Physics, asked by bhoomisingh1809bs03, 5 months ago

Is the poem dover beach relevant in our times . How?
plz plz tell

Answers

Answered by smee26
9

Explanation:

Dover Beach" is the most celebrated poem by Matthew Arnold, a writer and educator of the Victorian era. The poem expresses a crisis of faith, with the speaker acknowledging the diminished standing of Christianity, which the speaker sees as being unable to withstand the rising tide of scientific discovery

The Sea of Faith movement is so called as the name is taken from this poem, as the poet expresses regret that belief in a supernatural world is slowly slipping away; the "sea of faith" is withdrawing like the ebbing tide.

Answered by aryansuts01
1

Answer:

Yes

Yes, "Dover Beach" is a very pertinent poetry now. The poem demonstrates that trust must be rebuilt via love, even if it is fleeting. Love and mutual trust can restore faith in one another.

Explanation:

The most well-known poem by Commonwealth author and teacher Matthew Arnold is "Dover Beach." The speaker of the poem acknowledges the weakened stature of Christianity, which the speaker regards as being unable to survive the onslaught of scientific advancement. The poem depicts a crisis of faith. The centrality and uniqueness of humanity in the universe are now being questioned by new science and intellectual investigation. The poem's speaker notices and hears this change almost unconsciously in the sea that he or she is overlooking.

The speaker takes in the calm sea, the fullness of the tide, and the moon's reflection in the surface of the water. The speaker observes the lights of the French shore fading away as she looks across the English Channel at the English coast's cliffs, which stand strong and dazzling, and the calm-looking harbour. The speaker abruptly turns to another person and pleads with them to come see what they are gazing at and to take in the cool night air. The speaker mentions the spray where the water meets the starry land because she knows something wasn't quite right.

The speaker urges the listener to pay attention to the sound of the stones shifting back and forth as the waves move them up and down the beach.

The speaker observes this slowly occurring pattern and associates it with unending misery. The speaker suddenly recalls the great Greek playwright Sophocles and envisions him experiencing the same melancholy in the Eastern Mediterranean as the speaker is experiencing right now on the English coast. In the speaker's imagination, Sophocles compares the melancholy sounds of nature to the universal misery of humanity, which flows like the waves. Then, as the sounds of the sea continues, the speaker detects another notion.

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