English, asked by riya288587, 1 year ago

summary of not marble nor the gilded monument.....​

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Answered by redeaglemgn
1

SUMMARY

Not Marble, nor the Gilded Monuments is the 55th sonnet written by William Shakespeare. It tells about the limitations of worldly glory and grandeur (impressiveness) All the great monuments, memorials and statues erected by princes, rulers and the rich to perpetuate (maintain) their memory are subject to decay, destruction and deterioration. (failure) The ravages of time and the agents of destruction destroy and damage all such monuments and memorials. Only the powerful rhyme of the poet and great poetry will survive the ravages (destruction) of time. Through the written words of this poem, the poet will immortalize the memory of his friend till the day of the Last Judgment.

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Answered by hiyaatuli
1

Answer:In this poem the poet speaks about the immortality of beauty and it's imperishable nature which I'd embedded in the vision of future generation. Neither the ravages of time not wasteful wars shall be able to destroy the glory of eternal piece of art. The poem thus depicts that materialistic things are short lived and are subject to decay where as the art is eternal and immortal

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