English, asked by tahreersheihk, 9 months ago

tell me , what is the present hour?A green and flowery spray. ( Name and explain the figure of speech)​

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Answered by sambabitra
4

Past, Present, Future by Emily Brontë

Time might be one of the most confusing topics in the world to think about. The differences between the past and the present, the constant unknown that is the future, and the way memory distorts our view of times gone by makes for an interesting, if highly abstract view of reality. As it happens, nothing suits abstraction quite like art does, and poetry is one of the best ways to examine a concept that is utterly impossible to explain through simple definitions. Instead, a skilled poet might turn to imagery and metaphor to try and describe an abstract concept with deep meaning to them.

Past, Present, Future Analysis

Past, Present, Future is divided into three verses, each one being of thematic importance to one of the titular words. Each of the three verses is a quatrain; four lines long, and uses a simple ABAB rhyming pattern. The shortest line is six syllables long and the longest is eight — this gives the poem a consistent rhythm that makes it easy to read aloud and follow along. The final verse breaks this mould only slightly, preferring an AABB rhyming pattern to the one established in the previous two verses. This is done to invoke a particular effect better explored within the specific context of the verse.

Tell me, tell me, smiling child,

What the past is like to thee?

‘An Autumn evening soft and mild

With a wind that sighs mournfully.’

In the first verse, the concept of the past is discussed, and the basic structure of the poem’s content is made clear. The narrator of the poem appears to be speaking with a “smiling child,” and asking them about the nature of time and reality. Despite the context of being asked to a child, the answer is not particularly childish, invoking an image of autumn, which is often viewed as a wistful kind of time because of its close relationship with cold and dark winters. The wind, personified to have a mournful sigh, is portrayed as being a sad figure, and this Autumn is ultimately described as something pleasant. The descriptions “soft and mild” suggest ideal weather, and the idea of a sad wind is distinct from that of a cold wind.

The choice to use the Fall season as a focus for the past is an interesting one, because it implies an impending winter. This would suggest that the present is going to be described as a wintry season, but it is also possible that the child is suggesting that when a person looks back into the past, they tend to see the mild autumn over the cold winter. This, then, could be a metaphor for the concept of nostalgia, of preferring to remember the past as (or even modify the memories to be) something calm and wonderful, to be missed, and to want to experience again.

Tell me, what is the present hour?

‘A green and flowery spray

Where a young bird sits gathering its power

To mount and fly away.’

The principal image of the verse, however, appears to be the young bird, who cannot fly but is preparing to. In this way, the speaker is suggesting that the present has a closer relationship with the future than the past, and that being in the present is preparing for something that is coming up ahead. Like the bird waiting to fly, most people are looking ahead to something that will fulfill them, give their lives additional meaning, or simply make them happier. The child, like the bird, spends the present waiting for the future — an odd concept to think about, considering that, by definition, it is impossible for a thing to exist “in the future” (but there’s really no need to get into that discussion!).

And what is the future, happy one?

‘A sea beneath a cloudless sun;

A mighty, glorious, dazzling sea

Stretching into infinity.’

Finally, the poem concludes by considering the future. This image is perhaps the most straightforward one — the still-happy child explains that the future is a sunny, cloudless sky overlooking a sea that stretches straight into the horizon. It is an image that suggests anything, in image that could mean anything, because it creates a theme of discovery and of excitement to its viewer. The adjectives used — “mighty, glorious, dazzling” — are all the description needed to understand this view on the future. That it is unknowable makes it exciting, something to approach with an open mind and a readiness to embrace. At one point in history, an open sea and a clear sky meant that anything was possible, that you might end up in unimaginable places. This makes it a highly effective metaphor to convey this idea that the future is something that — to borrow an earlier metaphor — should be eagerly embraced with both wings outstretched.

Answered by amitha7178
1

Answer:

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