Digging for China In Richard Wilbur's poem, "Digging for China", he writes, " 'Far enough down is China,' somebody said. 'Dig deep enough and you might see the sky as clear as at the bottom of a well.'" (Lines 1-3) Wilbur was suggesting to his readers that if one looks at the world in a different way, they could find a totally different place. We can see this concept when we explore Wilbur's poem as a whole piece. He is talking about finding a paradise in one's backyard

  • Comparing and Contrasting Hughes's Mother to Son and Wilbur's The Writer

    1114 Words  | 3 Pages

    for the child. Although the point of view, context, and language of the two poems differ significantly, the message is the same: a parent wants a good life for his or her child, but knows that many obstacles can block the way. While Hughes and Wilbur share a similar message in their poems, their points of view are very different. Hughes uses a first-person narrator, a mother speaking directly to her son. The title of the poem itself, "Mother to Son," states this point of view. The reader is listening

  • Themes and Symbols in Poe's The Masque (Mask) of the Red Death

    1501 Words  | 4 Pages

    about the story that can be explored if someone wishes to find a view with which he or she can better understand or identify. One possible theme of the story is that it is nothing more than the imaginings of a dreaming mind. According to Richard Wilbur, this is partially shown through the geometry contained in the story. He states that, "Poe quite explicitly identifies regular angular forms with everyday reason, and the circle, oval, or fluid arabesque with otherworldly imagination" (269). If Poe

  • Confronting Death in Richard Wilbur's The Pardon

    1849 Words  | 4 Pages

    Wilbur's poem "The Pardon." This is apparent from the opening line, "My dog lay dead five days without a grave." What is not immediately apparent, however, is that this is not simply a poem about a young boy's sadness over the loss of his dog. What Wilbur discusses in this piece is much more profound, cutting through the superficialities of death and confronting fears and doubts that all of us experience at different points in our lives. This is a poem about atonement, about facing the mistakes of

  • Wilbur Wyatt Hamilton

    1252 Words  | 3 Pages

    Wilbur Wyatt Hamilton was born January 28, 1931, in San Antonio, Texas. He is the son of E. E. Hamilton and Bessie Fields. Hamilton had a younger sister, Ruth Ella, who was born in 1933. However, she passed away in 2007. Hamilton also had other siblings that were known as his half-siblings. His half-siblings were Gene Jr. and Primrose. Gene Jr. was his father’s daughter from the first marriage and Primrose was his mother’s daughter from her first marriage. There was an issue that was kept very quiet

  • The Writer by Richard Wilbur

    647 Words  | 2 Pages

    say the as we age, we also gain wisdom, and while this is true, it is only true to an extent. In “The Writer” by Richard Wilbur, we are able to see the fact that life is a struggle that we cannot avoid, how easy it is to forget what it’s like to struggle, and what it is like to stand idly by while watching others go through times of turbulence. In “The Writer” by Richard Wilbur, one is able to realize what the real battle in life is: watching the one that you love suffer, and having to stand idly

  • Tartuffe And Romanticism: Meaning And Representation Of Evil In Literature

    1544 Words  | 4 Pages

    acknowledge the presence and representation of evil and how they shape society. Enlightenment thinkers value reason, rationality and moderation, whereas Romanticism encouraged imagination, emotion and individual sensibility. “Tartuffe” by Richard Wilbur demonstrates all of the Enlightenment values in his play, whereas “Frankenstein” by Mary Shelley emphasizes on emotion, passion and the natural world. This essay will explore ways in which human reason and society can be evil and deceiving. Evil

  • Comparing Setting and Narrative Style in the Works of Edgar Allen Poe

    1224 Words  | 3 Pages

    setting begins to play an important role in how the narrator discovers the many ways he may die.  Although he must rely on his senses alone to feel his surroundings, he knows that somewhere in this dark, gloomy room, that death awaits him.  Richard Wilbur tells us how fitting the chamber in "The Pit and the Pendulum" actually was.  "Though he lives on the brink of the pit, on the very verge of the plunge into unconciousness, he is still unable to disengage himself from the physical and temperal world