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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper which interprets Amy Lowell’s poem The Dinner Party. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAdnny.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
several short poems. And, in each poem there seems to be a different narrator, or a very different perspective and/or focus, which further offers a sense of the disjointed. But,
it is also a poem about a Dinner Party, as the title suggests, and in many different ways it offers the reader a look at social and personal perspectives concerning
the gathering of people for a social and perhaps stressful social dinner party. The following paper interprets the poem. The Dinner Party by Amy Lowell As mentioned, this
particular poem is actually divided into several small poems. The titles are Fish, Game, Drawing-Room, Coffee, Talk, and Eleven OClock. The first poem speaks of drinking wine and thus introduces
the reader into the beginning of a dinner party wherein people sit and talk, sip wine, and set the stage for the party as they await dinner. The narrator obviously
sees the people as pretentious and pointless as indicated when the narrator claims that the people are "Mocking at the thing they cannot understand" (Lowell 3). The second part
states how one individual, a man with whixkers, "Sneered languidly over his quail" which again offers a very pretentious understanding of the dinner party and those who have attended (Lowell
11). After this section the dinner party clearly moves to the Drawing-Room wherein a woman who sits with fire reflecting her jewels seems to offer nothing in her eyes, suggesting
that her heart has been burnt, illustrating the sense of void in the dinner party and the members, as well as suggesting that the narrator sees a woman who has
lost herself because of such social pressures. One critic indicates that this poem is one wherein Lowell "caricatures conservative academics resistance to the new poetry. With a stanza for
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