English, asked by akbarali14, 6 months ago

how different is the world to the poet​

Answers

Answered by swathi21025
1

Explanation:

From the original text, we can see a character seeing life as signifying nothing, despite all the activity that's being played out. Our lives aren't like that. So I believe that the depression can be ignored, if we see the beauty, as well as the tragedy, of life. As pointed out, we enter the world, or the globe, stage and we exit and we ain't heard of again because we ain't around.

That didn't apply to anybody like Jesus, the Son of God, who was raised from the dead according to the Holy Scriptures and being witnessed and reported, so we, who live now, could read about such miracles. While Jesus raised Lazarus at one time, by calling his name and his name alone from the realm of death, Jesus also raised others from death.

Saint Paul preached and when facing opposition cried out to the people, that he believed in the resurrection of the dead, for he knew that others did, too, while the rest refused his preaching about resurrection.

Shakespeare is merely voicing the depression of a character, yet in other stories he may praise God and portray faith in Jesus. So imagine if we merely cling to one quotation or part of a quotation as signifying something more precious than others or the grand total. We quote Shakespeare in part not in total. People see us with snapshots or hear us with sound bytes. Who knows you more than God Almighty? He uses scribes and scholars to get His word to us. He changes us on a heart by heart basis. Some He prepares for centre stage, others merely clean the stage after the play has ended. Each has a measure of service, or the rejection of that service, thus leading to or away from any real blessing. Even so, we each live, we each die until God changes that destiny around.

Answered by vatsav56
0

Explanation:

He would want the people of the world are in complete agreement with each other. He imagines a scene of togetherness where everyone will be holding hands and the world will resound with songs of peace. ... The poet longs to see the world impose a ban on guns and swords. This was a strange dream that he had.

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