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/lit/ - Literature


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3757063 No.3757063 [Reply] [Original]

What's the best compliment your professor has written on your paper?

>> No.3757087

after he retired he told me: "You were the best writer I had in twenty five years of teaching. I used your essays as examples in every class after yours."

>> No.3757098

>>3757063
Told me that I was incredibly clear and told me I should consider becoming a writer. I was working towards engineering

>> No.3757100

>>3757063
About six months ago I was visiting LA and decided to go to my alma mater for nostalgia. I walked into one of my old professor's offices (haven't seen him in 6 years) and he looked up and greeted my by my full name. That was the best compliment I could think of. We talked for forty-five minutes about what I had been doing since graduation and his new research before he went to teach a class.

>> No.3757110

"At least it was on time"

>> No.3757116

>>3757110

> first honest post in entire thread

>> No.3757117

>>3757098
Mine said the same thing.

>> No.3757118

"Get a real degree and a real job you piece of shit."

-my philosophy professor

>> No.3757119

"Incomprehensible paragraphs."

I knew I was on to something.

>> No.3757120

You tried hard.

>> No.3757124

Not a professor, but during my full class critique in CW, some person drew smiley faces at all the parts that they liked. So I got a paper back with no words and a bunch of smiley faces.

>> No.3757125

He read my story to every class for years to come and told me that I have an amazing future writing ahead of me. He used it to teach the class about how real writing can take many hours of refinement to nail, and that this must have taken me a long time.

I didn't have the heart to tell him that I wrote it starting an hour before class and finishing thirty minutes later.

This was a proff who thought he was Robin WIlliams in the Dead Poets Society who had to inspire young minds by shedding the shackles of pompous academia. Of course this made his class a joke but who cares I got 95% for what much have been about 4 hours combined work for the whole semester.

>> No.3757133

"stunning, amazing ending"
Copious amounts of "yes!" and "very, very good!".
Always imagined she got off to my paper.

>> No.3757140

>>3757133
>Always imagined she got off to my paper.

This is hot to think about...

>> No.3757143

I wrote a fable about a dog that was supposed to give a moral on drug addiction and I got it back with bloodstains on it with a "Sorry." written at the top in red pen.

>> No.3757159

>>3757063
"Please consider changing your major to our department"

>> No.3757177
File: 26 KB, 299x450, st.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3757177

>A+, see me after class for an A* ;)

>> No.3757187

You can write, you can think. There's discernible talent.

>> No.3757190

>>3757177
That's not a compliment. That's just instructions. Why are you so fucking stupid, anon?

>> No.3757199

>Can I use this as an example paper for future classes?

Happened more than once.

>> No.3757203

>>3757177
PS [spoilers]I'm home-schooled[/spoilers]

>> No.3757207

>>3757187
Well at least you know you're not Wallace

>> No.3757211

>>3757207
That was quite clearly the joke you fucking phillistine.

>> No.3757215

>>3757211
and I followed it, imbecile

>> No.3757229

>>3757190

Critiquing my dissertation like it was peer review, just a sentence at the start and finish saying this was an amazing dissertation ect and then two solid paragraphs savaging it and picking my argument to pieces then finishing with a ridiculously high grade.

I've never heard of him doing the same for anyone else and the fact that he thought it was worth proper brutal academic criticism, and that I could take that, seemed to me to be the highest compliment possible.

>> No.3757233

Tour de force.

>> No.3757237

>>3757229

Gah clicked on >>3757190 by accident.

>> No.3757247
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3757247

>decent

>> No.3757254

I had a professor who studied Milton analyses for 15 years tell me that my view of Paradise Lost is something he's never seen before.

I did a Marxist reading of it.

>> No.3757265

"intelligent stuff" which means it fills the requirements (its a JC) and I have pontential

>> No.3757273

>>3757247
>>>/v/
No surprise. Please fuck off.

>> No.3757279
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3757279

>>3757273

>> No.3757281

>>3757254
What'd you argue?

>> No.3757298

>>3757125
I got 100% for my coursework last year, and it was about an hours worth of work. I hadn't read the books I was writing about for four plus months, and all of my quotes were from memory.

Felt good.

>> No.3757302

Now everyone who posted in this thread must pot the work their professor complemented, and the rest of /lit/ will see if it deserved the complement.

>> No.3757311

>>3757281

That Paradise Lost is overall a class argument, a representation of Milton's displeasure with the serf/aristocratic divide in social structure, and there-in it represents a pre-eminent Marxist hierarchical structure with the kingdom of Satan as the underdog proletariat and God as the overbearing bourgeoisie. A REALLY fun paper.

>> No.3757315
File: 402 KB, 1280x960, IMG_20130514_085711.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3757315

>>3757302
dere yu goe

>> No.3757319

That my interpretation of animal imagery was interesting.

>> No.3757324

>>3757315
>not being able to put punctuation in the right place
top lel

>> No.3757327

>>3757302
I have this saved on my hard drive from a while back, I wrote it on the night before the deadline and completed it in the following morning. I got 100% on it, don't think it was warranted but happy I guess.

I was:

>>3757233

One of the most impressive aspects of Seamus Heaney's poetry is his ability to forge a relationship with the physical and metaphysical themes he explores in verse. It is an ability that is prevalent in almost every poem Heaney has written, and one that makes him unique as a poet. Similarly impressive is the depth of this ability, as Heaney's connections with his poetry are as deeply rooted as any real-life connection, and as a result of this are vulnerable to the same criticisms of most relationships. These range from being saccharine and romanticised to vindictive or hateful. However, Heaney manages to write poetry that does not succumb to any of these descriptions.

Heaney's ability to connect with his muses is not restrained by land, sea or even death. Throughout his work shines an ability to emotionally involve himself with the animate and inanimate, and the tangible and intangible. In "Postscript", he managers to capture in verse the moment of the senses being overwhelmed by beautiful scenery, and bond himself to the idiosyncrasy of being awed rather than the scene of the poem. In this way the poem draws in the reader and makes them notice in themselves the same moment of aesthetic watershed. Heaney is constantly building bridges in his poetry, whether it is between the reader and himself or himself and his subject matter.

>> No.3757330

>>3757327
(cont)

Exploring one of the more traditional relationships for a change, Heaney examines the connection between himself and his father in "The Harvest Bow". Here his relationship with the past is shown to echo in his present-day life in an unusual manner. Rather than be drawn to his father's past by meeting or talking with him, the harvest bow itself proves to be a window into the past and a symbol of Heaney's childhood. The strength of Heaney's relationship with the past (inarguably his strongest relationship) seems most concentrated in the relics of his own, whether they are harvest bows, bog bodies, or skunks.

Although Heaney's relationship with the past is strong, like a personal relationship it is not always positive. In "The Tollund Man", a negative outlook is shown. The accusation of nostalgic romanticism is seldom leveled at the poet, noted for his honest reflections on the past, and his homeland is no exception to this. Heaney is once again seen delving into the past, but with the hand of trepidation rather than reflection this time. Heaney in the poem establishes a strong connection between the death of the Tollund Man and the sectarian murders in Northern Ireland, and through morbid juxtaposition of the two he reaches a sort of cathartic vantage point from which he can reflect on the violence prevalent in his homeland. The poem also contains Heaney's most ostentatious conclusion on his home place, as he talks of feeling "Lost,/Unhappy and at home" in Aarhus, where religious murder is as familiar as it is in Derry. "The Tollund Man" also shows most of all the strength of Heaney's connection with the past, where the relationship between the two is almost tangible to the point where Heaney is as easily harmed as helped by it.

>> No.3757331

>>3757063
I had a /lit/ prof call a paper I wrote on camus a bunch of pretentious squabble.

He himself was a pretentious douche bag and likely felt threatened by my magnanimous member.

>> No.3757335

>>3757327
(finish)

"Bogland" is another poem of Heaney's in which he breathes life into the inanimate, and uses the newly personified object as a metaphor of life. It is also perhaps the strongest indicator of Heaney's affection for the bog as a symbol of both his youth and Irish culture. "Bogland"'s most interesting point is its identification of attachment to the past as an Irish tendency, as it is undeniably a huge facet of the poetry of Heaney. The idea that "Our pioneers keep striking/Inwards and downwards" is one that is also applicable to the poet himself. He reveals his affection for the bog through the subtlety of adjectives, in the line "The ground itself is kind, black butter". Overall, this poem is perhaps the best one to use to identify Heaney's ability to forge relationships in poetry, as not only does he personify and subsequently connect with the intangible (the Irish persona) and the inanimate (the bog), but he also openly celebrates the Irish trait of hanging onto the past - a theme that is abundant in Heaney's poetry.

Overall, it is undoubtedly the trademark of Heaney's poetry to foster deep relationships with his subject matter, but it is the depth of these connections that makes his poetry so unique. He explores the past with poetic dexterity and an admirable clarity of vision, and through this forges poetic relationships that are at least comparable to personal ones.

>> No.3757336

>>3757331
Keep telling yourself that.

>> No.3757342

>>3757336
I think he was being humorous, friend.

>> No.3757340

>>3757324
yeah I goofed but I always end up doing my papers the night before so mistakes are to be had. I'll get it together by the time I get to real college

>> No.3757341

>>3757336
I find my genitalia rather soothing myself.

>> No.3757343

>>3757315
why the weird aligning?

>> No.3757344

>>3757331
But camus IS pretentious squabble.

>> No.3757346

>>3757343
unless my teacher is ignorant and the handbook is wrong, that's MLA format correct

>> No.3757349

>>3757346
>mla

conformist.

>> No.3757353

>>3757349
well I'm certainly not going to put it in god dam APA

>> No.3757356

>>3757349
This. Fucking conformist sheeple. I write all my essays in size 72 comic sans, with randomised line spacing and varying font colours. The occasional sentence or two are in wingdings. That is IF I write the essay at all.

>> No.3757362

>>3757356
>he doesn't print it on green sanded-down tree bark

Fucking pleb

>> No.3757366

>>3757362
>>3757356
>>3757353
>>3757349
glorious

>> No.3757369

>>3757362
Who said anything about printing them? I type my essays in microsoft word (windows 98 version) and then hire a surrealist painter to carve that essay into a black of sandstone. I then replace a single block the in great pyramid of Giza with that block of sandstone, and when my feat has made the news the next day I sent my professor a handwritten URL - directing him to the news of the block placement - in the post.

>> No.3757373

>>3757369
*block of sandstone

>> No.3757375

>>3757369
what grade did you get?

>> No.3757378

>>3757369
but why a surrealist and not just an artist?

>> No.3757382

>>3757378
Why not?

>>3757375
I got a Medal of Honor from Obama.

>> No.3757385

>>3757382
all I got was a "B" last time I did that

>> No.3757386

>>3757385
Your professor must be a pleb.

>> No.3757389

>>3757385
>the black sandstone was of unsatisfactory quality.

>> No.3757393

>>3757389
he downgrades work when he has to put in foot work

>> No.3757678

"bretty good, 5/5"

>> No.3757702

Sorry Anon, I'm too old for you. I am married too, sorry, please don't insist and make just the exams, please.

>> No.3757703

>>3757087
>>3757098
>>3757100
>>3757125
Let's see some writings then. Have you faggots published anything, or are you planning on dying anonymous geniuses.

>> No.3757710

itt: (potential writurs( faggot engineering teachers sayin to their students that theyre the next dostoyedgys

>> No.3757712

"FINISH YOUR WORK"

>> No.3757719

"pretty good for a goyim B+"

>> No.3757756

My history professor once told me I was the reason teaching was still fun for him. His exact words were: "Anon, compared to the other kids... Now, I don't want to say anything bad... I mean, I'm here to teach them things, after all. But it's nice to have a kid like you in a class every once in a while. Keeps it fun for me too."

I failed the next test after a heavy night of drinking and I have never felt worse than on that day. I let him down. Sometimes, I still wonder what went through his mind as he graded me.

>> No.3757759

>>3757110
lel had a good chuckle

>> No.3757766

>This essay would have REALLY benefitted from better penmanship.

>> No.3757772

"perfect"

>> No.3757802
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3757802

Not my story but I watched my friends paper get destroyed by his history professor.

>Friend was writing for the History journal
>Hands it in to professor
>Professor praises it, says it's great.
>Takes out a fucking orange, puts it on top of the paper.
>Starts cutting the orange into slices and eating it
>Paper gets destroyed in Orange juice
>Professor says sorry and hands it back to him
>Says he'll be graded normally

>> No.3757806

>>3757315
learn how to do in-text citations son!

>> No.3757817

"A. This type of writing comes easy to you, doesn't it?" -on a comparative analysis

>> No.3757822

I don't know if it's a compliment or what, but they said that I should come see them after the end of term and they could help me edit the paper into something appropriate for publication in an academic journal because they thought the subject matter was interesting.

>> No.3757823

"You need to stop showing off."

>> No.3757830

>>3757712
your professor sounds like a bro

>> No.3757833

She kept a copy for herself, and asked me to retype it in nicer presentation and give it to her so she could use it to show other students how to write. Said something like every once in a while she gets a special essay and does this.

I didn't think it was spectacular, and I think it had a bit to do with me emanating "sad bastard" and her wanting to make me feel better. The 100% certainly did.

>> No.3757837

>>3757315
verbose drivel

>> No.3757840

>>3757833
Did you give her the D?

>> No.3757843

>>3757837
I don't think so, it's quite good. Verbose is about the last accusation I'd level at it, more like opaque.

>> No.3757845

>>3757837
>I've never written a degree level essay

>> No.3757848

>>3757840
She was like 70 years old, so no.

>> No.3757851

>>3757802
wut? that sounds horrible. what kind of person treats something with such disrespect after praising it?

>> No.3757852

>>3757802
4chan: The Teacher

>> No.3757855

>>3757851
that's not even relevant. I would have been able to cut that orange without a drop spilled

>> No.3757856

>>3757852
It really is. Man that sounds like a greentext story. Hell if you swap "spaghetti" for "orange" it is nearly identical to a greentext story.

>> No.3757903

>>3757335
christ that is a lot of fluff and padding.

>> No.3757912

>>3757903
The whole thing or that part specifically?

>> No.3757917

>Why does anyone care?

>> No.3757924

>>3757912
I just skimmed it, I'm sure it was fine but there was a lot of little padding in each sentence, unnecessarily puffed up phrases and words, that sort of thing.

>> No.3757925

>>3757917
its something to talk about that isn't Ayn Rand.

>> No.3757927

>>3757924
Yeah.. I have a bad habit of resorting to purple prose to rack up marks in academic essays.

>> No.3757941

Last December my prof told me I should get my paper on Nietzsche published.

I am, it´s been accepted and will be published in the September issue.

>> No.3757956

>>3757941
of gay shit for fags weekly?

>> No.3757959

>>3757956
Jokes on you dumbass, he specified a month. Maybe you'd know that if your family was Patrician enough to buy the "gay shit for fags" monthly edition.

>> No.3757966

Wrote an essay about how the local government was handling the bird flu affair (this was back when everybody thought it could become a global pandemic). It was pretty shit, it was basically "don't trust what they tell you because they have their own agenda and often use things like this as misdirection while they do their own dirty shit."

But anyway, professor said I had a "very literary style" and read it out loud for the whole class. It was the only essay that got such a treatment from her in the whole course.

>> No.3757974

>>3757956
>>3757959
It´s a peer-reviewed philosophy journal.

>> No.3757975

After half faking and half crushing my way through an exam question on an Emily Dickenson sight piece:

"Nice."

I was elated.

>> No.3758044

The three more memorable, on the top of my head, are:
"Beautiful work" (a commentary of an extract of Bergson's Matter and Memory) in senior highschool philosophy class
"Written with elegant simplicity" two years later (still philosophy)
"Conclusion compact and complete" the same years. This one was funny because I was a math major so "compact" and "complete" had a very technical signifiance.

Those were fun days. I'd post it but I haven't it right now (not a home) and it's in French anyway.

Sage because I will never be a writer. My literature teachers tricked me. All those years, damn.

>> No.3758059

>>3758044
You guys have highschool philosophy class? Wow, cool.

My teachers tricked me too with encouragement to study literature because I had "precocious talent".

>> No.3758073

>>3757975
"Half-faking and half-crushing"?
>>3757833
This post was enjoyable to read. It got my imagination going when you said your essay emanated the feeling of being a sad bastard and when you said the 100% made you feel better.

Become a novelist so I can promote you

>> No.3758076

>>3758073
I would but my wrists have now been slit too deep to allow for the picking up of a pen.

>> No.3758078

Something like "-A, your use of passive voice prevents your language from achieving the level of your ideas"

The paper was a comparative final essay between Joyce and Chekhov. I was a high school sophomore taking a 400 level course in college.

>> No.3758084

passable

>> No.3758086

"Your essay shows no sign of critical thinking ability, and you have no discernible talent. Still, I hear you're a great tennis player, so no need to get hung up over it!"

>> No.3758097

>>3758078
I point out my grade to emphasize how much that meant to me. I'm not trying to be one of those "I read Finnegans Wake when I was 4" people.

>> No.3758253

"your writing is thrash but you certainly know how to use our hands, anon ;) "

>> No.3758266

"I have no idea what any of this means, but my
god it's pretty."

70/100

>> No.3758272

>>3758253
by the way, this may sound like a joke but it's completely true. the teacher got fired 2 years later for statutory rape lol. I wasn't involved in that case

>> No.3758289
File: 25 KB, 438x456, 1347852940001.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3758289

tfw T.A never let me fuck her--could of sworn she really wanted it.

>> No.3758291

>summative assessment
>useful

Fucking plebs

>> No.3758296

"Clear, erudite style"
That was in history.

>> No.3758307

>>3758059
Yeah it's pretty fun. Unfortunately philosophy is the assignement with highest percentage of retarded/crazy/deluded teachers in the whole French educational system (and that's saying something, as anybody who has been in any Western educational system long enough coul attest). There's no required program, we're supposed to deal with a list of themes. The courses are designed to encourage critical thinking but many teachers take it as an occasion to do whatever they want. Some even go so low as to make it a barely disguised proselyte class. I was fortunaltely a bit more lucky, I actually learnt things that year.

>My teachers tricked me too with encouragement to study literature because I had "precocious talent".

Story of my life. In all assignements. Post-highschool expectations-lowerings are harsh sometimes.

>> No.3758314

>>3758296
I also got something like "writes with flair and originality" on an English essay about Wuthering Heights.

>> No.3758321

>>3758291
Nobody mentioned usefulness here. Surely you patricians don't need to read before posting.

>> No.3758336

"No discernible talent, see me after class"

>> No.3758337

'u are the best'
thank u

>> No.3758338

>>3758336
Come on, it's been done twice already. Someone make a Lovecraft joke. Or something about De Sade writing something creepy. Or Stirner writing "spooks" alá Homer with "Screw Flanders" over and over again.

>> No.3758341

"F+ No discernible talent, see me after class"

>> No.3758359
File: 41 KB, 660x551, Oh_stop_it_you.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3758359

"Love the opening of the story.

You have such a great ear for the rhythms of fiction.

I don't know what your future plans are, but I hope they include continuing with your fiction writing. I predict you have a future of publication ahead."

>> No.3758367

>>3758338
"Not everything is a spook, Mr. Stirner. Especially not my maths class."

How did I do?

>> No.3758374

"INCOMPREHENSIBLE WRITING??
I CAN LEND YOU A CALLIGRAPHY BOOK NEXT CLASS"

how thoughtful

>> No.3758379

"oh you :)"

I legit got this after making a pun in a essay on Shakespeare

>> No.3758391

"0/10 not even mad fucking stormfag cunt"

>> No.3758405

"70/100 DID YOU EVEN WATCH THE MOVIE?"

When I was 17 in community college and we had to write a paper about Martin Luther King and I talked about how multiculturalism doesn't work and separatists like Malcolm X were better and MLK was a plagiarist rococo minstrel anyway and etc.

2edgy5me

>> No.3758411

I study film and recently had to write an essay on James Dean and the representation of mythical figures in recent American history.

I spelled his name as James Deen throughout the essay and my prof. wrote "naughty!" at the end in red pen and underlined it. She's smoking hot too

>> No.3758416

>>3758391
lol'd

>> No.3758418

>>3758411
Goddamn I hope this is true so much

>> No.3758428

>>3758418
Yep it is, I would scan it but my scanner hasn't been working for some reason.

I guess it would be stranger if it wasn't a film class since she can claim to have heard of him through The Hills. She's smoking hot though, I can't stress that enough.

>> No.3758436

>>3758428
How old? I like to think she's been in that game before..

>> No.3758454

At the very end of my paper, my professor had written:

>"And the Beat goes on, Mr. Garza. And the Beat goes on..."
>"100/100"

A Randy Savage quote is the nicest thing a professor has ever written on my paper

>> No.3758488

>>3758436
I'm guessing mid-40's, not fat, brunette, husky voice and a real sexual look in her eyes like she's been up drinking hte night before or something

>> No.3758491

>>3758411
This is fucking hilarious

>> No.3758492

>>3758359
high school doesn't count

>> No.3758495

>>3758454
What faggy ass subject is this?

>> No.3758503

>>3758492
It was a fiction writing class I took my senior year of college.

>> No.3758504

>>3758495

It was a Symbolic Logic paper about trying to apply a FOL the issues in the debate between the Imperial Japanese Navy and the Imperial Japanese Army as to whether or not they should go to war with America in 1941.

My professor was not a mentally sound person.

>> No.3758508

>>3758503
And are you published yet?

>> No.3758534

I received $500 for having the "best" research methods paper, although I would have preferred a shot at the professor in >>3758411
(assuming she is, in fact, smoking hot)

>> No.3758541

>>3757254
I am very curious
could you post your essay?

>> No.3758542

I've had tons of compliments. One wrote that my paper was a pleasure to read, another that I should be writing books lol. I'm a fucking terrible writer, the bar is simply quite low at my university.

>> No.3758546

In high school my English teacher wrote a scathing comment in which she said that if I didn't work hard on my vocabulary I'd always remain a second-rate native speaker.

English is my 3rd language.

>> No.3758560

>>3758508

I haven't had the opportunity to finishing anything yet, you know, with trying to graduate from college and all. Seeing as this was from five months ago I don't rule it out from the realm of possibility for the future.

>> No.3758597

>>3758560
Do you think you have the capacity to be the voice of our generation?

We're counting on your bro

>> No.3758598

"This time you truly gave it to me."

The paper was about Moby Dick
Bonus if you guess my name.

>> No.3758609

>>3758598
Leibniz

>> No.3758608

Very good.
This was coming from the asshole who'd give [insert whatever you consider a literary masterpiece here] a D-.

>> No.3758613

>>3758598
RENE

DESCARTES

>> No.3758614

>>3757837
jokes on you, I got an A on that paper!

>> No.3758615
File: 486 KB, 250x141, I've made a huge mistake.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3758615

>>3758597

>> No.3758617

>>3757703
OP's a mute inglorious Milton

>> No.3758624

>>3758613
That was easy, but still, good for you. Another one:
"Your science is so gay it's a tragedy".
Biology paper of course.
Easy again.

>> No.3758629

I wrote a half-hearted book to make rent and some Finnish newspaper said I was the Kafka of the iGeneration

>> No.3758631

>>3758624
Take this shit to /sci/ faggot

>> No.3758638

>>3758629
If your name isn't Ron McBalls or Lit Rand I don't care.

>> No.3758671

>>3758631
I seriously don't grasp how that someone on /lit could possibly not get the joke. So I guess you are a troll. 5/10 made me respond but too easily spotted.

>> No.3758678

>>3757063
"It's always a pleasure reading you"

>> No.3758679

>>3758671
I get the joke faggot, it's not clever

>> No.3758709

Back in highschool, I wrote an essay on Moby Dick and did a Nitzschean/phenomenologist reading of it (two separate parts), I was graded A+ and my teacher wrote something like "the best essay I've read in my career."

Honestly, it was just a bunch of rambling with proustian sentences.

>> No.3758763

"good work! creative"

damnit im never gonna amount to anything am i

>> No.3758998

>>3757703
top lel

>> No.3759014

"I find this convincing"

>> No.3759017

"good"

I got an 82. It was the highest mark in the class though.

>> No.3759125

>>3757215

I bet you explain a joke after you tell it huh?

>> No.3759538

>this is a good essay that shows your very good understanding of poetic techniques. Your close analysis of the language was done very well

aww, thanks.

>> No.3760082

I did a philosophy 101 course some time ago.

The teacher said afterwards that he would never encourage anyone to study philosophy extensively, but he thought I should do it.

I don't know.