Episodes
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Introduction One of Coleridge's most exquisite and captivating poems is "Love." The poem "Love" is an excerpt from Genevieve's tale, "Tale of the Dark Ladie." The poet created the fictional Genevieve in this poem, whom he admired. In the year 1800, Coleridge relocated to the Lake District. As his marriage broke down, he fell deeply in love with Sara Hutchinson, who would later become Wordsworth’s sister-in-law. This is covered in "Love" and other Asra poems. His opium use developed into an addiction that caused him significant harm. The poet expresses his love for Genevieve in this poem, but she rejects him. It is a creation of the poet's imagination. She has tender, gentle feelings about what transpired. The poet does a good job of accurately and in-depth describing them. This poem demonstrates many of Coleridge's poetry's best qualities. The poet does a fantastic job at describing the surrounding environment. The poem contains some powerful and intriguing words and images.
This podcast was created on Hubhopper studio. If you wish to start your own podcast for free, visit studio.hubhopper.com, or download the mobile app on the Google Playstore. Hubhopper is India's leading podcast creation platform. Start your podcast & get your voice heard across platforms like Spotify, Gaana, Google podcasts, Wynk Music and more. Click on the link 'Hubhopper' or visit studio.hubhopper.com.
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THE KID is one of the finest feature films made by CHARLES CHAPLIN. It is one of my most favourite films and probably Chaplin also loved the film very much and that is the reason why he has written about making this film in his autobiography called MY AUTOBIOGRAPHY. He describes in his autobiography how he discovered a child artist and how a new idea of a movie struck him after discovering the child artist.
This podcast was created on Hubhopper studio. If you wish to start your own podcast for free, visit studio.hubhopper.com, or download the mobile app on the Google Playstore. Hubhopper is India's leading podcast creation platform. Start your podcast & get your voice heard across platforms like Spotify, Gaana, Google podcasts, Wynk Music and more. Click on the link 'Hubhopper' or visit studio.hubhopper.com.
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"The Quest for Happiness" is about how people can survive with hope. Its main goal is to find happiness and avoid suffering. The Dalai Lama sheds light on Wealth, which he calls prosperity, Health, and Friendship, which he calls compassion. The Dalai Lama makes it clear that his essay is based on things that have nothing to do with religion. Reading about where happiness comes from is interesting. The essay shows how important secular ethics are and how we can use them in our daily lives. These are morals that both religious and nonreligious people can follow. Here, the Dalai Lama gives suggestions and advice on how to get rid of bad feelings and help people find happiness. In this essay, the Dalai Lama explains why compassion is important and stresses how important it is to have healthy relationships, financial security, and good health all at the same time. But he says that happiness can't really come from things in this world. Rather, the only way to get true satisfaction and ultimate happiness is to find a purpose and keep practising mindfulness.
About Dalai Lama
The 14th Dalai Lama, who is still in power, is the most famous and important Buddhist monk in the world. He is well-known around the world as a religious preacher, a Buddhist scholar, and a spiritual writer. He was born on July 6, 1935, in a small village in Takster, Amdo, north-east Tibet. His family farmed and sold horses. His Holiness became a monk when he was six years old. Lord Gautama Buddha and his ideas have a big impact on him. After Chinese troops brutally put down the Tibetan National Uprising in Lhasa in 1959, His Holiness was forced to leave the country. Since then, he has lived in McLeod Ganj, which is a suburb of Dharamsala in the northern Indian state of Himachal Pradesh. The Dalai Lama is a peaceful person. In 1989, he was given the Nobel Peace Prize for his peaceful efforts to free Tibet.
This podcast was created on Hubhopper studio. If you wish to start your own podcast for free, visit studio.hubhopper.com, or download the mobile app on the Google Playstore. Hubhopper is India's leading podcast creation platform. Start your podcast & get your voice heard across platforms like Spotify, Gaana, Google podcasts, Wynk Music and more. Click on the link 'Hubhopper' or visit studio.hubhopper.com.
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In 1925, the poem "I, Too, Sing America," sometimes known as "I, Too" was published for the first time. When it appeared in 1925's collection of poems The Weary Blues by Langston Hughes, it was also known as the "Epilogue." The poem by Hughes is a great illustration of how black people view the United States. The poet implies that all African Americans believe they are subjected to unfair treatment due of their colour of skin. Like each white person who tries to brush him off, the poet makes it abundantly apparent that he is an American. He claims that African Americans have also made an equal contribution to shaping America. The poem serves as a sort of protest against the Jim Crow laws of the South, which required black and white people to avoid each other in practically all public settings. After the Civil War, it persisted for roughly 100 years until 1968. In the poem "I, too," Hughes asserts that he is still a significant contributor to America. The poem imagines a society in which black and white people are treated equally.
This podcast was created on Hubhopper studio. If you wish to start your own podcast for free, visit studio.hubhopper.com, or download the mobile app on the Google
Playstore. Hubhopper is India's leading podcast creation platform. Start your
podcast & get your voice heard across platforms like Spotify, Gaana, Google
podcasts, Wynk Music and more. Click on the link 'Hubhopper' or visit studio.hubhopper.com.
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Walt Whitman's poetry collection Leaves of Grass, which came out in 1856, was the first book to include his poem called "Song of the Open Road." It is a poem that tells a story about observations, happiness and life lessons. The speaker plays the part of a wanderer. He decides to hit the open road and see the world. He follows the road wherever it goes. The road stands for many things, like freedom, diversity, and ideals. He talks about how free he felt during his journey. The trip brings him a lot of happiness. Even now, people think the poem is very important. It encourages and motivates people to spend time in nature and get to know it better. It talks about all parts of life and gives answers to many different problems.
This podcast was created on Hubhopper studio. If you wish to start your own podcast for free, visit studio.hubhopper.com, or download the mobile app on the Google Playstore. Hubhopper is India's leading podcast creation platform. Start your podcast & get your voice heard across platforms like Spotify, Gaana, Google podcasts, Wynk Music and more. Click on the link'Hubhopper' or visit studio.hubhopper.com.
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The main objective of the writer for writing this novel is to tell the readers to adopt socialism by elaborating the evils of capitalism. Sinclair thinks that capitalism is inhuman and that is the reason why he depicts the failure of capitalism in this novel and portrays socialism as the cure for all the evils caused by capitalism.
READ MORE: https://literature4life.com/index.php/2021/09/05/savage-and-unforgiving-world-in-the-upton-sinclairs-novel-the-jungle/
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Riders to the Sea is a fantastic dramatic piece of literature. It just has one act. J. M. Synge penned this tragic play. It's about what goes wrong for a fishing family who lives in a cottage near the sea.
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To Read More about "The American Scholar by Ralph Waldo Emerson" - click: https://literature4life.com/
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Langston Hughes wrote "The Negro Speaks of Rivers" when he was 17 years old in 1920. It is often thought to be his first "mature" poem. He wrote this poem on the train journey to see his father. When he crossed over the Mississippi River, he got the idea to write this poem. He had trouble getting along with his father, who was black and didn't like other black people. People say he wrote the poem on the back of an envelope which his father gave him. It came out in 1921 in a magazine called The Crisis that many African Americans read. At Hughes's funeral in 1967, this same poem was read out loud. It's written in free verse, but it has rhythm for sure.
Hughes became a well-known leader of the Harlem Renaissance because of how well this poem did.
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The plot of the play Romeo and Juliet has been told in a serious and neat way, which makes it very suspenseful. Two rival families in Verona, the Montagues and the Capulets, are at the centre of the story. The play starts with a fight between people from these two families. At some point, the Prince has to step in to keep the fight from getting worse. The rest of the play is about Romeo and Juliet, two young people from different families who meet and fall in love. But their love can't last because their families hate each other.
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"Elegy III: Change" by John Donne is an excellent example of formal and sustained mourning in verse. It appears that he composed elegies under a variety of life circumstances. The poet's sardonic defence of women's transitory love was frivolous at best. When it comes to love, he compares women to flowing water, claiming that they are lovely only when they are able to shift partners without hesitation.
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The Canto XXI is one of Alfred Tennyson's 133 cantos from In Memoriam. The poem is a testament to Tennyson's valued relationship with Arthur Henry Hallam, who died when he was just 22 years old and whose death severely impacted Tennyson, causing him to write this epic elegy. Tennyson focuses on finding peace and a way to find hope in it after his friend's untimely loss.
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The author's search for his own mother is the theme of this story. He considers his mother to be a stranger because he was adopted and didn't discover his true identity until he was 38 years old. In his quest, he meets a lot of strangers, but he eventually finds someone he really likes.
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A Living God story illustrates a crucial event in the life of Goryo Hamaguchi (1820-1885), the current Yamasa Corporation's owner, who stood firm on numerous important political and regulatory footings in Japan. In 1854, Hamaguchi rescued many lives in Hirogawa, Wakayama, when a massive tidal wave wreaked havoc on the promontory. Following the wave, Hamaguchi used his own money to construct a 600-meter defensive barrier with a width of 20 metres and a level of five metres, limiting the damage caused by subsequent tidal waves. He, too, worked in the field of training and established a secure foundation for learning Japanese fencing and Chinese painting. According to Shintoism, the traditional Japanese faith, kami, or sanctified spirits, manifest themselves as life-giving elements such as wind, rain, mountains, trees, and so on. People are also adored as kami and are cherished when they pass away. The accompanying story informs us about one such man, Goryo Hamaguchi, who became a living God as a result of his acts of kindness.
Ishikari Lore by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Christina Rossetti is one of the most well-known female Victorian poets. She was born on December 5th, 1830, in London. Her writing displayed a wide range of styles. Goblin Market and Other Poems 1862 is her most famous work. She is regarded as one of the most important Pre-Raphaelite poets. She was diagnosed with hyperthyroidism, breast cancer, and other ailments as she neared the end of her life. On December 29, 1894, she passed away.
Christina Rossetti wrote a Petrarchan Sonnet called Remember. It is divided into two sections: Octave and Sestet. The Octave uses an abbaabba rhyme scheme, while the Sestet uses a cddece rhyme scheme. The Sonnet is a lovely expression of both human and divine love.
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WILLIAM WORDSWORH’s Lucy Poems are a collection of five poems composed in Germany between 1798 and 1801. Long has been discussed whether Lucy was a real woman or a fragment of the poet’s imagination. Wordsworth never revealed her true identify or upbringing. ‘Education of Nature’ is one of the ‘Lucy poems.’ Nature provided Wordsworth with inspiration and spirituality. In this poetry, Nature adopts Lucy as her kid and decides to raise her under her care. Lucy, dies suddenly, leaving the poet sad. Nature has a special place in this poem since she is both beautiful and generous. The poem becomes a magnificent elegy addressed to a deceased woman whom Wordsworth admired not only for her beauty, but also for her connection to nature, which he thought as a great achievement. According to the poet, nature has an ennobling and spiritual capacity to guide humanity, as proven by this poem.
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MAX EHRMANN Was an American poet who wrote this didactic poem that is an instructional poem, called DESIDERATA which means in Latin something that is needed or desired. The poem is in the prose format therefore it is called a prose poem and this poem has a very interesting history. MAX EHRMANN was mostly unknown for all his lifetime but this particular poem made him very popular; and he is known even today for his poem DESIDERATA. He wrote this poem in 1920 but he didn’t publish it… most probably because he wrote this poem for his daughter. Later on in 1927, he thought of copywriting it; and so, the poem was copyrighted in 1927. Still the poem didn’t have any fame as it didn’t reach unto the readers.
In the Christmas of 1933, he printed this poem on Christmas cards and he distributed those cards among his friends, family and acquaintances but he did not mention the Copyright notice regarding this poem on those cards and therefore he had to lose his Copyright. Many people distributed the unattributed copies everywhere which means MAX EHRMANN was not credited for his work in those copies. He died in 1945 and after his death his wife published his poems in a book entitled THE POEMS of MAX EHRMANN In 1948. Even after the publication of this book nearly 200 unattributed copies of desiderata were distributed in a church in 1959.
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