English, asked by Ankan2007, 9 months ago

Please explain me this three lines quickly from the poem ozymandias given in clip: 1)Trunkless legs________2)wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command_________3)hand that mocked them..

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Answered by kd1030601
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Akashlucky5298

26.02.2018

English

Secondary School

+13 pts

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Explain these line from the poem "Ozymandias"i) 'Two vast and trunkless legs of stone'

ii) 'Half sunk a shattered visage lies whose frown,And wrinkled lip,and sneer of cold command'

iii) 'The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed'

iv) 'Look upon my words, ye mighty and despair'

please I request you to answer all my questions from this chapter please.

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cutypriyanshi410

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1. Here the traveler begins his speech. He tells the speaker about a pair of stone legs that are somehow still standing in the middle of the desert.Those legs are huge ("vast") and "trunkless." "Trunkless" means "without a torso," so it's a pair of legs with no body.

2."Visage" means face; a face implies a head, so we are being told that the head belonging to this sculpture is partially buried in the sand, near the legs. It is also, like the whole statue, "shatter'd."

3."Mock'd" has two meanings in this passage. It means both "made fun of" and "copied," or "imitated." "Hand" is a stand-in for the sculptor. So the sculptor both belittled and copied this man's passions."The heart that fed" is a tricky phrase; it refers to the heart that "fed" or nourished the passions of the man that the statue represents. But if you think these lines are unclear, you're right. Even scholars have trouble figuring out what they mean.

4. Ozymandias's speech is ambiguous here. On the one hand he tells the "mighty" to "despair" because their achievements will never equal his "works." On the other hand, he might be telling the "mighty" to "despair" as a kind of warning, saying something like "Don't get your hopes up guys because your statues, works, political regimes, etc. will eventually be destroyed or fade away, with nothing to recall them but a dilapidated statue half-buried in the sand."

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