How dose the pome windy nights bring in a sence of mystery
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The wind is portrayed as a mysterious, dark force that is inevitable and inescapable. The poem 'Windy Nights' is by ...
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The poet associates the wind to the moon and stars, late at night. The wind is picturised as a man on a horseback, who gallops on and on and make the trees cry and toss the ships at sea. The galloping horseman comes on and off.
The poet associates the wind to the moon and stars, late at night. The wind is picturised as a man on a horseback, who gallops on and on and make the trees cry and toss the ships at sea. The galloping horseman comes on and off.The wind is portrayed as a mysterious, dark force that is inevitable and inescapable.
The poet associates the wind to the moon and stars, late at night. The wind is picturised as a man on a horseback, who gallops on and on and make the trees cry and toss the ships at sea. The galloping horseman comes on and off.The wind is portrayed as a mysterious, dark force that is inevitable and inescapable.The poem ‘Windy Nights’ is by Robert Louis Stevenson (1850 – 1894), a Scottish poet and writer
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