A photograph is an 'embodiment of time and timelessness" Exeplain.
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Shirley Toulson's 'A Photograph` unfolds the very tenet of “Time – and Timelessness”. The poem strongly hints at the eternal state of the natural being and ephemeral state of the humans. ... The smiling photograph creates a pang in the heart of the poet as she remembers and misses her mother with a doleful heart.
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The three main themes of the poem Photograph are loss, reflection, and the transient quality of life. It looks into the odd manner that people's memories enable them to continue to exist after they pass go. These memories can take on a concrete form, like photos, in addition to being restricted to one's head.
Explanation:
- "Time - and Timelessness" is the central principle of Toulson's "A Photograph." The poet encountered the horns of death; the absence of her mother from her life has made it gloomy. Her mother's childhood and pleasant times were tied to earlier happy ones.
- The poem has overt allusions to both the transient nature of mankind and the eternal status of the natural world. Here, we are introduced to a picture of three females, including the poet's mother, on a seashore. The sea hardly ever changed, but the poet's mother met her end.
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