Poetic Images
Poetic Themes
Context
C&P Themes
C&P Symbolism
100

These characters steal away the child in "Stolen Child"

Faeries

100

Yeats's poetry often centers around this

Nature

100

This is the city where most of Crime and Punishment takes place.

St. Petersburg

100

The central theme of Crime and Punishment 

Sin and redemption/crime and punishment

100

Sonya's shawl is this color

Green

200

This is represented by the fly in Emily Dickinson poem "I heard a Fly buzz --when I died--"

Doubt

200

Hopkins's poetry often juxtaposes these two ideas

Anguish and beauty

200

Ezra Pound was born in this country 

America
200

Who is essential to Raskolnikov's redemption?

Sonya

200

Katerina represents this idea in Crime and Punishment

Justice (lady justice or human justice)

300

This person is praised at the end of Walt Whitman's poem "One's Self I Sing"?

Modern Man

300

This is represented by the word "Possibility" in Emily Dickinson's poem "I dwell in Possibility"

Poetry 

300
This major historical event is referenced in Yeats's "Second Coming"

World War I

300

This school of thought is condemned by association with Svidrigailov, Raskolnikov, and Luzhin 

Rational Egoism 

300

Svidrigailov's dreams could symbolize this

His unresolved guilt

400

This image is described by the last lines of "God's Grandeur"

The Holy Spirit over the world

400

Ezra Pound's 'motto' when it came to poetry

"Make it new"

400

Yeats is know as the last of the

Romantics

400

Raskolnikov must be willing to accept this, or he cannot be redeemed 

Suffering

400

Raskolnikov's room could symbolize this

The state of his soul

500

The speaker in "The Lake Isle of Innisfree" is physically located here

The city (The roadway/The pavements grey)

500

This is the school of thought associated the soul in Yeats's "A Dialogue of Self and Soul"

Platonism 

500

Define free verse poetry 

Poetry a consistent without rhyme or meter

500

 Sonya and Raskolnikov have this at the end of Crime and Punishment and it allows them to bear great suffering

Infinite love

500

Pulcheria's death symbolizes this effect of Raskolnikov's sin

Broken natural order (responses can vary)