The Hawk
THE COLLISION, THE SOUND OF WINDOW AND HAWK, MADE ME JUMP TO MY FEET IT WAS QUITE A SHOCK. THE DOGS WERE EXCITED BY THE NOISE THEY HEARD THE RACE […]
THE COLLISION, THE SOUND OF WINDOW AND HAWK, MADE ME JUMP TO MY FEET IT WAS QUITE A SHOCK. THE DOGS WERE EXCITED BY THE NOISE THEY HEARD THE RACE […]
Entry #1 Sometimes missing you makes me really hate Target And it sucks to hate Target because Target is well, pretty awesome. But it looks identical everywhere in the world
When I first saw the log that was to become my next mission in the wood shop, it had been sitting in the yard for over two years. Neglected and
Her son begins the outline of a lamb and cautions us to keep it as a secret, his fist clenched round the nubbins of a crayon. His mother leans back
An exciting new reading of John Milton’s Lycidas, examining the mysteries of interruption in the middle of the poem. This study looks at Milton’s poem with a theological lens, taking into account early modern cultural implications surrounding death. Sarah Bartlett has an MA from East Carolina University, with a concentration on early modern studies.
This essay explores how a reading of Shakespeare’s sonnets set in the Tower of London ameliorates an understanding of Shakespeare’s writing and his world. Sarah Bartlett has an MA from East Carolina University, with a concentration in early modern British Literature. Her studies focused on the works of Shakespeare, Donne and Milton.
This study examines Donne’s work from an Aristolelian, alchemcial lens, educating the reader on the science practiced in Europe in the early modern period. Sarah Bartlett has an MA from East Carolina University, with a concentration in early modern British Literature. She served as a research assistant for the Donne Variorum for three years, during which time she began a six year journey undertaking a study of Donne’s enigmatic and chimeric poem, Air and Angels.