Great Lines: Rudyard Kipling
Kipling suggests the ideal mindset of a champion.
Read MoreKipling suggests the ideal mindset of a champion.
Read MorePlath imagines female choice as a fig tree.
Read MoreAs Shakespeare reimagined, in refusing to be mastered, Cleopatra mastered herself.
Read MoreEmily Brontë captures the wondrous transience of the bluebell.
Read MoreThe phrase ‘To be, or not to be’ combines devices to pose the quintessential, existential question.
Read More‘The Red Wheelbarrow’ comprises a mere four lines which carry a weight of meaning.
Read MoreTS Eliot’s The Waste Land is 100 years old—and oddly relevant still, in our perplexing post-industrial age.
Read MoreSteinbeck’s Nobel Prize speech challenges writers to reflect both the worst and the best man can be, in a quest to better humanity.
Read MoreWordsworth personifies daffodils as a ‘golden’, ‘dancing’ multitude.
Read MoreThe Beautiful and Damned (1922) prefigures the grand, flowing movements of the Gatsby narrative.
Read MoreA small, white, mighty sign that life begins again.
Read MoreStructure can be controlled and automated—fixed—in advance, when students have a clear method to follow.
Read MoreHere are 5 steps to write a summary efficiently.
Read MoreThe joy comes from observing the pattern as it becomes increasingly meaningful to us.
Read MoreChristmas songs are an excellent example of euphony at work.
Read MoreHere are three ways to combat ‘slacktivism’ and convince your followers to volunteer their time, effort and presence your campaign.
Read MoreDelivering a memorable line can have a significant and lasting impact on your audience.
Read MoreRhetorical language is outstanding language used to impress an audience.
Read MoreIn a verbal tribute to the primacy of nature, as the foundation of all existence, Maclean describes the world at the beginning and end of time
Read MoreCasablanca’s sentimental script boasts some of the most memorable and repeated lines in popular culture.
Read More