Explain the word Blind sky from the poem cherry tree
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the weather is a great day and night and I have been so long for the weather
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Explain the word Blind sky from the poem cherry tree
- The poet goes into considerable detail to describe the cherry tree's development, comparing it to a "five-month-old infant" who is "extremely little" and "lost." He even observes that the goats have eaten the plant's leaves and that a grass mower has sliced the plant in half.
- The subject of Cherry Tree is that both people and time are constantly in flux. Since the father's education was not equal to that of the child's, they were not studying the same things because most of them, like germs, had never even been heard of before.
- The poet plants a cherry seed with the hope of growing a tree of his own, and the poem is about his unbridled joy in doing so. The plant needs eight years to develop into a flowering tree. He talks about the several seasons the tree experiences before eventually growing and blooming.
- The poet observed two things while attempting to see the sky through the cherry tree's leaves: the flitting and flying finches. Bees taking honey from each cherry tree flower.
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