English, asked by MasterH625, 1 year ago

Describe the central theme of OZYMANDIAS

Answers

Answered by peehutagorean28
2
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The meaning or themes of Percy Bysshe Shelley's poem “Ozymandias” are fairly straightforward and are also highly traditional. Basically, the poem reminds powerful people that their power is only temporary. However much powerful people may wish to think that their power is immortal, they are only deceiving themselves.

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Answered by Simplebeing
2
Hey Dear!!
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Percy Bysshe Shelley's poem "Ozymandias" is a short but very famous poem. It is a sonnet i.e. a fourteen-line poem. 

The central theme sets around an irony of the powerful figures of the earthly domain. Everything is subject to nature and time. Ozymandias was very powerful and owner of a great empire which was a witness of his prowess. But his statue now stands deserted. His all glory gone with the time. No one is there to adore him. The poem gives the message about the temporariness of any power as earthly power is mutable. No one is immortal even the mighty and the powerful cannot escape from ravages by time. The statue of Ozymandias is only a witness to this fact.

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