I wonder by my troth,what thou,and I did,till we loved? explain the excerpts
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wonder, by my troth, what thou and I / Did, till we loved? ' With these frank and informal words, John Donne (1572-1631) begins one of his most remarkable poems, a poem often associated – as is much of Donne's work – with the Metaphysical 'school' of English poets.
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The Good-Morrow by John Donne's metaphysical love poems, particularly an aubade, a morning love song/poem. The two lovers are waking up first thing in the morning. The speaker needs to analyze the state of their relationship, so he asks and comments on the time before their passion, enjoyment, and beauty.
Explanation:
- The meaning of this line is the speaker asks his lover what did they do before they were in love? Although the speaker's lover does not enter the poem in a speaking role, we can presume that she's the "thou" he's talking to. This one is not intended to be answered, like any rhetorical question. Rather, the speaker uses it as a means of rolling his romantic monologue, of making his partner think about love and why the relationships is so great.
- In this, love is described as a deep experience which is almost like a religious epiphany. In reality, the poem notes that romantic love may have the same impact as religion. The soul of the talker wakes up through love; the speaker leaves the world outside because of love; the speaker discovers salvation in love. For two factors, the claim is inherently subversive.
- First of all, since the poem says that all love, even love outside of marriage, can have this transformative and enlightening effect. Secondly, the belief that romantic love can represent religious devotion's joys and revelations.
To know more
justify the title of the poem The good morrow - Brainly.in
https://brainly.in/question/9388514
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