Arts & Humanities: Poetry: “Question: To the virgins to make much of time how is the poems theme contemporary despite the year in which it was written?” plus 5 more |
- Question: To the virgins to make much of time how is the poems theme contemporary despite the year in which it was written?
- Question: Do worth and warmth rhyme?
- Question: I need a poem for John Steinbeck's the Pearl?
- Question: How is this poem (honestly)?
- Question: In "Tintern Abbey," why does Wordsworth dwell on nature, rather than on the Catholic abbey as an active place of worship?
- Question: Do you like this poem?
| Posted: 17 Nov 2015 04:48 PM PST Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Question: Do worth and warmth rhyme? Posted: 17 Nov 2015 04:35 PM PST Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Question: I need a poem for John Steinbeck's the Pearl? Posted: 17 Nov 2015 04:20 PM PST Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Question: How is this poem (honestly)? Posted: 17 Nov 2015 03:50 PM PST Beauty, the Beast Beauty is the beast of a kind |
| Posted: 17 Nov 2015 03:44 PM PST By the time Wordsworth visited and re-visited the site (his impressions from the re-visit being the inspiration for the poem) the namesake abbey had been abandoned for over two centuries (King Henry VIII had basically dissolved and confiscated all Catholic monasteries and convents in the 1500s). The roof was long gone. Grass grew where there had once been a floor of stone and wood. Ivy and moss climbed the naked gothic arches... Wordsworth's poem was all about how nature had reclaimed his spirit and about nature's supremacy over the works of man. It was not about worship (neither God nor His works) so much as it was an internal recognition of nature's energies and spiritual impact... thus the image of a spiritual structure being reclaimed by nature was a fitting one. |
| Question: Do you like this poem? Posted: 17 Nov 2015 03:14 PM PST I remember those summers with you Under pink sunsets Under velvety skies But why was I blind To the thirsty glint in your eye? You were the father I never had Every day I die a thousand deaths They said I seduced you And bearing the cross of innocence wounded But I have painted my skies grey too long |
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