English, asked by minnilater, 4 months ago

paraphrasing on abou ben adhem poem​

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Answered by studarsani18018
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"Abou Ben Adhem" is a poem by Leigh Hunt, a key figure of the Romantic movement in England. The poem focuses on an event in the life of the Sufi saint Ibrahim bin Adham (anglicized to Abou Ben Adhem). Ben Adhem encounters an angel, who is writing a record of those who love God. Learning his name isn't on this list, Ben Adhem instructs the angel to mark him down as one who loves his "fellow men." The next night, the angel returns with a second list: those who are blessed by God. Ben Adhem's name is at the top this time, suggesting that God favors those who love their fellow human beings—indeed, that love for other people is the best way to express love for God. Hunt is not particularly well-known for his poetry, and is better remembered for his role in facilitating the work of other poets at the time (such as Keats and Shelly). "Abou Ben Adhem" is one of a handful of Hunt's poems still commonly read.

Explanation:

The speaker blesses Abou Ben Adhem, who has just woken up from a deep, peaceful sleep. Looking around his moonlit bedroom, Ben Adhem notices that the room is filled with a sense of pure loveliness, like that of a blooming lily, by the presence of an angel who is writing in a golden book. Ben Adhem's peaceful life thus far has made him fearless, and so he asks the angel what it is writing. Looking up compassionately, the angel answers that it is making a list of the people who love God. Ben Adhem asks if his name is on this list. It isn't, replies the angel. Unworried, Ben Adhem implores the angel to record his name as some that loves other people instead.

The angel fulfills Ben Adhem's request before disappearing. The next night it returns in a blaze of light, holding a new list of people blessed by God. Ben Adhem's name is at the top.

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