PART C- (10 x 2 = 20 marks) Answer the following short questions. 13. What is the rhyme scheme of Shakespeare's sonnets? 14. How does the speaker describe the world of Nightingale? 15. Explain the terms "Impediments and Edge of doom". 16. Define Dramatic Monologue. 17 What is the theme of the poem Kubla Khan? 18 How does God is described by Milton in his poem? 19. Write a short note on Chimney Sweeper. How does Wordsworth compare the London city to garment? 20. 21. What happened to The Lotus eaters? 22. Why does Shelly call the skylark as spirit? 3 6250103
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The poet begins by stating he does not object to the "marriage of true minds", but maintains that love is not true if it changes with time; true love should be constant, regardless of difficulties. In the seventh line, the poet makes a nautical reference, alluding to love being much like the north star is to sailors. True love is, like the polar star, "ever-fixed". Love is "not Time's fool", though physical beauty is altered by it.
The movement of 116, like its tone, is careful, controlled, laborious…it defines and redefines its subject in each quatrain, and this subject becomes increasingly vulnerable.[2]
It starts out as motionless and distant, remote, independent; then it moves to be "less remote, more tangible and earthbound";[2] the final couplet brings a sense of "coming back down to earth". Ideal love is maintained as unchanging throughout the sonnet, and Shakespeare concludes in the final couplet that he is either correct in his estimation of love, or else that no man has ever truly loved.
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