Summery of Chaper Ozymandia
Answers
1) the poet meets a traveller from an ancient land.
2) the traveller tells the poet that he has seen two huge trunkless legs of stone standing in desert
3) near those legs lay a shattered and half buried face in the sand
4) the face of the statue showed signs of contempt and cold command on it.
5) it seems that the workmanship of the sculpture who made the statue , was of a very high order.
6) the sculpture had read those passion of the living man quite well.he stamped those passion exactly on the lifeless stones.
7) only boundless and bare sand ispredeaing all around the broken statues and the shattered face of ozymandias...
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This is a sonnet (a poem of fourteen lines – the first eight form an octave and the next six form a sestet).
It is about a ruined statue which has become so with the passage of time and here, we can correlate it with Shakespeare’s sonnet ‘Not marble, nor the gilded monuments.
The title ‘Ozymandias’ is the throne name of Egyptian king Ramesses. The poem talks about his foolish desire to immortalize himself by erecting a statue.
The poet meets a person who has been to an ancient place in the deserts, Egypt. He tells the poet about the ruined statue of the great powerful king, Ozymandias. It had been destroyed with the passage of time.
There were only the two legs which stood on a platform and the upper part of the body was nowhere to be seen. The face of the statue lay buried in the sand. He praises the talent of the artist as the minutest expressions and wrinkles had been perfectly copied by him.
The engraving on the platform reflects the pride and arrogance of Ozymandias. As the statue is now destroyed, the engraving is a mockery at the pride and ego of the king.
Today, after the passage of so many centuries, finally there is no trace of the king’s accomplishment in the vast stretch of the desert.