English, asked by Mykids611, 10 months ago

And smell i went out to the hazel wood, because a fire was in my head, and cut and peeled a hazel wand, and hooked a berry to a thread; and when white moths were on the wing, and moth-like stars were flickering out, i dropped the berry in a stream and caught a little silver trout. when i had laid it on the floor i went to blow the fire a-flame, but something rustled on the floor, and someone called me by my name: it had become a glimmering girl with apple blossom in her hair who called me by my name and ran and faded through the brightening air. though i am old with wandering through hollow lands and hilly lands, i will find out where she has gone, and kiss her lips and take her hands; and walk among long dappled grass, and pluck till time and times are done, the silver apples of the moon, the golden apples of the sun. —"the song of wandering aengus," william butler yeats write a few sentences describing what you visualized, heard, and smelled when you imagined the poem.

Answers

Answered by emcelroy4833
0

Answer:

it harry potter

Explanation:

Answered by syed2020ashaels
0

Answer:

Given below is the answer

Explanation:

The reader knows what to expect.

Personal pronouns

By changing the tone when Aengus would

The meter

One of the key figures of 20th-century literature, William Butler Yeats was an Irish poet, playwright, and novelist who lived from 13 June 1865 to 28 January 1939. He was a key figure in the Irish Literary Revival and a stalwart of the country's literary elite. He also assisted in the construction of the Abbey Theatre. He held the office of Senator of the Irish Free State for two periods in his senior years.

Yeats, an Anglo-Irish Protestant, was raised in County Sligo and was educated in Dublin and London. He was born in Sandymount and spent summers there as a boy. He began studying poetry at a young age, when he developed a fascination for occult and Irish folklore. The first phase of his career, which roughly spans from his days as a student at the Up until the turn of the 20th century, Dublin had the Metropolitan School of Art. His first collection of poetry, which was released in 1889, is known for its lyrical, slow-moving poems that pay homage to the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and Edmund Spenser.

His poetry became more visceral, realistic, and politicised starting in 1900. He gave aside his youth's transcendental views, but some ideas, including cyclical theories of life, continued to trouble him. In 1897, he had taken over as the Irish Literary Theatre's primary playwright, and from the start, he had supported new writers like Ezra Pound. In 1923, Yeats received the Nobel Prize for Literature. The Tower, written by him in 1928, and Words for Music Perhaps and Other Poems, published in 1932

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