However, Nazrul's poems strongly emphasise the confluence of the roles of both sexes and their equal importance to life.
The poem emphasizes the effects of age and the associated deterioration of beauty, and its effect on a sexual or romantic relationship.
These poems emphasise his personal solitude and empathy with the "little" and "insignificant" things around him, or with its horizon, the sea.
Additionally, the poem emphasizes Wordsworth's poetic achievement while simultaneously undercutting Coleridge's own.
Clinton's address and the poem, according to Hagen, both emphasized unity despite the diversity of American culture.
The poem under the skull emphasizes Smith's acceptance of death:
The poem included many personal images connecting to Eliot's childhood, and emphasized the image of water and sailing as a metaphor for humanity.
The poem also emphasizes a desire to protect one's family and to live a simple life in harmony with nature.
The poems emphasise the spirit and self from a religious, spiritual perspective.
The poem emphasizes that memory must be abandoned to understand the current world, and humans must realize that the universe is based on order.